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BTEA notices shift to non-union workers in NYC: Politico report

New York City’s leading trade organization representing building contractors, historically a construction union ally, is increasingly welcoming employers who use nonunion workers as well, Politico reports.

The shift, which Building Trade Employers’ Association (BTEA) president Lou Coletti acknowledged in a private speech and interview in late June, is taking shape as city officials, organized labor and developers spar over the terms of a bill that would regulate the increasingly dangerous construction industry. A handful of unions, meanwhile, are locked in disputes over collective bargaining agreements that were set to expire at the end of June, the website reported.

Coletti reportedly delivered a candid speech on June 28 at a dinner hosted by the Construction & Realty Services Group at Keens Steakhouse in Manhattan. He made clear his organization is embracing “open shop” companies whose workers are not required to be in unions and typically charge lower rates.

He also vowed to sue if a bill being drafted in the City Council requires government-funded subsidies for increased worker training mandates because his members already bear that cost themselves, according to a recording of his remarks obtained by Politico New York.

“We’re an organization that’s in transition. Ninety-five percent of my construction managers and general contractors are building open shop,” Coletti said. “There are trades that have made changes, and if they made changes, their prices are at the table and it works and if it doesn’t, then they don’t get the job. It’s that simple. We’re a contractor group, not a labor group.”

“We know we’ve lost a tremendous amount of market share in the residential marketplace as well as the interior marketplace,” he added. “It’s a fact. We’re in an open shop environment — that isn’t going to change. The question is, how is the BTEA going to change to address that?”

Coletti’s organization includes 27 contractor associations representing 1,700 construction managers, general contractors and subcontractor firms employing 120,000 workers, according to its website.

After years of scarce lending and climbing land costs — and an often unsuccessful effort to persuade unions to lower their rates —contractors and building managers began working with non-unionized labor, Coletti said in an interview with Politico. “The shift coincided with a broader feud over union wages, sparked by the 2015 expiration of the 421-a property tax break, which was reinstated this year with a partial pay requirement,” the site reported.

“Open shop is not where we want to be,” he said. “We prefer doing a job with 100 percent building trades, but if we don’t have 100 percent of them who allow us to be cost-competitive, we reach the point … that we can no longer afford not to compete for that work.”

Meanwhile, Gary LaBarbera, president of the Building and Construction Trades Council of Greater New York, wrote an op-ed in the Commercial Observer last month, “Gotham Was, Is and Always Will Be a Union Town” in response to an article about unions losing their stronghold on the real estate industry.

He also took aim at the Real Estate Board of New York (RENBY) or working alongside two “front” organizations that represent nonunion contractors — the New York Construction Alliance (NYCA) and the Associated Builders & Contractors (ABC) Empire State chapter).

“In reality, NYCA and ABC represent the narrow, misguided interests of seven contractors and unfortunately a few thousand exploited construction workers,” he wrote. “And REBNY is now helping to push their agenda.”

Several sources involved in the construction safety debate told Politico that Coletti is making a play to get NYCA members to join his organization. The alliance represents several general contractors, including Lettire Construction Corp. and L+M Builders Group.

Coletti acknowledged he is in talks with open shop contractors but said his association hasn’t decided on the scope of its expansion yet.

He also reportedly criticized the Syracuse-based ABC Empire State chapter for having little presence in NYC as it lobbies city council on the construction safety legislation.

“My new nickname, and I hope you use it in the article — I call them the mouse that roared,” he said.

Their main objection to the bill, he said, is simple economics. “They don’t have a commitment to safety and they don’t want to pay for it,” he said.

“If not for this mouse that roared, (the bill) would have been passed and hundreds of merit shop contractors and tens of thousands of workers would be unemployed right now while Mr. Coletti sat on the sidelines watching the legislation move,” ABC Empire State president Brian Sampson reportedly replied.

The bill is being redrafted before a final vote, which is still unscheduled.

Among the unresolved issues is who would foot the bill for the new mandated training courses, which could total up to 242 hours for certain specialized workers.

The RNBY plans to sue if it deems the final bill favors unions, a Politico source close to the negotiations said.

 

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