95.3 / 88.5 FM Grand Rapids and 95.3 FM Muskegon
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

“Prevailing wage” to be an issue before new Legislature

Prevailing wage
flickr.com

It’s looking like “prevailing wage” will be an issue in the Legislature’s new session. It deals with pay rates for construction workers on publicly funded projects. And, as we hear from It’s an issue that divides Governor Rick Snyder and the Legislature’s Republican leaders.

Pay rates for workers on publicly funded construction projects could be an issue this year in the Legislature. Bills to repeal Michigan’s 50-year-old law that requires contractors to pay union-scale wages on public projects were among the first to be introduced this year.

   Republican leaders in the Legislature support the repeal. But Governor Rick Snyder does not. He says prevailing wage encourages people to consider careers in the building trades. 

   Jeff Wiggins is with the Associated Builders and Contractors. It’s a trade group for non-union builders. He says there’s still time to negotiate and come up with a strategy.

    “We’re just getting started. This is the third week of the first month of     the first year of a two-year legislative term. If this were a football game, we’re just      kicking off, so there’s a whole lot of game to play.”

   Wiggins’ group spearheaded a petition drive in 2015 that would have allowed the Legislature to repeal the prevailing wage law without the governor’s approval. That fizzled after the signature-gathering company botched the effort by collecting too many duplicate names.