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A Look Back to Look Forward on Prevailing Wages in PA

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Monday, April 2, 2012   

HARRISBURG, Pa. - As debate continues on whether prevailing wages in Pennsylvania cost taxpayers more than they should on public construction projects, one group points out that we already have the answer. Stephen Herzenberg, economist with the Keystone Research Center, says the notion of paying workers less to help keep costs down ignores issues of safety and training, not to mention the ripple effects on the economy.

He says that in the 1990s prevailing wages were cut in some rural areas of the state to see the effect, and the results were clear.

"The costs didn't go down. In fact, if anything, costs went up more in the areas where prevailing wages were lowered the most. That's partly because they couldn't attract quality people to do those projects."

Herzenberg says what prevailing-wage law critics fail to recognize is that repealing it, and paying workers less, means work quality suffers, labor hours increase and so do the costs associated with having to repair work that's not up to par.

"Why they continue to support a policy which is bad for workers and doesn't benefit taxpayers is a little mystifying."

Herzenberg says prevailing-wage laws help ensure that Pennsylvania construction companies hire local workers for jobs, and those workers then sink their earnings back into local economies.

"Jobs don't go to contractors who hire low-wage workers from out of state. So, one of the ripple effects of repealing or weakening prevailing-wage laws would be that it hurts our struggling economy. That's not a good idea."

Pennsylvania's 50-year-old prevailing-wage law sets wage standards paid to workers for public construction projects valued at more than $25,000.

The state School Boards Association, perhaps the most vocal opponent to prevailing wages, says they add a burden to the already stressed-out budgets of state and local governments.



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