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EDITORIAL: High-speed rail rolls out the pork barrel for unions

Ex-cons also get preference for hiring under agreement.

Thursday, Mar. 07, 2013 | 12:01 AM

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The first leg of California's high-speed rail project goes through our central San Joaquin Valley, one of the most economically depressed areas of the state. Given that, a hiring policy giving preferences to "disadvantaged workers" -- including unemployed veterans, homeless people, single parents on government assistance and high school dropouts -- is a laudable goal.

That it also includes preferences for the unemployed who have "a criminal record or involvement with the criminal justice system" goes too far. That is one of the provisions of the Community Benefits Agreement recently approved by the California High-Speed Rail Authority drawing deserved attention from critics.

People who are qualified, have been in prison and served their debt to society should not be denied a chance to work on high-speed rail or any other government project. That they should receive preference above other equally qualified long-term unemployed is absurd.

It's also important to understand that those categories of "disadvantaged workers" are not the real focus of the Community Benefits Agreement. They are a distraction. The agreement's big beneficiaries are the state's building trades unions. Embedded in the agreement are provisions that make it more likely that union workers will be employed on the project almost exclusively.

Besides ex-cons, homeless persons and veterans, the agreement -- under the definition of "disadvantaged workers" -- includes union apprentices "with less than 15% of the apprenticeship hours required to graduate to journey level."

Another provision requires nonunion contractors who subcontract for work to pay into the union retirement funds and health and benefit funds. Nonunion contractors have to pay regardless of the fact that they may have their own company pensions and despite the fact that their workers may not be union members.

The Community Benefits Agreement -- approved administratively with little public discussion -- virtually ensures that smaller, nonunion contractors will have to pay union wages and union benefits to get a piece of this public works pie. There are thousands of such contractors, and all of them fall into a separate category of "disadvantaged" when it comes to benefiting from the project.


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