Bill Text: MO HB1041 | 2013 | Regular Session | Comm Sub


Bill Title: Changes the way the Department of Labor and Industrial Relations determines the prevailing hourly rate of wages on public work projects

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 2-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2013-04-30 - Rules - Reported Do Pass (H) [HB1041 Detail]

Download: Missouri-2013-HB1041-Comm_Sub.html

FIRST REGULAR SESSION

HOUSE COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE FOR

HOUSE BILL NO. 1041

97TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY

2106H.04C                                                                                                                                                 D. ADAM CRUMBLISS, Chief Clerk


 

AN ACT

To repeal sections 290.210, 290.260, and 290.262, RSMo, and to enact in lieu thereof five new sections relating to prevailing wages.




Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the state of Missouri, as follows:


            Section A. Sections 290.210, 290.260, and 290.262, RSMo, are repealed and five new sections enacted in lieu thereof, to be known as sections 290.210, 290.253, 290.260, 290.262, and 290.285, to read as follows:

            290.210. As used in sections 290.210 to 290.340, unless the context indicates otherwise:

            (1) “Collective bargaining agreement” includes any written agreement or understanding between an employer or employer association and a labor organization or union which is the exclusive bargaining representative of the employer’s or employer association’s employees pursuant to the terms of the National Labor Relations Act and which agreement or understanding or predecessor agreement or understanding has been used to determine an occupational title wage rate.

            (2) "Construction" includes construction, reconstruction, improvement, enlargement, alteration, painting and decorating, or major repair.

            [(2)] (3) "Department" means the department of labor and industrial relations.

            [(3)] (4) “Labor organization” or “Union” means any entity which has been designated pursuant to the terms of the National Labor Relations Act as the exclusive bargaining representative of employees of employers engaged in the construction industry, which entity or affiliated entity has ever had a collective bargaining agreement which determined an occupational title wage rate.

            (5) "Locality" means the county where the physical work upon public works is performed[, except that if there is not available in the county a sufficient number of competent skilled workmen to construct the public works efficiently and properly, "locality" may include two or more counties adjacent to the one in which the work or construction is to be performed and from which such workers may be obtained in sufficient numbers to perform the work, and that, with respect to contracts with the state highways and transportation commission, "locality" may be construed to include two or more adjacent counties from which workmen may be accessible for work on such construction].

            [(4)] (6) "Maintenance work" means the repair, but not the replacement, of existing facilities when the size, type or extent of the existing facilities is not thereby changed or increased.

            [(5)] (7) "Prevailing hourly rate of wages" means the wages paid generally, in the locality in which the public works is being performed, to workmen engaged in work of a similar character including the basic hourly rate of pay and the amount of the rate of contributions irrevocably made by a contractor or subcontractor to a trustee or to a third person pursuant to a fund, plan or program, and the amount of the rate of costs to the contractor or subcontractor which may be reasonably anticipated in providing benefits to workmen and mechanics pursuant to an enforceable commitment to carry out a financially responsible plan or program which was communicated in writing to the workmen affected, for medical or hospital care, pensions on retirement or death, compensation for injuries or illness resulting from occupational activity, or insurance to provide any of the foregoing, for unemployment benefits, life insurance, disability and sickness insurance, accident insurance, for vacation and holiday pay, for defraying costs of apprenticeship or other similar programs, or for other bona fide fringe benefits, but only where the contractor or subcontractor is not required by other federal or state law to provide any of the benefits; provided, that the obligation of a contractor or subcontractor to make payment in accordance with the prevailing wage determinations of the department, insofar as sections 290.210 to 290.340 are concerned, may be discharged by the making of payments in cash, by the making of irrevocable contributions to trustees or third persons as provided herein, by the assumption of an enforceable commitment to bear the costs of a plan or program as provided herein, or any combination thereof, where the aggregate of such payments, contributions and costs is not less than the rate of pay plus the other amounts as provided herein.

            [(6)] (8) "Public body" means the state of Missouri or any officer, official, authority, board or commission of the state, or other political subdivision thereof, or any institution supported in whole or in part by public funds.

            [(7)] (9) "Public works" means all fixed works constructed for public use or benefit or paid for wholly or in part out of public funds. It also includes any work done directly by any public utility company when performed by it pursuant to the order of the public service commission or other public authority whether or not it be done under public supervision or direction or paid for wholly or in part out of public funds when let to contract by said utility. It does not include any work done for or by any drainage or levee district.

            [(8)] (10) "Workmen" means laborers, workmen and mechanics.

            290.253. 1. No contractor or subcontractor shall contract with or construct public works for any public body, other than the Missouri state highways and transportation commission, unless such contractor or subcontractor has participated in the wage survey process utilized by the department pursuant to section 290.262 to determine the prevailing hourly rate of wages in Missouri localities for construction work, other than highway construction work, by completing and submitting the survey forms to the department evidencing all the hours worked by and all wage rates paid to its workers in each occupational title for construction work during the previous calendar year unless such contractor or subcontractor has not engaged in any construction work which the contractor shall establish by providing an affidavit or other sworn statement so attesting to the department. The department shall provide a contractor or subcontractor with proof of compliance.

            2. Survey forms containing wages and hours submitted to the department under this section shall not be considered public records under chapter 610.

            3. The provisions of this section shall become effective on January 1, 2015.

            290.260. 1. The department, as it deems necessary, shall from time to time investigate and determine the prevailing hourly rate of wages for heavy and highway construction work in the localities. In doing so, the department shall accept and consider information regarding local wage rates that is submitted in either paper or electronic formats. A determination applicable to every locality to be contained in a general wage order shall be made annually on or before July first of each year for the Missouri state highways and transportation commission and shall remain in effect until superseded by a new general wage order. [In determining prevailing rates, the department shall ascertain and consider the applicable wage rates established by collective bargaining agreements, if any, and the rates that are paid generally within the locality.]

            2. A certified copy of the determination so made shall be filed immediately with the secretary of state and with the department in Jefferson City. Copies shall be supplied by the department to all persons requesting them within ten days after the filing.

            3. At any time within thirty days after the certified copies of the determinations have been filed with the secretary of state and the department, any person who is affected thereby may object in writing to the determination or the part thereof that he deems objectionable by filing a written notice with the department, stating the specific grounds of the objection.

            4. Within thirty days of the receipt of the objection, the department shall set a date for a hearing on the objection. The date for the hearing shall be within sixty days of the receipt of the objection. Written notice of the time and place of the hearing shall be given to the objectors at least ten days prior to the date set for the hearing.

            5. The department at its discretion may hear each written objection separately or consolidate for hearing any two or more written objections. At the hearing the department shall first introduce in evidence the investigation it instituted and the other facts which were considered at the time of the original determination which formed the basis for its determination. The department, or the objector, or any interested party, thereafter may introduce any evidence that is material to the issues.

            6. Within twenty days of the conclusion of the hearing, the department must rule on the written objection and make the final determination that it believes the evidence warrants. Immediately, the department shall file a certified copy of its final determination with the secretary of state and with the department and shall serve a copy of the final determination on all parties to the proceedings by personal service or by registered mail.

            7. This final decision of the department of the prevailing wages in the locality is subject to review in accordance with the provisions of chapter 536. Any person affected, whether or not the person participated in the proceedings resulting in the final determination, may have the decision of the department reviewed. The filing of the final determination with the secretary of state shall be considered a service of the final determination on persons not participating in the administrative proceedings resulting in the final determination.

            8. At any time before trial any person affected by the final determination of the department may intervene in the proceedings to review under chapter 536 and be made a party to the proceedings.

            9. All proceedings in any court affecting a determination of the department under the provisions of sections 290.210 to 290.340 shall have priority in hearing and determination over all other civil proceedings pending in the court, except election contests.

            290.262. 1. Except as otherwise provided in section 290.260, the department shall annually investigate and determine the prevailing hourly rate of wages in each locality for each separate occupational title. In doing so, the department shall accept and consider information regarding local wage rates that is submitted in either paper or electronic format. A final determination applicable to every locality to be contained in an annual wage order shall be made annually on or before July first of each year and shall remain in effect until superseded by a new annual wage order or as otherwise provided in this section. [In determining prevailing rates,]

            (1) With respect only to third and fourth class counties, the prevailing rate for all work other than the work for which rates are determined under section 290.260 for an occupational title within a locality shall be determined in the following manner:

            (a) The total number of non-collective bargaining agreement hours worked for the time period in that occupational title in the locality shall be considered;

            (b) The total number of collective bargaining agreement hours worked for the time period in that occupational title in the locality shall be considered;

            (c) If the total number of non-collective bargaining agreement hours in the aggregate exceeds the total number of collective bargaining agreement hours in the aggregate, then a non-collective bargaining agreement rate shall prevail. If the total number of collective bargaining agreement hours in the aggregate exceeds the total number of non-collective bargaining agreement hours in the aggregate, then a collective bargaining agreement rate shall prevail; and

            (d) If a non-collective bargaining agreement rate prevails, the rate to be determined as the prevailing rate shall be the wage rate most commonly paid of the non-collective bargaining agreement rates as measured by the number of hours worked at each wage rate at a non-collective bargaining agreement rate, for that occupational title within the locality. If a collective bargaining agreement rate prevails, the rate to be determined as the prevailing rate shall be the wage most commonly paid of the collective bargaining agreement rates as measured by the number of hours worked at each collective bargaining agreement wage rate for that occupational title within the locality;

            (2) Except for third and fourth class counties the prevailing wage of which shall be calculated as described in subdivision (1) of this subsection, the prevailing rate for an occupational title other than heavy and highway construction work in a locality shall be the wage rate the department determines to be the most commonly paid, as measured by the number of hours worked at each wage rate, for that occupational title within the locality;

            (3) With respect to all counties in Missouri, if no work within a particular occupational title has been performed during the reporting period in the locality at any wage rate, the prevailing rate for that occupational title in that locality shall be the wage rate most commonly paid, as measured by the number of hours worked at each wage rate, for that occupational title within all Missouri counties adjacent to that locality. For the purposes of this section, “adjacent county” means any Missouri county having a boundary that, at any point, touches any boundary of the locality for which the wage rate is being determined. If no work within a particular occupational title has been performed in the locality and its adjacent counties, the department shall ascertain and consider the applicable wage rates established by the collective bargaining agreements, if any, and the rates that are paid generally within the locality [and] . The department shall, by March tenth of each year, make an initial determination for each occupational title within the locality.

            2. A certified copy of the initial determinations so made shall be filed immediately with the secretary of state and with the department in Jefferson City. Copies shall be supplied by the department to all persons requesting them within ten days after the filing.

            3. At any time within thirty days after the certified copies of the determinations have been filed with the secretary of state and the department, any person who is affected thereby may object in writing to a determination or a part thereof that he deems objectionable by filing a written notice with the department, stating the specific grounds of the objection. If no objection is filed, the determination is final after thirty days.

            4. After the receipt of the objection, the department shall set a date for a hearing on the objection. The date for the hearing shall be within sixty days of the receipt of the objection. Written notice of the time and place of the hearing shall be given to the objectors at least ten days prior to the date set for the hearing.

            5. The department at its discretion may hear each written objection separately or consolidate for hearing any two or more written objections. At the hearing the department shall first introduce in evidence the investigation it instituted and the other facts which were considered at the time of the original determination which formed the basis for its determination. The department, or the objector, or any interested party, thereafter may introduce any evidence that is material to the issues.

            6. Within twenty days of the conclusion of the hearing, the department shall rule on the written objection and make the final determination that it believes the evidence warrants. Immediately, the department shall file a certified copy of its final determination with the secretary of state and with the department and shall serve a copy of the final determination on all parties to the proceedings by personal service or by registered mail.

            7. This final decision of the department of the prevailing wages in the locality for each occupational title is subject to review in accordance with the provisions of chapter 536. Any person affected, whether or not the person participated in the proceedings resulting in the final determination, may have the decision of the department reviewed. The filing of the final determination with the secretary of state shall be considered a service of the final determination on persons not participating in the administrative proceedings resulting in the final determination.

            8. At any time before trial any person affected by the final determination of the department may intervene in the proceedings to review under chapter 536 and be made a party to the proceedings.

            9. Any annual wage order made for a particular occupational title in a locality may be altered once each year, as provided in this subsection. The prevailing wage for each such occupational title may be adjusted on the anniversary date of any collective bargaining agreement which covers all persons in that particular occupational title in the locality in accordance with any annual incremental wage increases set in the collective bargaining agreement. If the prevailing wage for an occupational title is adjusted pursuant to this subsection, the employee's representative or employer in regard to such collective bargaining agreement shall notify the department of this adjustment, including the effective date of the adjustment. The adjusted prevailing wage shall be in effect until the next final annual wage order is issued pursuant to this section. The wage rates for any particular job, contracted and commenced within sixty days of the contract date, which were set as a result of the annual or revised wage order, shall remain in effect for the duration of that particular job.

            10. In addition to all other reporting requirements of sections 290.210 to 290.340, each public body which is awarding a contract for a public works project shall, prior to beginning of any work on such public works project, notify the department, on a form prescribed by the department, of the scope of the work to be done, the various types of craftsmen who will be needed on the project, and the date work will commence on the project.

            290.285. Any public body using an employee to perform construction work, including but not limited to occupational titles with a prevailing hourly rate of wages, requiring training, professional registration, licensure or issuance of a professional certificate must comply with all local, state, and federal laws relating to the training, professional registration, licensure, or issuance of the employee’s professional certificate.

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