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On June 3, Reps. Clay Higgins, R-La., and Dusty Johnson, R-S.D., hosted a briefing on the use of project labor agreements and the effects on the American construction workforce. Ben Brubeck, 老牛影视vice president of regulatory, labor and state affairs, joined other state and industry stakeholders to discuss the Biden administration鈥檚 mandating PLAs on federal construction projects of $35 million or more that went into effect on Jan. 22. The briefing was widely attended by congressional staff whose members are concerned about the negative impact the final rule will have on contractors around the country.

鈥淲hen mandated by government agencies, PLAs needlessly increase construction costs by听, reduce opportunities for qualified large and small contractors and their craft and noncraft employees and exacerbate the听construction industry鈥檚 worker shortage of more than half a million people听by discriminating against the nearly 90% of the industry workforce that is not unionized,鈥 said Brubeck.

Prior to the briefing, a collation of industry stakeholders led by 老牛影视sent a letter to U.S. House of Representatives members expressing concerns with the final rule and advocating for legislation that would reverse it. The letter and briefing highlighted the Fair and Open Competition Act (/), introduced by Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., and Sen. Todd Young, R-Ind., that protects federal and federally assisted construction contracts from government-mandated PLAs and will allow merit shop contractors to have a fair chance at competing to rebuild America. The bill currently has co-sponsors in the House and staff were encouraged to recommend co-sponsorship to their member. In addition, 老牛影视and other stakeholders expressed support for the Congressional Review Act Resolution () introduced by Rep. Higgins that would nullify the final rule. 听听

On March 28, 老牛影视and its Florida First Coast chapter filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida in Jacksonville in response to the Federal Acquisition Regulatory Council鈥檚听Dec. 22, 2023, final rule鈥撯揳nd the related Dec. 18, 2023,听鈥撯搃mplementing President Joe Biden鈥檚 Feb. 4, 2022,听. In its legal filing, 老牛影视asserted that the Biden administration鈥檚 PLA rule is beyond the scope of executive authority and violates the Constitution, the First Amendment and the Administrative Procedure Act. The complaint also notes that the rule violates the Federal Property Administrative Services Act, the Competition in Contracting Act, the National Labor Relations Act, the Office of Federal Procurement Policy Act and the Regulatory Flexibility Act, among others, by limiting competition and forcing large and small businesses to sign union agreements as a condition of winning a federal contract for construction services.

Learn more at听听and the Build America Local coalition website at听.

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