Construction industry exempted in final rule on Industry-Recognized Apprenticeship Programs (IRAPs)

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Above: Cherise Lakeside, a past president of the Portland Construction Specifications Institute (CSI) learns some tricks of the trade for historical restoration and ornamental plastering from apprentices at Plasterers Local 82.

By Don McIntosh

It worked. An energetic campaign by North America’s Building Trades Unions (NABTU) and its affiliates got the Trump administration to back off a plan that would have weakened apprenticeship programs—in construction anyway.

Since 1937, the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) has regulated apprenticeship training programs in order to promote the health, safety and general welfare of apprentices. Thanks to that regulation, workers who graduate from registered apprenticeship programs have a credential that’s recognized by employers in their industry throughout the country.

The law mandates a role for representatives of employers and labor in setting standards for apprenticeship programs. But in 2017, President Trump issued an executive order directing the DOL to develop a new kind of apprenticeship program that could be designed and overseen solely by employers and employer groups. When the DOL released proposed rules for the program last year, the agency touted the proposed “industry-recognized apprenticeship programs” (IRAPs) as a way to entice more employers to give the apprentice model a try. But construction union leaders warned that if IRAPs were allowed in the construction industry, they could undermine existing apprenticeship programs that are well established and highly successful.

Led by NABTU, building trades unions mounted a massive campaign to keep IRAPs out of construction, with the support of several union-friendly employer groups. DOL received more than 326,800 comments about the proposed program, overwhelmingly from union members opposed to it. Oregon union members submitted over 2,000 comments.

“If construction is included in IRAP, the lack of oversight will result in a lack of safety for jobs that are already dangerous, and substandard work quality,” wrote Minna Long, an apprentice at Ironworkers Local 29.

On the other side, Associated General Contractors of America (AGC) and the anti-union construction employer group Associated Builders and Contractors (ABC) appealed to the DOL to keep construction in.

In the final version of the rule published March 11, the DOL sided with the unions, indicating that IRAPs would not be allowed in construction.

The rule is supposed to take effect May 11. But the DOL never had Congressional authority to develop or implement IRAPs. Congress hasn’t allotted any money for it, and a group of mostly Democratic lawmakers is opposed.

“The IRAP system established under this rule strips the Department of Labor of its critical role in certifying that apprenticeship programs are meeting quality standards and upholding worker protections,” said House Labor Committee chairman Bobby Scott (D-Va.) “The Department cannot guarantee that IRAPs are standardized and portable throughout the country…. This rule will expose apprentices to low-quality programs, squandering valuable taxpayer money and undermining the integrity of the existing registered apprenticeship system.”

House Democrats are investigating whether the DOL violated federal appropriations law by steering funds Congress authorized for registered apprenticeships to contractors who did work to advance the IRAP model.

2 COMMENTS

  1. To be accurate, when the proposed rule first came out, DOL did not include construction in the IRAP plan–they were excluded for good policy reasons–which was fine with labor. The public comment period fight was neccessitated because the AGC & ABC wanted to to reverse that decision by the Department and include construction in the IRAP. Given Secretary Acosta’s departure from DOL, we needed all the effort from construction unions to win this fight.

  2. Dont think we’re not gonna have to keep fighting.Remember that whenever you vote. Good job brothers and sisters

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