Inside MEETING NO TICES See Page 6 V olume 107 Number 12 J une 16, 2006 P ortland Portland City Council takes hard look at PDC over construction pay L a b or Re co g n it i o n N ig h t Thirty-two people received awards June 3 at the ninth annual Labor Appreciation and Recognition Night dinner sponsored by the Northwest Oregon Labor Council. In addition to paying tribute to these “friends of labor,” the event was a fundraiser for the Emergency Fund of La- bor’s Community Service Agency. This year, $2,000 was raised on raffle tickets for thousands of dollars worth of prizes donated by local unions and area businesses. Last year, the Emergency Fund assisted 851 people from 29 dif- ferent unions who were facing emergency situations. Money from the fund can be used to help pay for rent, util- ity bills, transportation, prescription drugs and more. United Way of the Columbia-Willamette made a special presentation to Glenn Shuck, executive director of Labor’s Community Service Agency, for his work with United Way during its annual fundraising drive. Recognized at this year’s dinner (pictured above) were: Darel Aker, Dave Tully and Bill Elzie of Teamsters Joint Council 37; Calvin Bissonette and Dana Hoadley of Glass, Molders, Pottery, Plastic and Allied Workers Local 139-B; Steve Dzielak of the Alliance for Retired Americans; Bruce Easley, Dan Froner and Mike Murphy of Laborers Munici- pal Local 483; Rick Gilmore, Deanna Meyer, Mary Orr and Marla Rosenberger of Multnomah County Employees Lo- cal 88 of the American Federation of State, County and Mu- nicipal Employees; UNITE HERE Local 9 leaders Jeff Richardson, Gloria Gonzalez, Jonah Kobayashi, Sophie Welcer, John Pulido, David Brown and Gayle Carnini; gen- eral managers Ron Gladney of the Benson Hotel, Norman Wha of the Paramount Hotel, Tracy Marks of the Hilton Hotel, Brendon Coffey of Aramark at the Oregon Conven- tion Center, and Michael Bashaw of Coast Hotels; Norman Leyden of Musicians Local 99; William Lukens of Machin- ists Lodge 63; Wally Mehrens, retired executive secretary- treasurer of the Columbia-Pacific Building Trades Council; Bob Petroff, directing business representative of Machinists District Lodge 24; Gene Pronovost, president of United Food and Commercial Workers Local 555; Maureen Thompson, director of Community Solutions for Clacka- mas County; and Julie Devlaeminck, office secretary of the Northwest Oregon Labor Council and a member of Office and Professional Employees Local 11. By DON McINTOSH Associate Editor After several fruitless years spent courting favor with the Portland Devel- opment Commission (PDC), building trades union leaders are now going around the agency. They’re taking their agenda directly to Portland City Coun- cil. Judging by recent meetings, a breakthrough may be nearing. Construction unions have tried without success to get PDC to require contractors to pay livable wages and benefits on its projects. PDC is known as a funder of big-ticket construction projects — using public subsidies to spark private development. PDC divvies up $200 to $250 million a year, money it gets from special bonds that are repaid by a portion of the prop- erty taxes in “urban renewal” districts. “We want to ensure that public tax dollar investment is used in ways that enrich working people’s lives, not just line the pockets of a few developers and contractors,” said Cherry Harris, organizer with Operating Engineers Local 701, at a June 7 Portland City Council meeting. In meetings with PDC officials over the last four years, building trades union leaders have argued that PDC- funded projects should pay the “pre- vailing wage” rate. Under state law, workers on public construction projects can’t be paid less than the prevailing wage — the standard rate for the area, as determined by an annual wage sur- vey conducted for the Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries (BOLI). The Building trades’ Mohlis interested in PDC post Organized labor has launched a cam- paign to get John Mohlis, executive sec- retary-treasurer of the Columbia-Pacific Building Trades Council, appointed to the Portland Development Commission, the quasi-independent development arm of the city of Portland. Two of PDC’s longest serving mem- bers — Chair Eric Parsons and Secre- tary Doug Blomgren — will step down after their terms expire in July. The five-person commission is ap- pointed by Portland Mayor Tom Potter and must be confirmed by the City Council. Potter already has appointed three commissioners since taking office in 2005. The newest commissioners are Sal Kadri, a business owner, Bertha Fer- rán, a mortgage consultant, and Mark Rosenbaum, a partner in a financial services business. Potter had indicated during his cam- paign and after his election in Novem- ber 2004 that he would consider ap- pointing someone from organized labor to the commission. Labor leaders were disappointed when that didn’t happen. “The one thing lacking on this board for a long time has been a voice for the workers,” said Judy O’Connor, execu- tive secretary-treasurer of the Northwest Oregon Labor Council, AFL-CIO. Building trades unions have worked with PDC in the past designing appren- ticeship training and women and minor- ity hiring programs. They have also fought with the agency over prevailing wage requirements on public-private projects that PDC helps fund. Mohlis was elected to the building trades post last year. Prior to that he was business manager of Bricklayers and Al- lied Craftworkers Local 1. law is meant to ensure that contractors compete based on competence and ef- ficiency, not based on who pays work- ers the least. It’s also meant to encour- age contractors to offer training and benefits to their employees. But PDC has said that unless a proj- ect is public infrastructure, it is exempt from the prevailing wage law, arguing the law applies only if PDC contracts directly with a construction contractor or actually owns the project at its con- clusion. BOLI, charged with enforcing the prevailing wage law, ruled that the law does apply to PDC on mixed-use, pri- vate-public projects that the agency helps fund. But PDC sued in May 2005 to overturn that interpretation, and won in Multnomah County Circuit Court. BOLI is appealing that decision. PDC’s legal action outraged con- struction union leaders, like Jim Pauley, president of Iron Workers Lo- cal 29. Pauley says his blood boils at the thought of PDC paying lawyers with tax dollars to sue another govern- ment agency — all to avoid paying a decent wage to construction workers. Pauley wasn’t the only one to react that way. Portland City Commissioner Randy Leonard says he’s become in- creasingly exasperated by the PDC. The lawsuit shows PDC is out of sync with the current City Council, Leonard said; and City Council wasn’t con- sulted beforehand. “They introduced this lawsuit basi- cally on behalf of developers,” Leonard told the NW Labor Press. At a June 6 City Council work ses- sion, Leonard invited Labor Commis- sioner Dan Gardner and PDC Execu- tive Director Bruce Warner to explain to the council how the lawsuit came about. Warner deferred questions to his at- torney. Gardner told the council PDC wanted the fight: He tried to resolve the dispute but his calls went unreturned. And a task force he appointed to look at how prevailing wage would apply to PDC failed to reach consensus. (Turn to Page 5)