93henfan wrote:The worst violations of labor rates I personally saw committed were by some of the larger construction firms from Philly/NJ/NY when I worked at Dover AFB. We'd go do an audit on Davis/Bacon rates at a construction site and you'd see guys scramble to put away tools as we rolled up. They would have guys doing skilled work that they were billing as laborers. Then we'd pull those guys aside for interviews, and there would always be a Sopranos-looking construction manager trying to stare them down. So then, we'd take them to a more isolated area and grill them. It was very tough to get them to admit they were being paid less than the job classification they were actually performing. Sometimes we'd take pictures first and then pull onto the site. The shame of it all is that whenever we issued a restitution letter to the company, we'd never see those workers again.

This was really my area of expertise when I did software development. Coast to coast...I not only trained companies in labor compliance, I gave seminars for govt. agencies and local builder's organizations.
What's fascinating is that most of this information is available online, yet few people are aware of Davis-Bacon requirements. Never seen the feds get too upset over violations, but regionally, there are some govt. agency "republics" that hammer their contractors.
And in some places (Texas, MS, NV...) enforcement is (defacto) non-existent. I had a TX based, national "plant maintenance" company, whose workers did millwright work (precision machining, welding, etc...) on federal fuel facilities. Their work was EXTREMELY dangerous, and two workers had been killed during the prior 5 years (one of which the company lost a wrongful death civil action), yet the wage classification used was "Janitorial", $8.72/hr, and likewise, they were categorized janitorial for W/C. Everyone knew what was going on, especially the feds who never spoke up, but regionally, attitudes towards wages has extreme variation.
btw...I mentioned that situation to a general contractor out on Long Island, and everyone in the room went silent and turned white.
Just a sidebar...
...the labor rate for Laborer Group II through IV, and Operator Group 2 through 8 (roadwork trades) in the District are FAR LOWER than the surrounding region.
Who'd a thunk?
