Repeal of prevailing wage law gets House panel OK

FRANKFORT-A bill that would repeal a state law requiring payment of an hourly base
wage-or prevailing wage-to workers on public works construction projects has passed
a House committee.

House Bill 3, sponsored by House Speaker Jeff Hoover, R-Jamestown, and Rep. Adam
Koenig, R-Erlanger, would apply to projects for which bids have not yet been awarded
at the time the bill, should it pass, takes effect. An emergency clause included in
HB 3 would ensure the bill takes effect immediately upon being signed into law by
the governor.

Koenig, who presented HB 3 to the House Economic Development and Workforce
Investment Committee before the committee approved the bill today, said prevailing
wage laws are "unlikely to yield rates that are representative of market wages."
They are also a financial strain on local governments and school districts, Koenig
said, emphasizing that saving money was the motivation for filing HB 3.

The bill has the support of Boone County Schools Superintendent Dr. Randy Poe who
testified alongside Koenig. Poe told the committee that higher construction fees on
prevailing wage projects have cost his school district as much as $50 million over
the last 19 years.

"The higher fees we pay through prevailing wage keeps us from improving upon
traditional space versus portable space (for) our students," said Poe. "This is
about creating more space for our students."

Speaking against the bill was Bill Finn, the state director of the Kentucky State
Building and Construction Trades Council. Finn said that nine out of 11 economic
studies since 2001 have showed no increase in overall construction costs due to
prevailing wage. "Twenty three percent is the entire pie that prevailing wage
affects," said Finn.

HB 3 now goes to the full House for its consideration.