Unions Suffer Day-Laborer Pains
In the city that never stops developing, day laborers have become a growing cause for tension between unions and the contractors who employ the jornaleros (day laborers).
As major unions hold on to traditional regulations, contractors working on low-rise sites – routinely non-union jobs – have increasingly sought out workers willing to accept cheaper
pay and no benefits.
“Right now a lot of non-union contractors take advantage of the available labor,” said Louis Coletti, president of the BTEA (Buildings Trade Employers’ Association), which represents 1,500 union contractors around the city. “They offer workers $10 to $15 an hour with no training, they leave them on the worksites, and a lot of laborers never even get paid when the job’s done.”
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