The construction industry unemployment rate fell to 13.6% in July, from 17.3% in the same year-ago period, according to recently released analysis of federal employment data by the Associated General Contractors of America. The number of unemployed people who previously worked in construction shrank by nearly 400,000 in the same time period, says Ken Simonson, chief economist at AGCA, Arlington, VA. However, the July 2011 employment total of 5,532,000 was only 32,000 higher than in July 2010, he says. "It is encouraging that the construction industry has added 54,000 jobs, or 1 percent, since hitting bottom last January," Simonson says.
Concrete workers from locals 6A, 18A and 20, including workers on the World Trade Center site and Weill Cornell Medical College research center, returned to work Aug. 4 following a three day strike that began Monday. The unions have agreed to extend their contract, which expired on July 29, to August 16, says Louis Coletti, president, Building Trades Employers’ Association. However, an agreement has not yet been reached on new terms including a proposed 20% wage cut. Separately, independent arbitrator Richard Adelman said on Tuesday that Concrete Workers District Council Local 16, an umbrella union group that also had
Talks continued Aug. 3 between the Cement League and Concrete Workers locals 6A, 18A and 20, following a worker strike that began Monday, says Louis Coletti, president of Building Trades Employers’ Association. The strike includes concrete workers at the World Trade Center site although some of those workers have returned to their jobs, says industry sources. “They should not use the WTC as a bargaining tip,” Coletti says. Management’s proposed 20% wage reduction “would not affect a single person on the WTC site but rather, that reduction would affect new residential/hotel projects,” Coletti says. “They should go back to
The Cement League and Concrete Workers locals 6A, 18A and 20 met August 2 for discussions following a worker strike that began Monday, three days after their contract expired, says Louis Coletti, president of Building Trades Employers’ Association. The union’s contract expired June 30 but was extended until July 29. Coletti says that workers on certain unspecified jobs have returned to work but that others remain on strike. He did not provide further details. The union refused to comment on the strike, and the Cement League was unavailable for comment at press time. In other union news, the
The construction industry is not recovering as quickly as expected, says Robert A. Murray, McGraw-Hill Construction's vice president of economic affairs. Total construction starts in 2011 are forecast to reach $413 billion, a 3% decline from 2010, Murray says in an update of MHC's mid-year outlook. Expectations were higher for this year as starts had leveled off last year after plunging 24% in 2009. First-half 2011 starts have "bounced along the bottom," providing little evidence that the industry is heading toward sustained growth, Murray says. He cites a weak single-family housing market and a steep decline in public works.There are
The first-in, first-out rule does not always apply in the publicity business, or so Glaziers Local 1281 and the Window and Plate Glass Dealers have learned. Back in April, the two organizations were the first—of all New York City unions and contractors with contracts set to expire in the April-June cycle—to reach agreement. However, that news was only announced July 20, overshadowed in part by the highly publicized collective bargaining talks between the Operating Engineers Locals 14 and 15 and the Building Contractors Association, Contractors Association of Greater New York and Cement League, says Jerry Haber, a Window and Plate
SnapShot July 25, 2011 Submitted By: Jamie M. Beckwith Marketing Director HM White, New York “What I tried to capture with this photo was the relative human scale and required teamwork by an extraordinary crew to realize the creation of this unique little city garden,” says Booher. He took this photo while overseeing the installation of 32,000-lb trees more than 45 ft tall and 13 ft wide within the New York Times Building’s courtyard. He used a Fujifilm FinePix F50SE. Booher describes the evening as a “somewhat surreal New York experience.” Photographer: Aaron Booher
When Turner Construction Co. introduced business information modeling (BIM) for building the new University Medical Center of Princeton, it immediately inspired a medical metaphor for the owner: brain imaging technology used by neurosurgeons. Barry Rabner, president and CEO of Princeton Healthcare System, the owner of the Plainsboro, N.J.-based medical center, compared BIM to how neurosurgeons inject blood vessels with dye and rotate images of the brain on an axis. “As the owner we wanted to keep costs as low as possible while maximizing usable space,” he says. “BIM helped reconcile those needs.”That was only the beginning of the collaboration process
Brooklyn Photo Courtesy of Bess Adler/Thornton Tomasetti Barclays Center: Forest City Ratner Cos. has submitted an application for a labor agreement for the first phase of its Atlantic Yards project in Brooklyn, which includes Barclays Center. Photo courtesy of Real Goods Solar inc. Real Goods: The acquisition provides the Colorado solar energy firm a foothold in the Northeast market. Unions Agree to 20% Wage Cut on Project Key unions in New York City, including laborers and structural trades, agreed to a 20% wage cut for work on Gotham West, a residential development on Manhattan's West Side that will consist of