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On Sept. 7, the Federal Acquisition Regulatory Council’s final rule on the Use of Project Labor Agreements for Federal Construction Projects, which would mandate anti-competitive and inflationary project labor agreements on large-scale federal construction contracts, arrived at the Office of Management and Budget’s Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs for review. This is the final step before the rule will be published in the Federal Register and take effect.

The rule will finalize a proposed rule released by the FAR Council on Aug. 19, 2022, which mandated the use of PLAs on all federal construction contracts of $35 million or more. The proposal is a direct result of President Joe Biden’s Feb. 4, 2022, Executive Order 14063, Use of Project Labor Agreements for Federal Construction Projects, which directed the FAR Council to mandate PLAs on large federal construction projects. Details on the final rule are not yet available, but it is expected to closely match the proposal.

ABC previously strongly criticized the proposed rule in a statement: “ABC calls for the immediate withdrawal of this illegal proposed rule and its imposition of anti-competitive and inflationary government-mandated PLAs on federal contracts,” said Ben Brubeck, ABC vice president of regulatory, labor and state affairs. “PLA mandates undermine economy and efficiency in federal contracting, increase construction costs by 12% to 20%, create project delivery delays and discriminate against nonunion contractors and workers, who comprise 87.4% of the construction workforce.

ABC actively opposed the proposed rule, including with the following actions:

Once finalized, this proposal will replace President Barack Obama’s 2009 Executive Order 13502, which encourages, but does not require, federal agencies to mandate PLAs on large-scale federal construction projects exceeding $25 million in total value on a case-by-case basis, and permits states and localities to mandate PLAs on federally assisted projects. The Biden administration expects its proposed rule to affect about 120 federal contracts valued at $10 to $14 billion per year.

Publication of the final rule is expected within the coming weeks. Stay tuned to Newsline for additional information upon the rule’s release.  

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