[blind-democracy] Philadelphia City Council pushes ‘diversity’ in the building trades

  • From: "Roger Loran Bailey" <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> (Redacted sender "rogerbailey81" for DMARC)
  • To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Thu, 27 Jul 2017 10:46:24 -0400

https://socialistaction.org/2017/07/24/philadelphia-city-council-pushes-diversity-in-the-building-trades/


Philadelphia City Council pushes ‘diversity’ in the building trades

/ 3 days ago


Aug. 2017 Building tradesBy a WORKING CARPENTER

The Philadelphia city council passed a law allowing the city to secure loans for a program to renovate city parks, recreation centers and libraries called Rebuild Philadelphia. Some council members expressed skepticism about the program, asking whether any of the jobs created would go to people living the neighborhoods where the projects take place.

Last year 63 percent of small projects done for the city had no workers of color. Middle-sized city projects performed only marginally better, with 42 percent having no workers from minority groups. Projects done for private developers are similarly majority white, with many from the suburbs.

The problem of racism in the building trades is a national one and not isolated to Philadelphia.

Philadelphia is 55 percent people of color. Forty six percent of the population is Black. The construction unions are still majority white. The only majority Black and Latinx union in the building trades is the Laborers Union, which is 54 percent people of color. The Laborers represent unskilled workers who do a variety of work on sites from demolition to clean up.

The rest of the trades have much lower percentages of minority group members; a handful are in the 25-30 percent range, and the majority have less than 20 percent. Two unions, the Insulators and Tile setters, report having no Black or Latinx members.

The building trades have a long history of excluding Black and Brown workers and women from apprenticeship programs. Passage of the Rebuild Philadelphia program was conditioned on the creation of opportunities for people of color and women to gain entry to apprentice programs. Three pre-apprentice programs were announced recently; the PHL Pipeline, which is part of the Rebuild program; PennAssist, tied to the Pennsylvania Hospital system; and the Construction Apprenticeship Preparatory Program (CAPP), which is part of Brandywine Realty Trust’s Neighborhood Engagement Initiative.

Brandywine is the developer of a proposed 30-year development plan along the Schuylkill River, including the Schuylkill Yards. Mayor Jim Kenney’s administration has also promised that Rebuild will offer more opportunities for small contractors that are women or minority owned. Sometimes minority contractors are fronts for larger white-owned firms or “owned” by the wives of contractors as a way of circumnavigating minority set-aside provisions.

Each of the pre-apprentice programs promises the opportunity to get into union apprenticeship programs, providing both work experience and assistance with preparation for the entrance tests for the unions. (The tests are mainly math.) But taking the test is only the first hurdle. There are several institutional barriers to completion and finding work after people gain entrance to the programs. Until the hiring process is addressed, these types of programs are merely window dressing. The question remains, in the midst of a building boom, who gets the jobs?

While the construction unions often promise increased diversity in apprenticeship programs, these pledges fall short. The Philadelphia Electrical and Technology Charter High School provides one example. It was founded by IBEW local 98 (Electricians) leader John Dougherty, who is also a major player in local Democratic Party politics. At its inception, the school’s stated purpose was to provide the foundation for entrance into the IBEW’s apprentice program. The student body of the charter school is 70 percent Black.

The Philadelphia Inquirer reports that in its 15-year history, there is “no record of any graduate entering Local 98’s apprentice training program.” This is a compelling example of why skepticism on the part of the Black community regarding promises of diversity by the unions is warranted. The Inquirer alleges that, rather than serving as a pipeline to a career in the skilled trades, the school is a patronage machine for Dougherty’s cronies and family.

A history of Jim Crow practices

The building trades have traditionally acted as “white labor trusts.” In the early years, there were separate locals for Black workers. The situation was very much a situation of economic apartheid. Black and Brown workers were the last hired and the first fired.

This reality persists today. While it’s possible for white nonunion workers to get into the union through being organized in, or through the submission of resumes, Black and Brown workers often don’t find this avenue available to them. The memorandum of understanding between the city and the unions inadequately addresses this by offering the possibility that already-skilled workers could gain union membership through work at the Philadelphia Housing Authority.

Following World War II, a Republican-controlled city council passed civil rights legislation, but racism and lack of opportunity persisted in employment, education and housing. During the 1950s, Black clergy led a series of boycotts demanding fair employment opportunities and won limited victories.

In the early 1960s, the NAACP organized demonstrations against the exclusion of Black tradesmen from jobs in the city. This struggle reached its height in a fight to integrate the site of a new junior high school in North Philadelphia. NAACP picket lines, which included many Black trades people, blocked worksite gates and demanded the hiring of minority workers. Pickets were met with violence from white union workers and cops.

After two weeks of disruption, building trades unions and contractors met with the NAACP and the AFL-CIO Human Rights Committee to negotiate a settlement:

“By the time the meeting came to an end, Moore (NAACP leader Cecil B. Moore) believed that the contractors had agreed to hire a Black plumber, a steamfitter and two electricians onto the Strawberry Mansion site. On Tuesday morning, however, Moore and NAACP pickets found not a desegregated workforce, but rather a significantly larger police presence with orders … to insure that workers were able to enter the site” (from “Up South, Civil Rights and Black Power in Philadelphia,” by Matthew J. Countryman).

During the recent Great Recession, the Phair Hiring Coalition organized demonstrations on job sites at Temple University (TU) demanding the inclusion of Black, Brown, and women workers on university job sites. During the height of the recession, buildings under construction at TU were overwhelmingly staffed by white tradesmen.

Overcoming the apprenticeship problem

In the construction trades, it’s still “who you know” that, more often than not, determines who gets hired. Many contractors hire union members off the street through recommendations of friends. Getting into apprentice programs and completing them is a series of hurdles. If you pass the test, you have to find a contractor sponsor willing to make the initial hire.

Once hired, the apprentice often has to contend with racist supervisors and co-workers. First and second-year apprentices are considered “cheap labor” and get used for the most menial tasks, like stuffing insulation or moving materials. Since the skills of the trade are mostly really learned on the job, this puts women and young people of color at a disadvantage. By the time they have completed their second year, their pay rate is much higher and, if they haven’t achieved a sufficient skill level, they become unemployable. Women also face sexual harassment, and people of color are often the victims of racist bosses and co-workers.

Advancement in some apprenticeship programs is based not only on grades, but also on having worked a minimum number of hours. If someone is having a hard time holding onto jobs because of discrimination, their time in apprenticeship could go beyond the usual four or five years.

How can this situation be resolved?

First, apprenticeship programs should be restructured to guarantee admission of more women and minority group members. Once admitted, these workers should be assigned journeyman mentors who will help them navigate the obstacles in the system. Contractors should be monitored to make sure that apprentices are taught the skills required for advancement in their trade.

More democratic union structures and accountability of officials is also necessary. An aggressive organizing drive targeting nonunion workplaces is an urgent task. This means organizing all workers, including the undocumented, into the unions. The unions have to make a commitment to rooting out the racism in their ranks.

Resistance to fair hiring from some white workers has to be overcome as well. Competition for high paying construction jobs is fierce. The fight for jobs, coupled to a sliding scale of wages and hours (30 hours work for 40 hours pay), is part of the struggle for a national public-works jobs program that guarantees jobs at top union wages. The demand for jobs for all should be coupled with demands for free universal health care, free education for all, the right to retire without economic worry, and the right to a safe and affordable home.

Photo: Wage Theft March outside Los Angeles City Hall in January 2015. From Los Angeles Black Worker Center.
1.http://www.phillytrib.com/news/trades-training-models-seen-as-game-changers-for-diversity/article_e0bce367-ad18-560c-9de2-47f0bf7a4679.html
2.Study: https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B3BUVGkugFMORXhZT0JRVVM4RGs/view
3.http://www.nationalbcc.org/news/beyond-the-rhetoric/621-economic-apartheid-construction-unions-and-the-city-of-philadelphia






Share this:

Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
16Share on Facebook (Opens in new window)16
Click to share on Google+ (Opens in new window)


July 24, 2017 in Black Liberation, Labor, Philadelphia, Women's Liberation.


Related posts





Trade Union Report to the Socialist Action Convention



River Rouge: 1941



Growing Support for Mumia Riles Philadelphia Police and Media


Post navigation

← What is the role of police under capitalism?

Living wage under attack →
















Get Involved!
Donate to help support our work
Get email updates
Join Socialist Action


Newspaper Archives
Newspaper Archives Select Month July 2017 (14) June 2017 (16) May 2017 (17) April 2017 (14) March 2017 (13) February 2017 (19) January 2017 (13) December 2016 (12) November 2016 (19) October 2016 (12) September 2016 (10) August 2016 (10) July 2016 (14) June 2016 (14) May 2016 (9) April 2016 (12) March 2016 (14) February 2016 (8) January 2016 (11) December 2015 (11) November 2015 (9) October 2015 (8) September 2015 (10) August 2015 (7) July 2015 (13) June 2015 (9) May 2015 (10) April 2015 (12) March 2015 (9) February 2015 (11) January 2015 (10) December 2014 (12) November 2014 (11) October 2014 (9) September 2014 (6) August 2014 (10) July 2014 (11) June 2014 (10) May 2014 (11) April 2014 (10) March 2014 (9) February 2014 (11) January 2014 (11) December 2013 (10) November 2013 (11) October 2013 (17) September 2013 (13) August 2013 (10) July 2013 (11) June 2013 (15) May 2013 (14) April 2013 (14) March 2013 (12) February 2013 (10) January 2013 (17) December 2012 (7) November 2012 (8) October 2012 (19) September 2012 (2) August 2012 (27) July 2012 (18) June 2012 (3) May 2012 (19) April 2012 (14) March 2012 (17) February 2012 (19) January 2012 (17) December 2011 (3) November 2011 (33) October 2011 (14) September 2011 (13) August 2011 (34) July 2011 (24) June 2011 (19) May 2011 (19) April 2011 (15) March 2011 (15) February 2011 (16) January 2011 (15) December 2010 (17) November 2010 (1) October 2010 (6) September 2010 (3) August 2010 (8) July 2010 (7) June 2010 (2) May 2010 (9) April 2010 (3) March 2010 (8) February 2010 (3) January 2010 (9) December 2009 (6) November 2009 (5) October 2009 (16) September 2009 (3) August 2009 (2) July 2009 (5) June 2009 (2) May 2009 (7) April 2009 (6) March 2009 (16) February 2009 (9) January 2009 (10) December 2008 (11) November 2008 (8) October 2008 (16) September 2008 (14) August 2008 (18) July 2008 (12) June 2008 (3) May 2008 (2) April 2008 (3) March 2008 (14) February 2008 (11) January 2008 (11) December 2007 (8) November 2007 (1) July 2007 (1) June 2007 (1) April 2007 (1) March 2007 (1) February 2007 (3) December 2006 (11) November 2006 (11) October 2006 (13) September 2006 (15) August 2006 (11) July 2006 (18) June 2006 (7) May 2006 (14) April 2006 (6) March 2006 (14) February 2006 (5) January 2006 (2) December 2005 (9) November 2005 (8) October 2005 (13) September 2005 (12) August 2005 (9) July 2005 (16) June 2005 (16) May 2005 (16) April 2005 (12) March 2005 (14) February 2005 (19) January 2005 (15) December 2004 (14) November 2002 (17) October 2002 (19) September 2002 (22) August 2002 (21) July 2002 (15) May 2002 (21) April 2002 (21) February 2002 (15) January 2002 (15) December 2001 (17) October 2001 (24) September 2001 (18) July 2001 (19) June 2001 (18) October 2000 (17) September 2000 (21) August 2000 (19) July 2000 (16) June 2000 (26) May 2000 (21) April 2000 (22) March 2000 (28) February 2000 (18) January 2000 (20) December 1999 (20) November 1999 (26) October 1999 (25) September 1999 (18) August 1999 (40) July 1999 (38) June 1999 (24) May 1999 (27) April 1999 (25) March 1999 (26) February 1999 (29) January 1999 (24) July 1998 (12)

Search

View socialistactionusa’s profile on Facebook
View SocialistActUS’s profile on Twitter
View SocialistActionCT’s profile on YouTube


Subscribe to Our Newspaper



Upcoming Events

No upcoming events


Category Cloud

Actions & Protest Africa Anti-War Arts & Culture Black Liberation Canada Caribbean Civil Liberties Cuba East Asia Economy Education & Schools Elections Environment Europe Immigration Indigenous Rights International Labor Latin America Latino Civil Liberties Marxist Theory & History Middle East Palestine Police & FBI Prisons South Asia Uncategorized Vote Socialist Action Women's Liberation


View Calendar


Blog at WordPress.com.









Follow





































Other related posts:

  • » [blind-democracy] Philadelphia City Council pushes ‘diversity’ in the building trades - Roger Loran Bailey