Attention construction contractors —Davis-Bacon Act update takes effect October 23
The first significant update to the Davis-Bacon and Related Acts in almost 40 years will take effect on October 23. Companies with federal construction contracts should be ready for changes to the way prevailing wage rates are calculated.
The Davis-Bacon and Related Acts cover federal contracts and subcontracts in excess of $2,000 relating to the construction, alteration, or repair of public buildings and public works. The acts require laborers and mechanics working on covered federal contracts to be paid the prevailing wage for the area where work is being done.
Prevailing wage calculation adjustments
Under a final rule published in the Federal Register on August 23, the prevailing wage will be the wage rate paid to at least 30 percent of workers in a given trade. Current rules calculate the prevailing wage based on 50 percent of workers.
The Wage and Hour Division (WHD) uses wage survey data to determine the prevailing wage in an area for each job classification, as well as fringe benefits.
If there is no wage rate paid to at least 30 percent of workers, the WHD will use a weighted average of wages paid to individuals employed in the job classification, a memo from Department of Labor states.
If there is not enough data for an area to determine the prevailing wage, the WHD can expand the scope of data and look to surrounding counties, groups of comparable counties, or the state.
Additional updates
In addition to updating the way the prevailing wage is calculated, the final rule also:
- Permits the WHD to periodically adjust prevailing wage and fringe benefit rates between surveys, so rates do not fall behind prevailing wages in the area;
- Allows the WHD to adopt prevailing wage rates set by state or local officials;
- Includes modern examples of covered construction, including wind turbines, solar panels, broadband installation, and installation of electric car chargers;
- Clarifies the circumstances under which transportation of material is covered;
- Changes many references from employee to worker, as the Davis-Bacon labor standards apply even when there is no employment relationship between a contractor and a worker, and;
- Adds anti-retaliation protections for workers or job applicants who make a complaint or cooperate in an investigation.
Davis-Bacon poster will be revised
Information about anti-retaliation protections will be added to the Davis-Bacon poster. Contractors entering into a contract on or after October 23 will need to display the updated version of the poster.
Covered contractors and subcontractors must post the Davis-Bacon poster at all times at the site of the work in a prominent and accessible location where it can be easily seen by workers.
The need for a new poster will be determined by the effective date of a contract and the contract’s posting clauses.
Key to remember: Federal construction contractors will need to abide by updates to the prevailing wage calculation and other provisions when updates to the Davis-Bacon and Related Acts take effect on October 23.