The Proud Heritage of the 'Prevailing White Wage'
By Vin Suprynowicz
[email protected]
    
Special to The Libertarian Enterprise
         Among the many uncataloged sins of the octopus-like government 
we've managed to develop over the past eight decades is the damage 
done by bureaucratic "happy-talk" to the plain meaning of English 
words.
         Government raises organized euphemism to a high art. When 
lawmakers and their busy scribes want to take more money from 
wage-earners and hand it to big campaign contributors who happen to 
be in the business of building schools, soup kitchens, or women's 
shelters, they're not going to call said legislation the 
"Construction Magnates' Pay-off Bill." No, no. It's the "Woman and 
Child Safety Act of 1997."
         Likewise, the politically naive might assume the proper way to 
determine the "prevailing wage" for a given public works project 
would be to place ads, offering to pay $10 per hour.
         If not enough qualified workers showed up in answer to that offer,
subsequent ads might offer $12 per hour, then $14, then $16, until a 
price was found at which sufficient workers of adequate skill were 
willing to commit to the project.
         The resulting pay scale would be the "prevailing wage" for such 
labor, in that town and in that season ... not because some 
Washington bureaucrat so decreed, but because it had been so 
determined by actual experiment.
         But no. That's not what our current "Prevailing Wage" laws are 
about, at all.
         The original "Prevailing Wage" law -- the federal Davis-Bacon Act 
-- was dreamed up by a Long Island congressman who was shocked to 
learn local construction firms had been underbid for the contract to 
build a veterans hospital in his district (in the years following the 
First World War) by an out-of-state contractor who then proceeded to 
cut costs by bringing in (brace yourself) black workers from the 
South, who were willing to work for less.
         Though this may have saved the taxpayers money, and provided 
honest work to a "disadvantaged" group, it sure didn't sit well with 
the congressman's constituents. The ensuing congressional oratory left 
no room for doubt that the new law, requiring any contractor on a 
federal construction project to pay the same high wages as the local 
white firms were paying, was specifically intended to block the 
importation of cheap "negro" labor.
         Then -- the art of euphemism already being in flower -- the 
scheme to have the federal government put together the lists of the 
minimum allowable wages was dubbed the "Prevailing Wage" system.
         The system has survived all these years, with the federal 
"prevailing wages" being jury-rigged higher and higher by a happy 
collusion between those who collect the taxpayer dollars and the 
so-called "regulators" they have now installed in Washington, until a 
federal audit last year found contractors happily being ordered to 
pay nearly $30 an hour for common steamroller operators -- nearly 
twice what any such worker would expect to earn without such 
government intervention.
         States like Nevada have their own versions of the federal 
Davis-Bacon Act. Cash Minor, chief financial officer for Elko County, 
reports that a local contractor was recently obliged to pay $27.20 an 
hour to workers on a public golf course project in Jackpot ... when 
the true market rate is $15.
         Jack Jeffrey, representing Southern Nevada trade unions, spoke up 
last week to oppose even the most minimal watering-down of Nevada's 
law, arguing that the current statute guarantees a high standard of 
work, and also prevents out-of-state contractors from underbidding 
local firms.
         Sound familiar?
         The reform in question has been proposed by State Sen. Dean 
Rhoads, from the rural northern enclave of Tuscarora. An extremely 
modest proposal, Senate Bill 210 would exempt state or local 
governments from having to pay the propped-up wages on jobs up to 
$500,000 in size -- an increase from the current $100,000.
         Presumably to make it more palatable, Sen. Rhoads' proposal would 
apply only to counties with populations less than 100,000 -- in other 
words, not in Reno or Las Vegas, where most Nevadans actually live.
         One would think that allowing the cash-strapped cow counties to 
put some local Joes and Janes to work at more sensible, non-rigged 
wages would raise few objections. Financial officer Minor estimates 
Sen. Rhoads' modest reform would have saved taxpayers in his county 
from $78,000 to $118,000 last year (raising the usual question of why 
the bill draft in question reads, "Fiscal Effect on Local Government: 
No.")
         But the labor unions apparently know a threat to their pay-off 
scheme when they see one.
         Sen. Rhoads' proposal is a good one, except for the size limits.
         Kara Kelley, vice president for government affairs with the Las 
Vegas Chamber of Commerce, testified in Carson City March 27, arguing 
that the exemption should be extended to include all counties and all 
projects.
         It sure should.
Vin Suprynowicz is the assistant editorial page editor of the Las 
Vegas Review-Journal. The web site for the Suprynowicz column is at 
http://www.nguworld.com/vindex/. The column is syndicated in the 
United States and Canada via Mountain Media Syndications, P.O. Box 
4422, Las Vegas Nev. 89127.