High-hazard Facility Work.
An owner or operator of a stationary source that is engaged in petroleum refining or petrochemical manufacturing, when contracting for the construction, alteration, installation, repair, or maintenance of the stationary source, must require its contractors and subcontractors to use a skilled and trained workforce to perform onsite work in an occupation with an approved apprenticeship program. A skilled and trained workforce means all the workers are either registered apprentices or skilled journeypersons.
A skilled journeyperson means the worker:
Prevailing Wage.
The prevailing wage is the wage paid on public works in each trade or occupation and is established by the industrial statistician at the Department of Labor and Industries under standards in law.
Beginning January 1, 2024, a skilled journeyperson working on stationary sources in petroleum refining or petrochemical manufacturing must be paid at least a rate consistent with the prevailing wage rate in that occupation and area.
(In support) The prevailing wage system is a more current reflection of the market and is more focused on construction and other work relevant to refinery operations, while the employment statistics from ESD use averages, are older, and do not have scopes of work that match real world standards. Using the prevailing wage system would clarify the wage standard and benefit both the union and nonunion workforce. The Legislature has already decided to adopt a wage benchmark for this industry, so the question now is just which benchmark is best. The prevailing wage system is well established, whereas the wage benchmark for this industry in current law was predicted not to work well when it passed. The health of the community and the safety of the workforce would be increased by using the prevailing wage system, which would be consistent with the intent of the current law. The bill will also resolve issues around wages in apprenticeships.
(Opposed) Workers in Washington refineries are already highly paid and well treated. There are no issues with the current wage standard. Using the prevailing wage system would increase costs and effect jobs and the ability to attract capital. These impacts would be felt most in working class families, for whom these jobs provide significant opportunity. This change would also impact investments in maintenance and safety and have environmental impacts. There is no precedent for requiring prevailing wages or otherwise legislating wages in private employment, and this could be a slippery slope to expansion of governmental control in the private sector. Prevailing wages are used by the state as a market participant and are inappropriate for the state to use in a regulatory role. The Legislature would also be usurping federal jurisdiction in this area. This change would minimize the opportunity of nonunion shops to work in refineries. Actual refinery work is unlikely to match the prevailing wage scopes of work. Refinery work often involves workers skilled in multiple crafts, and this bill would create jurisdictional boundary issues between scopes of work in these trades.
(Other) None.