Black Workers Call for City Council Summit on Discrimination in Hiring on City Projects

Community meeting photo
Community meeting at the San Antonio Senior Center in the Fruitvale District to dis¬cuss racial disparities in hiring African American workers and contractors on City of Oakland building projects, Monday, Aug. 19, 2019. (Photo by: Ken Epstein)

By Ken Epstein

African American contrac­tors and construction workers are opposing a proposal that has been presented to the City Council requiring that all jobs on city projects be awarded to building trades unions that dis­criminate against Black work­ers.

“It’s a pure power play right now,” said one speaker, who is a member of four unions. “The (unions) are not designed to grow their membership. They are only designed to make the strong stronger. If anything, the unions are a detriment to anyone starting off (in con­struction).”

In response to charges that unions want to control the hir­ing on all city projects while excluding African American members, the City Council had previously asked the building trades to submit reports on the race and gender of their mem­bership.

So far, only six of 28 union locals have submitted that in­formation, according to city staff.

Reports by construction workers on the job indicate that African Americans are de­nied membership in almost all of these unions, while Latinos only find work in the labor­ers’ and to some extent in the carpenters’ unions. The higher paid trades, such as electri­cians, plumbers and heavy equipment operators are al­most all white.

Speakers at the Monday meeting, where council mem­bers Noel Gallo, District 5; and Loren Taylor, District 6, were in attendance, want the City Council to hear their concerns, not to be steamrolled by pow­erful interests into an agree­ment without a full discussion of the issues.

They are asking the coun­cil to hold a work session or a community summit rather than voting on the labor proposal at a council meeting, where speakers would only receive one minute to talk, and im­portant issues about persistent discrimination in the building trades might be buried.

The meeting was the third and final community engage­ment session called by the City Council to examine ways to mitigate inequities in a po­tential Project Labor Agree­ment, backed by local building trade unions and their support­ers, requiring developers on city projects to exclusively hire union workers for labor, while non-union contractors would be limited in their use of their non-union workers for projects that are built on city-owned land and or involve city funding.

Speakers also expressed concern that the building trades only sent people to the first community meeting sev­eral weeks ago at Castlemont High School but did not come back to second or third meet­ings, apparently not interested in engaging with Black Oak­landers about the issues they are raising.

This article originally appeared in Oakland Post.

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