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by SR2Z
485 days ago
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> The state I live in does not have approved contractors by jurisdiction, if you have a state license and any city specific licensing Unless I'm having a stroke, aren't counties/cities specific jurisdictions within a state? Licensing IS a set of approved contractors, and we would be lying to each other if we pretended that state licensing requirements are always entirely aboveboard. Where I live, the city is notorious for being captured by local unions and setting (ludicrously high) minimum wages for tradesmen to guarantee they remain competitive. |
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My employer holds contractor licenses in all 50 states. Please be specific about which things are not above board with regards to contractor licensing instead of allusion.
> Where I live, the city is notorious for being captured by local unions and setting (ludicrously high) minimum wages for tradesmen to guarantee they remain competitive.
Nobody is forcing you to live where you do. Major cities (sometimes states) do sometimes have rules about prevailing wages on publicly funded projects or city owned properties but I’ve never heard of forcing prevailing wages on private projects. If you have an example, I’d like to see.
Certain trade unions have been better about preventing non-union competition than others, pipefitters and sheet metal workers in particular, but I’m not aware of a jurisdiction that forces the use of union labor. If there is, I’d be curious to know what it is. Electricians are almost all union labor in Chicago due to the city’s electrical code requiring conduit and banning romex in residential construction.
By the way, I’m a construction project manager and deal with these things every single day.