Norwich considers labor agreement for school construction project

Jan. 6—NORWICH — As the $385 million school construction project gets underway, city officials are considering whether to enter a project labor agreement with local trade unions that would mandate a percentage of Norwich workers be employed on the project.

The proposed agreement with the Norwich-New London Building Trades Council faces staunch criticism from Republican Mayor Peter Nystrom and by the Connecticut Chapter of Associated Builders and Contractors.

Trade union leaders and the director of the Connecticut State Building Trades Training Institute, BTTI, gave a lengthy presentation to the Norwich School Building Committee on Dec. 19 on how project labor agreements work. They discussed training high school graduates and the success of projects in 19 Connecticut cities and towns, including New London, Windham and Killingly.

Chris Fryxell from the Connecticut Chapter of Associated Builders and Contractors, requested to address the School Building Committee at its Jan. 23 meeting to counter their claims. Nystrom complained that the agreements would stifle bidding competition, raise costs and delay projects.

During their presentation, labor leaders said the opposite has been the experience in projects throughout the state, with projects finishing under budget, on time and with residents earning top wages and spending their money locally.

The School Building Committee is working on designs for the first two of four new elementary schools. The Greeneville and John B. Stanton schools will be built first at an estimated total cost of $126 million.

The School Building Committee and the City Council would have to approve the project labor agreement with the Norwich-New London Building Trades Council. School Building Committee Chairman and Democratic Alderman Mark Bettencourt said the committee should be ready to seek construction bids by the end of 2024, so an agreement would need to be approved before then.

Joe Toner, executive director of the Connecticut State Building Trades Council, told the School Building Committee that the agreement would set a percentage of project workers who are Norwich residents. An initial proposed agreement would have 25% Norwich residents required, with another 5% from New London County.

The Norwich-New London Building Trades Council has lists of members in 13 construction trades who live in Norwich. Union trade workers often travel to jobs, so a Norwich PLA would give them the chance to work close to home with the money they earn spent locally on housing, food, entertainment and other purchases, Toner said.