Supervisors approve deal with trade and union organizations

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News releaseĀ 

The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors approved a motion authored by Supervisor Kathryn Barger and co-authored by Supervisor Janice Hahn that will result in the county executing a first-of-its-kind agreement with trade and union entities that will bring thousands of trade and skilled labor jobs to Los Angeles County, according to a statement released by Bargerā€™s office. 

ā€œThis motion will build up the future of the countyā€™s workforce so we can offer good-paying and stable careers for the next generation of skilled labor and trade workers,ā€ Barger said in the release. ā€œWeā€™ve been working on negotiations for six years to get all the components of this labor agreement right because cultivating a strong local economy means we need to offer diverse and attainable career paths, especially for individuals who choose to not attend college, those seeking a fair chance after past mistakes, foster youth, individuals experiencing homelessness, and veterans. This is an important win we can all be proud of today.ā€ 

ā€œThis countywide project labor agreement is going to open doors for so many people who have been locked out of these good-paying construction careers for too long,ā€ Supervisor Janice Hahn said. ā€œThe apprenticeships, job training and opportunities included in this policy are pathways to life-changing jobs for our residents and make it the most important workforce development policy our county has done in decades.ā€ 

Chris Hannan, executive secretary of the Los Angeles and Orange Counties Building Trades Council, addressed the Board in person to share his thanks. 

ā€œOn behalf of the 140,000 members of the Los Angeles and Orange Counties Building Trades Council, I would like to thank the Board of Supervisors for their leadership today and for the many years leading up to this motion,ā€ Hannan said. ā€œThis is going to create thousands of opportunities for county residents in the years to come.ā€  

The Countywide Community Workforce Agreement will be effective for five years and will apply to L.A. County projects that have a minimum construction contract value of $5 million.  

Local unions will be required to provide project contractors who enter into a business agreement with Los Angeles County with sufficient qualified local and targeted workers to meet the new labor requirements established by the agreement, the statement from Bargerā€™s office said. 

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