HB 17-1300
signedApprentice Utilization In Public Projects
Plain-English Summary
AI-generatedHB 17-1300, also known as the Apprentice Utilization In Public Projects bill, requires contractors working on state-funded public projects costing $500,000 or more to hire apprentices for at least 25% of their workforce. This applies only to projects that don't receive federal funding and ensures these apprentices are registered with a U.S. Department of Labor program. Contractors must submit proof upon project completion that they've met this requirement or provide documentation showing why it wasn’t possible, otherwise they could face financial penalties. The bill is now signed into law, meaning contractors must comply with its requirements for eligible public projects moving forward.
Official Summary
The bill requires the contractor for any public project that does not receive any federal moneys to use apprentices registered with an apprenticeship program for at least 25% of the workforce in an apprenticeable occupation that is hired to work on the public project (apprenticeship requirements). For purposes of the bill, a public project is a project under the supervision of any state agency, including the department of transportation, that is likely to cost $500,000 or more in any fiscal year. The apprenticeship program must be registered with the United States department of labor, office of apprenticeship. A government agency may consider a bid or proposal for a public project that does not receive any federal moneys only if the bid or proposal indicates that at least 25% of the project workforce that is in an apprenticeable occupation and that is hired by the contractor to work on the public project will be apprentices registered with an apprenticeship program. Upon completion of a public project, the contractor is required to submit an affidavit to the government agency stating that the contractor has satisfied the apprenticeship requirements or made a good faith effort to comply with the apprenticeship requirements. If the contractor complied with the requirements, the affidavit must include the names of the registered apprentices, identify the specific apprenticeship programs with which the apprentices are registered, and specify the total number of people in the workforce for the public project who are in apprenticeable occupations. If the contractor was unable to comply with the apprenticeship requirements, the affidavit must include documentation of the contractor's good faith efforts to comply and the reason why compliance was not possible. If the contractor fails to submit the affidavit or if the state agency finds that the affidavit does not reflect the contractor's compliance or good faith effort to comply with the apprenticeship requirements, the agency may retain any unallocated portion of the amount of the contract price that the agency is authorized to withhold until the contract is completed as liquidated damages. A contractor that is awarded a contract by a state agency shall require, through private contract, that any subcontractor used to fulfill the terms of the contract complies with the apprenticeship requirements. The contractor may require, through private contract, that a subcontractor provide necessary information to allow the contractor to comply with the affidavit requirements. The bill specifies that the apprenticeship requirements do not supersede existing statutory requirements for licensed apprenticeable occupations. (Note: This summary applies to the reengrossed version of this bill as introduced in the second house.)
Details
- Chamber
- House
- First action
- 2017-05-01
- Latest action
- 2017-03-28
- Last action desc.
- Introduced In House - Assigned to Business Affairs and Labor
- OpenStates
- View source ↗
Sponsors
- Adrienne Benavidez (primary) · Democratic