New Jersey Laborers' Union
Members Contractors Owners/Developers
Health & Safety
Business Development
Training
Local Unions
Political Action
Organizing
Apprentice Program
Benefits
Join the Laborers

Help Menu

 

 

 

Information for Contractors

Contractor's Notes

Meeting the Challenges
Contracting 2002

By Donald Waters

New Jersey contracting is filled with risk and challenges. Competition is fierce. Regula-tions that can delay and disrupt the flow of work, coupled with unparalleled public demands for fast project completion, make for a pressure-cooker industry. Yet, there are many of my colleagues who will do nothing less than meet these challenges and help make New Jersey a better place to live and work.

My contracting vantage point in the public utilities contracting business brings me into contact with public and private sector contractors in both the heavy-highway and commercial building sectors. Here are some challenges contractors face in 2002 and beyond:

The quest for steady and reliable sources of construction funding: Heavy-highway contractors live in a roller coaster world that depends on steady tax receipts to state and federal government transportation trust funds for their core business. But, it is not just the road and transit contractors who depend on steady and dependable funding. Building contractors also need steady interest rates and business vitality to assure continued work in their office building and manufacturing facility markets. The ability to plan our work and to expand our businesses at the proper time can mean the difference between prospering or not surviving.

The essential need for ample numbers of qualified and dependable workers: The construction workforce is aging. The need to recruit and train the next generation of workers is a daunting task. We are helping spread the word about the good things our industry does in many ways. Contractors and their construction associations are working cooperatively with unions in programs such as New Jersey LECET and the Construction Industry Advancement Program to bring construction career information into the state's school classrooms. We are conducting construction industry career days and sponsoring summer work programs. We are encouraging pre-apprentice orientation programs and using apprentices on our projects as much as possible.

The challenge to man our future projects with capable young men and women will be met by working as an industry team.

The danger of regulatory melt down in New Jersey's economy: New Jersey is the most congested state in the nation, yet it is a tremendous struggle to add capacity to the state's transportation network. Goods movement and the ability to get employees to their work places are primary concerns of business leaders. The recent closure of the Edison Ford Motor plant was directly linked to a parts shipping cost into New Jersey and finished shipping costs out of New Jersey that is three times the cost other Ford locations experience.

Creative ways to meld the built environment with the natural environment can be carried out if reasonable people in positions of political and regulatory leadership stand up to those who would shut our state down to 'save' it.

The challenge to reduce construction accidents and make our work zones as safe as they can be: The construction process by its nature brings the construction worker into close contact with various hazards. Our industry is engaged in a concerted effort to raise safety awareness, to engineer safety into all our projects and to learn from our workers how to make our construction sites as safe as they can be. Too many contractors have had to make the fateful visit to an employee's family to explain that their father or husband will not be coming home tonight.

There is a special emphasis program by contractor associations and unions to improve work zone safety both for motorists and for our workers. With more night work and tight urban repair projects, we have to find innovative means to keep on-site machinery, nearby traffic and supplier trucks away from our workers. That is our goal and we cannot fail.

I am sure that other major challenges will surface for contractors as we pursue 21st century contracting. Indeed, programs like New Jersey LECET will help provide fresh approaches and stronger alliances to keep our industry moving

« Back to Main

 

Top of Page

 

2002 © LIUNA—All Rights Reserved. Legal & Privacy.

Contact Help Site Map Download Forms Home Contact Help Site Map Download Forms Home