Legal/Regulation: Page 39


  • Chicago council approves $6B Lincoln Yards, $7B The 78

    As a condition of city subsidies, Sterling Bay and Related must use 30% minority- and 10% woman-owned contractors on their respective mixed-use megaprojects.

    By Kim Slowey • April 12, 2019
  • Florida contractor receives 43rd OSHA citation, proposed $1M fine

    Travis Slaughter, owner of two roofing companies, also owes $2.2 million in previous penalties.

    By Kim Slowey • Updated Jan. 30, 2020
  • Trendline

    Legal Issues

    Contracts, disputes, change orders and delays can keep builders up at night. Construction Dive covers some of the top issues facing the industry.

    By Construction Dive staff
  • Lawyers: FIU bridge engineers dismissed cracks hours before collapse

    Lawyers in civil proceedings are hashing out who gave the all-clear before the deadly incident at Florida International University last March.

    By Kim Slowey • April 12, 2019
  • $4.6B construction bill heads to Washington state's Senate

    Public schools and colleges receive record funding and the largest share under the plan, which is part of a national push for infrastructure investment.

    By Kim Slowey • April 10, 2019
  • NABTU: Union, wage protections must underlie $1T infrastructure plan

    Union leaders and lawmakers at a conference this week called for prevailing wages, project labor agreements and other standards to be included.

    By Kathleen Brown • April 10, 2019
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    Bureau of Land Management
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    Opinion

    Why contractors should nix 'casual use' of jobsite drones

    As use of the technology expands, contractors, subs and other stakeholders should heed the safety and liability risks involved, an aviation attorney writes.

    By By Mark A. Dombroff • April 10, 2019
  • In Illinois, GCs could be on the hook for subs' unpaid wages

    As is the case in California and Maryland, the proposed law would subject prime contractors to potentially paying workers twice.

    By Kim Slowey • April 10, 2019
  • Labor secretary: OSHA jobsite inspections likely to increase

    The agency's visits to construction sites will ramp up once new inspectors are fully trained, labor department head Alexander Acosta told a House committee.

    By Kim Slowey • April 9, 2019
  • Colorado passes law making wage theft a felony

    Effective next year, the state will consider it a criminal offense to underpay full-time, contract, migratory or foreign laborers by $2,000 or more.

    By Kim Slowey • Updated May 17, 2019
  • San Diego airport officials vote to use PLA on $3B airport project

    San Diego International Airport staff said agreements with local unions are key to keeping the design-build redevelopment on pace with its five-year schedule.

    By Kim Slowey • April 8, 2019
  • Contractor sues developer over 'leaning' Manhattan high-rise

    Former construction manager Pizzarotti LLC stopped work, claiming the 58-story structure should have been anchored into bedrock with piles but that Fortis went with a cheaper, less-safe alternative, which the developer denies.

    By Kim Slowey • April 3, 2019
  • Bill aims to better classify California construction workers

    State legislators are considering a new test for contractors to use when deciding if laborers and tradesmen qualify as independent contractors.

    By Kim Slowey • April 2, 2019
  • OSHA slaps $106K on Georgia contractor's trenching hazards

    The citation and proposed fines resulted from investigators witnessing Corley Contractors expose employees to unsafe conditions at an Acworth jobsite.

    By Kim Slowey • April 2, 2019
  • Immigration reform could relieve pressure on Houston's construction labor market

    Allowing some type of legal status for the undocumented workers who make up almost one-third of the city's labor pool could reduce project costs and improve quality of work, local industry leaders say.

    By Kim Slowey • March 28, 2019
  • Chicago's building code overhauled after 70 years

    The modernization brings the city in line with international standards and gives contractors more options for building materials and technologies.

    By Kim Slowey • March 26, 2019
  • Contractor faces 20 years in prison for forced labor

    The owner of several construction companies in northern California held undocumented workers in captivity, refused them pay and forced 24-hour shifts.

    By Kim Slowey • March 25, 2019
  • LA's Oceanwide Plaza restarts, owing subs almost $100M

    The largest recorded mechanic's lien so far reportedly has been for almost $53 million from subcontractor Webcor.

    By Kim Slowey • March 25, 2019
  • Fed watchdog wants DOD to have better insight into contractors' safety records

    The Government Accountability Office said that OSHA violations should be tied to a company identification number so that defense contractors can weigh safety records before awarding projects.

    By Kim Slowey • March 21, 2019
  • Feds charge New Jersey contractor with defrauding schools

    Prosecutors allege that Orba Construction Co. turned in false certified payrolls for work it performed on New York City School Construction Authority projects.

    By Kim Slowey • March 19, 2019
  • UBC: $2.6B in taxes lost yearly to under-the-table pay

    The United Brotherhood of Carpenters chalks up most of the loss to labor brokers that provide contractors with cheap workers.

    By Kim Slowey • March 19, 2019
  • ABC branch sues school district over 'unconstitutional' PLAs

    Even low bidders aren't entitled to perform work for Minneapolis Public Schools unless they agree to hire union workers.

    By Kim Slowey • March 18, 2019
  • FEMA to fund only half of California's request for Oroville Dam repairs

    The federal agency approved only $333 million of the $639 million the state requested, reportedly citing the dam's condition prior to the 2017 failure. 

    By Kim Slowey • March 13, 2019
  • OSHA focuses blame for fatalities at Orlando hotel project to lead contractor

    Universal Engineering Sciences' citations for the JW Marriott incident last year were dropped while PCL's still stand.

    By Kim Slowey • Updated March 27, 2019
  • OSHA fines Pennsylvania contractor $209K for excavation violations

    Etna Construction did not provide employees protective systems or teach them how to recognize dangerous excavation conditions, the agency said.

    By Kim Slowey • March 11, 2019
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    Fotolia
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    Worker claims employer had him arrested based on his reporting of safety concerns

    A Department of Labor lawsuit alleges Boston-based Tara Construction facilitated an employee's immigration detention after an injury he reported sparked an OSHA investigation.

    By Kim Slowey • March 11, 2019