The Davis-Bacon Act of 1931 is a United States federal law which established the requirement for paying prevailing wages on public works projects. All federal government construction contracts, and most contracts for federally assisted construction over $2,000, must include provisions for paying workers on-site no less than the locally prevailing wages and benefits paid on similar projects.
The act is named after its Republican sponsors, James "Puddler Jim" Davis, a Senator from Pennsylvania and a former Secretary of Labor under three presidents, and Representative Robert L. Bacon of Long Island, New York.
Rep. Bacon--whose pet issue was protecting America’s racial "homogeneity"--initially introduced what became the Davis-Bacon Act in 1927 after a contractor employed African-American workers from Alabama to build a Veteran’s Bureau hospital in his district. The "neighboring community," Bacon reported, was "very upset," as were local unions. The legislative history of Davis-Bacon reflects a desire by Congress to reserve jobs on federal projects for local, union workers, at the expense especially of itinerant black workers.
The Act was modified again in 1964 to include fringe benefits in the calculation of prevailing wages.
In 1994, the Davis-Bacon act was amended so that the construction, renovation or repair of buildings used by Head Start programs, are also subject to the requirements of the Davis-Bacon Act.
The Davis-Bacon Act was suspended by President Richard Nixon for 28 days in February 1971 in efforts to reduce inflation pressures. Labor Secretary Peter J. Brennan accused the Nixon administration of treating construction workers as patsies. Shortly afterward Nixon reinstated Davies-Bacon enforcement and ordered the establishment of the Construction Industry Stabilization Committee.
In September 1992 President George H. W. Bush indefinitely suspended the Davis-Bacon Act during the recovery from Hurricane Andrew in 1992. After Bill Clinton became president, he re-instated the Act in March of 1993.
On September 7, 2005, President George W. Bush, citing a "national emergency," again suspended the Act in the areas of Alabama, Florida, Louisiana and Mississippi ravaged by Hurricane Katrina.
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