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Fair Pay: Decent Wages Must Be Part of Obama's Jobs Package

Decent wages -- and strengthened union organizing -- must go hand-in-hand with any economic recovery plan.
January 12, 2009  |  
 
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Over the weekend, Barack Obama promised in his radio address a major "Made-in-America" jobs stimulus package that could add as many as four million new jobs to the American economy. Obama said, "Our first job is to put people back to work and get our economy working again. This is an extraordinary challenge." But it's vital that this spending be accompanied by vigorous enforcement of oft-flouted federal contracting laws that demand that decent wages be paid on jobs contracted with federal taxpayers' money.

As highlighted in December by a report by the Center for American Progress Action Fund:

The federal government is failing to live up to its legal and moral obligations as a model employer. Through numerous laws and executive orders, Congress and the executive branch have expressed a clear and long-standing objective to set and enforce high standards for the treatment of contracted workers. The federal government, however, is falling far short of this goal. Instead of helping to create quality jobs, all too often the federal government contracts with companies that pay very low wages and treat their workers poorly.

For taxpayers, shortchanging federal contract workers is often penny wise but pound foolish. Without decent wages, benefits, and working conditions, work quality can sometimes suffer due to high turnover, inadequate training and experience, and low morale. And when contract workers are poorly compensated, taxpayers often bear additional costs, such as for Medicaid and food stamps, in effect subsidizing low-road companies. But when contracted workers have quality jobs, taxpayers often receive quality work and law-abiding companies are able to compete on a level playing field. Moreover, like the canary-in-the-coal-mine warning of problems, contracted workers being treated poorly can be a sign that taxpayers are being hurt as well.

While Republicans are likely to take potshots at the Obama initiative, it's important to keep in mind that decent wages -- and strengthened union organizing through the Employee Free Choice Act -- must go hand-in-hand with any economic recovery plan. Indeed low, stagnant wages played a key role in the current economic meltdown. In her testimony on Friday, Labor Secretary nominee Rep. Hilda Solis placed great emphasis on ensuring fair pay and workplace safety, making enforcing federal contracting law a likely priority, but declined to address specifically her support of the Employee Free Choice Act, a bill she co-sponsored while in Congress.

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