BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    




                   Senate Appropriations Committee Fiscal Summary
                           Senator Christine Kehoe, Chair

                                           677 (Solorio)
          
          Hearing Date:  8/17/2009        Amended: 7/23/2009
          Consultant:  Bob Franzoia       Policy Vote: L&IR 4-1
          _________________________________________________________________ 
          ____
          BILL SUMMARY: AB 677 would revise the definition of "public  
          works," for the purpose of requiring the payment of prevailing  
          rate of per diem wages, to include work performed under private  
          contract in connection with the construction or maintenance of  
          renewable energy generation capacity on property wholly or  
          partially owned by a school or community college district or on  
          public property specifically to serve a school or community  
          college district.
          _________________________________________________________________ 
          ____
                            Fiscal Impact (in thousands)

           Major Provisions         2009-10      2010-11       2011-12     Fund
           Revision of definition of         Up to $30   Up to $60 Up to  
          $60                    Special*
          public works                                            

          * Labor Enforcement and Compliance Fund
          _________________________________________________________________ 
          ____

          STAFF COMMENTS: The prevailing wage rate is the basic hourly  
          rate paid on public works projects to a majority of workers  
          engaged in a particular craft, classification or type of work  
          within the locality and in the nearest labor market area (if a  
          majority of such workers are paid at a single rate).  If there  
          is no single rate paid to a majority, then the single or modal  
          rate being paid to the greater number of workers is prevailing.   


          Prevailing wages must be paid to all workers employed on a  
          public works project when the public works project is over  
          $1,000. If an awarding body elects to initiate and enforce a  
          labor compliance program, that has been approved by the Director  
          of the Department of Industrial Relations, for every public  
          works project under the authority of the awarding body,  
          prevailing wages are not required to be paid for any public  










          works project of $25,000 or less when the project is for  
          construction work, or for any public works project of $15,000 or  
          less when the project is for alteration, demolition, repair, or  
          maintenance work.  These rates are established and issued by the  
          Division of Labor Statistics and Research and enforced by the  
          Division of Labor Standards Enforcement (DSLE) within the  
          Department of Industrial Relations.

          Energy development companies may partner with private investment  
          companies and secure energy development agreements with school  
          and community college districts.  The school or community  
          college district permits the partnership to build an energy  
          project, usually a solar photovoltaic system, and may contract  
          to purchase the electricity.  According to this bill, such  
          projects would be determined to be public works and require the  
          payment of prevailing wages to workers on the project. 

          At this time, there is little information on the potential  
          workload resulting from an increase in requests for public works  
          coverage determinations.  For purposes of
          Page 2
          AB 677 (Solorio)

          providing a cost reference, staff notes there are approximately  
          1,000 school districts and 72 community college districts.  If  
          ten percent of these districts permitted such energy projects  
          annually, there would be 107 projects that may result in a  
          prevailing wage enforcement workload increase to the DLSE.  This  
          analysis assumes that if half of the projects required DLSE  
          coverage determinations, that workload would be require up to  
          one half time Deputy Labor Commissioner III ($6,107 mid range  
          monthly). 

          Deputy Labor Commissioners I and II have monthly salary ranges  
          of $4,357 to $5,361 and $5,027 to $6,186 respectively.

          As part of the state government trailer bill Chapter 12 /2009  
          (AB 12x4, Evans), the Director of Industrial Relations would be  
          authorized to levy a separate surcharge upon all employers, as  
          defined, for the purposes of deposit in the newly created Labor  
          Enforcement and Compliance Fund.  Chapter 12 requires that the  
          total amount of the surcharges be allocated between employers in  
          proportion to payroll respectively paid in the most recent year  
          for which payroll information is available.  The surcharge  
          levied shall not exceed $37,000,000 in the 2009-10, adjusted for  
          as appropriate to reconcile any over/under assessments from  










          previous fiscal years, and shall not be adjusted each year  
          thereafter by more than the state-local government deflator.   
          The cap of $37,000,000 represents the amount expended by the  
          DSLE in 2008-09 for the enforcement of wage and hour violations.  
           With this cap, the DLSE will be force to begin prioritizing  
          enforcement activities if enforcement duties and costs exceed  
          the cap as adjusted by the deflator.  For 2009-10, the deflator  
          was 0.003 percent.  For 2010-11, deflator is estimated to  
          increase to 0.014 for an increase of $518,000 in additional  
          enforcement funding.