CONGRESSIONAL REPEAL OF BLACKLISTING RULE PROTECTS THE INTEGRITY AND FAIRNESS OF THE FEDERAL CONTRACTING PROCESS, CONSTRUCTION OFFICIAL SAYS
Congressional Review Act Measure Repealing the Obama Administration's So-Called "Fair Pay and Safe Workplaces" Rule Protects Innocent Firms from Being Debarred by Unsubstantiated Allegations
News Release from AGC of America, March 7, 2017
The chief executive officer of the Associated General Contractors of America, Stephen E. Sandherr, issued the following statement in response to passage tonight of a Congressional Review Act measure repealing the Obama Administration's so-called "Fair Pay and Safe Workplaces" rule:
"Congress has wisely voted to preserve the integrity and fairness of the federal contracting process by voting to repeal former President Obama's blacklisting rule. This measure, the so-called Fair Pay and Safety Workplaces rule, would have allowed government officials to debar, or blacklist, construction companies from bidding on federal projects based on the mere allegation of labor law violations without any due process.
"To be clear, there should be no place in federal contracting for unsafe or unscrupulous firms. Yet the former President's measure did nothing to reform or improve the existing suspension and debarment process. Instead, it created a new layer of bureaucracy that would have given federal officials broad discretion to punish construction firms based on any number of unsubstantiated allegations without establishing a process for those firms to defend themselves. That is why the Associated General Contractors worked so aggressively to push for passage of today's repeal measure.
"We urge President Trump to sign this measure into law as quickly as possible."
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