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TL:DR
The Los Angeles City Council Tuesday directed staff to commission a study analyzing the effects of implementing a minimum wage increase for construction workers building mid-size residential developments in the city.
Council members voted unanimously to approve a motion introduced by Councilman Curren Price in September alongside colleagues Hugo Soto-Martinez, Eunisses Hernandez, Bob Blumenfield, Heather Hutt and Ysabel Jurado. The council wants to raise the minimum wage for construction workers from $18 an hour to nearly $32.50 an hour, and add an additional health care credit of $7.65 per hour.
Council members also asked staff to examine alternative rates that may minimize potential negative impacts.
The policy would only affect workers who are building mid-size residential construction or any residential development, including mixed-use, with 10 or more units and under 85 feet in height.
Council members also requested the study of wages by construction project type, industry employment, housing construction development, individual earning and economic impacts to the L.A. and regional economy.
The council said raising wages for construction workers is necessary because of the need for more housing and rebuilding after the Palisades Fire. Additionally, members cited concerns about how federal immigration policies have impacted the construction industry.
β€œIn order to maintain and attract more workers into the mid-size residential construction industry to build the necessary housing supply our city desperately needs, we need to set a Residential Construction Minimum Wage, and address the high levels of wage theft and workers exploitation in this trade,” the motion said.
City staff are expected to solicit feedback from impacted industries and trades such as the Building Industry Association of Southern California, Los Angeles Builders Association, the Council of Infill Builders, the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce, as well as unions representing construction workers such as the Los Angeles/Orange County Building Trades Council and the Western States Regional Council of Carpenters.
Neither the Southern California Construction Union nor the Building Industry Association of Southern California immediately responded to a request for comment.
Earlier this year, city officials approved a minimum wage increase for hotel and airport workers. Those workers are expected to earn $30 an hour by 2028 β€” when the Olympic and Paralympic Games come to Los Angeles. Proponents argued the increase will allow workers to reap some of the economic benefits that will result from the international event.
Critics of the policy argued it will lead to layoffs and strain businesses already impacted by federal tariffs and other trade policies.

My Thoughts πŸ’­

Wow this rise in labor costs will cost construction costs to rise tremendously. Almost doubling the minimum wage is crazy. You would think if the builders were extremely profitable and needed more labor wages would rise right? I understand the goal but the path to get there is misguided. In my opinion
Given how extensively studied minimum wage policies are, the city council may as well commission a study on how gravity impacts construction and propose a law to reduce it.
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Having sat on enough policy committees I now see how this stuff works.
"Commissioning a study" is what happens when the majority thinks it's obviously a bad idea or a waste of time to talk about, but they don't want to say it outright for fear of the blowback they'll get from the wokies.
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Seattle made the mistake of actually doing a decent job forming their committee to evaluate the minimum wage effects.
When the prespecified empirical approach didn't yield the results they wanted, they just brought in a different batch of economists who would give them the right answers.
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Dang, I hadn't heard this story, but is not surprising
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @kepford 3s
This is how government works. Not new. Not unique. If you haven't seen it watch the BBC show "Yes Minister!" from the 1980s. Over and over again I see things from that show done in US government. And it's a hilarious show.
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42 sats \ 1 reply \ @kepford 24m
Indeed. It's stuff like this that explains why we still have killed socialism. Far to many non-socialists don't understand the price system.
But, more likely is that is is just a stalling tactic
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @kepford 1m
Been rewatching "Yes, Minister!" and doing a study is a classic stalling tactic as well as a way to look productive.
Even as skeptical people of government I think we often are not cynical enough. This is just how government works. It doesn't.
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This will increase all prices across California making it even more expensive for residents across the state. The path to reach the goal is misguided because this decision is a perfect illustration of high time preference(prices are high, lets increase wages).
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Politicians will do anything, no matter how absurd, to prove themselves useful.
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All govt directed wage policies are a bad idea. It's an intervention into the freedom of people to trade and make contracts. The very concept of Bitcoin undoes this. No third party intermediary.
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