Thank you.
Throughout these entire hearings I'm the only representative from the organized sector that's been here so I might ask for a little of your indulgence. There are a number of things that have been stated in some of the previous hearings that may require either some correction, or for things to be put into some perspective.
The position of the building trades unions in respect of the whole business of tendering is that we want federal infrastructure money to go further. We pay taxes too. We support competition. It's how our contractors stay in business. We want publicly funded construction to give best value. Value-based procurement is where sophisticated construction purchasers generally tend to go. They're looking at a life-cycle cost.
In the United States the low-bid system that works for almost all the work results in one construction dollar in ten being spent on litigation. We're concerned about quality, schedule, and budget.
The simple fact is that low bid isn't always low cost. Getting the best value is what you should be striving for. You have heard that this reduces competition and makes it difficult to schedule and budget, but there is no empirical evidence of that whatsoever; apocryphal evidence, yes. It would be my respectful suggestion that it would be appropriate for you as a committee to get some people who are knowledgeable and perhaps not self-interested to try to work through these issues.
In Canada 50% of the construction industry is residential. Neither Mr. Oakey, nor the Christian Labour Association, nor I have much presence in it. So the comments that you heard about 71% of the industry being frozen out is simply a fib. We represent roughly 38% of the entire industry or about 70% of the industrial, commercial, and institutional marketplace.
In reading the transcripts, it would seem to me that some of the comments that are made about the evil union monopoly really relate to four municipalities in Ontario. You need to have some perspective on the issue in Ontario.
The municipality was certified by the carpenters in accordance with the Ontario Labour Relations Act for carpenters only. There are 28 other trade groups in Ontario. The City of Hamilton, by self-performing the work, became a construction employer so they get, by operation of law, the carpenters industrial agreement, which has a subcontracting clause in it, but only for carpentry work. The cities of Hamilton and Kitchener, or anywhere else, may have to tender their carpenter work to a union contractor, but it doesn't force them to do that for any other trade.
You need to have some perspective on the issue that contractors generally tend to be frozen out. The problem may well be that they can't qualify to get on the bid list, but that's an owner decision not a labour relations issue. On any institutional, commercial, or industrial job carpenters are somewhere between 15% and 18% of the work.
If you look at that and you look at how much labour actually goes into the contracts, a residential contract is 50/50, labour and material. Commercial and institutional is between 25% and 40% labour. Industrial is 20% to 30%. The carpenters are less than 6% of all of the work on a commercial job.
To suggest that somehow the fact that they have a collective agreement would cost a 40% cost overrun is ludicrous. Overruns happen all the time. They happen to Merit contractors, Christian Labour contractors, building trades contractors, straight non-union contractors. It's the result of bad estimates; unforeseen circumstances; the inability to get men, material or equipment; disorganization; weather; strikes and lockouts; difficulty in proceeding. Everyone has them.
You have heard a number of estimates as to the cost of the so-called closed tender. In Quebec, they say it's 2% less; Cardus says it's 2% more. If you have a house in Gatineau built by union labour, it costs less than a house in Ottawa. How could that be? The suggestion that is made that 30% or 40% of infrastructure cost is left on the table means that our workers would have to work for free and bring their own material.
There are a host of U.S.-sponsored studies that say project labour agreements are good or project labour agreements are bad. It depends on the sponsor. There is no empirical evidence here, and maybe we need some.
What this seems to be about is the four municipalities in Ontario. This is a tempest in a teapot. If you look at Stats Canada's numbers, they will tell you there are 20,000 general contractors in Canada and 108,000 trade contractors; 95% of which have 10 or less employees. We're not talking about Bob's Painting and Al's Plumbing. We're talking about the roughly 5,000 contractors who are somewhat bigger and are in business. A number of them do not bid any work. They do invitational work from owners they have worked with for generations. A number of them are industrial or pipeline workers, or something else.
The fact is that owners in a public or private business should have a fiduciary relationship in procurement to get best value. How they tender the work should be up to them. There is 91% of the work in Ontario that is done by open tender. Federally, almost all work is open tender—the ship building contract being somewhat different—with qualification and invitational tenders being used for the appropriate kind of work.
The truth is that as an owner you are required to manage risk. You need to use a technique that deals with the risk, how you assume it, who assumes it, and how you ameliorate it. If you're going to do a renovation in a washroom in a school, maybe it's a purchase order. If you're going to do an annex to the school, maybe it's open tender. If you are building a complex new research facility for a $200 million, maybe it's qualified tenders. If you're going to build a $2.6 billion airport—I know that's the airport authority—maybe it's an invitational tender. If it's very complex work, maybe it's sole source or maybe it's a project labour agreement.
You've heard how pernicious and evil project labour agreements are, but here are some facts you should consider. BC Hydro, the various privatized electrical utilities in Alberta, SaskPower, Manitoba Hydro, Ontario Power Generation, Bruce Power, New Brunswick Power, Nova Scotia Power, and Nalcor, all use project labour agreements, as do most of the highly sophisticated purchasers of construction in this country.
Those people aren't necessarily the pals of unions. Toyota, a non-union employer, uses project labour agreements for all of its construction and maintenance, and so does Syncrude Canada. Why? They have looked at value, the skill of the contractor, its ability to engineer, and its management, management systems, financial strength, workers who are in good supply, and workers who are available. It's getting the certainty of a no-strike, no-lockout clause, and a workforce that all works under the same terms and conditions of employment, so the workers don't go shopping from place to place on the site.
On handling cost escalation, the truth is that non-union companies do not have fixed wage rates. Not having fixed wage rates means that if they are having a pinch to get people, they have to pay more. Cost is not certain.
With regard to harmony in the hours of work and diversity, in our collective agreement with Nalcor, we put 20¢ an hour into a diversity fund. We're trying to train people and to work with employers and owners to achieve their goals.
You've heard a lot of hogwash about how in Manitoba contractors have been frozen out. The truth is that Kiewit, a contractor, has the work at Wasquatum and the work at Pointe du Bois using the Burntwood/Nelson agreement. That agreement provides for hiring in the following order: northern aboriginal people who live in the Churchill-Burntwood-Nelson area, northern union members, northern aboriginals not living in the preferred area, and then any other northerner not listed above.
At Wasquatum, 40% of the job were aboriginal workers. I'll send you the collective agreement. On the floodway, anyone could bid. They needed to meet the training obligations and pay the same wages. Part of the work was reserved for aboriginal contractors. Aboriginal content was one-third, and 20% on the bridges. We'll send you the collective agreement. At Voisey's Bay under the collective agreement, 40% of the workforce were aboriginal people. At Nalcor, Innu and Labradorians get to go to work before local members.
The truth is that buying in on the idea that low bid is the lowest cost is an illusion. It is a simplistic solution to a complex question. Low bid is a one-dimensional look at your project. Low bid, completely open tender without qualifications, means that all someone has to do is hand in one sheet of paper, or two if you're going to qualify the bid. It costs a lot of money to do the analysis to prepare a proper bid. t's a half to one per cent of the cost of the work.
If I can get the work by taking a flyer on it, why would anyone want to waste their money in bidding?