Friday, May 13, 2011

Phantom Crane Operators Rake in $400,000 in No Show/No Work Ground Zero Construction Projects Thanks to Mobbed Up IUOE Locals


A series of no-work and no-show jobs for construction projects at Ground Zero in Lower Manhattan from a pair of union locals under Fed scrutiny for ties to the Colombo and Genovese crime families is adding more than $96 million to the overall costs, a New York developer group claims.

Outdated rules would allow some members of the International Union of Operating Engineers (IUOE) to pocket an annual salary of anywhere between $135,000 to $405,000 for doing not much more than showing up to projects that include the Freedom Tower, the 9/11 memorial, a transit hub and work on adjacent streets.
Contractor and union sources confirmed that the eight tower cranes at the WTC site guarantee a bonanza for Local 14 operating engineers and the Local 15 specialists who fix them.

On one day in mid-March, for example, contractors said 56 of 204 Local 14 and Local 15 employees on site held no-work jobs.

The board compiled the statistics in the runup to contract talks with the operating engineers and all the city's construction unions, which start next month.

Local 14 and 15 officials did not return calls seeking comment.

Many of the jobs are vestiges of an era in which the Colombo and Genovese crime families controlled Locals 14 and 15. Local 14 has been under a federal monitor since 2009.

One example is the full-time Local 14 "master mechanics" the contractor must hire whenever five pieces of heavy equipment or three tower cranes are in use.

With a $135,000 base salary, a master mechanic can make a staggering $405,000 a year with overtime that's guaranteed by six-day, 12- to 16-hour-a-day schedules. Welfare benefits, insurance and other costs hike the annual bill to $700,000 for that one mechanic.

It's a ridiculous requirement, REBNY says, because the manufacturer or crane owner does the repairs, not the contractor's master mechanics.

Instead, they are glorified shop stewards, a part-time job in most unions. With three required on site a day, that should cost about $6.3 million through 2013, the board says.

Master mechanic Carl Carrara Sr., identified as a Genovese associate, was charged in a 2003 racketeering conspiracy as the mob's point man in a no-show scam at the Museum of Modern Art.

He and six other master mechanics pleaded guilty that year in two cases that put much of Local 14 and 15's leadership behind bars.

Local 15 demands a similar piece of the action via "®maintenance engineers." They're required on site full time when a master mechanic is there and three major pieces of equipment are operating in case any machines need fixing.

"There is nothing for these guys to do," a World Trade Center construction supervisor said. Eliminating that requirement would save $7.5 million over three years at Ground Zero, REBNY says.

Then there's the Local 15 position of "crane oiler," a relic from the days when equipment needed frequent lubrication. An oiler is required on site when any tower crane is in use.

Today, the oiler simply fires up the crane at the start of work. With overtime, he can earn more than $100,000 a year.

And there's Local 14's "stationary equipment operator," with one assigned to each compressor, welding machine and spray fireproofer in use. With overtime, they pull down about $110,000 a year, REBNY estimated.

A World Trade Center construction supervisor who asked not to be identified said technology has reduced the job to two simple functions: "They turn the machine on in the morning and turn it off at night," the supervisor said. "They are basically non-essential."

REBNY wants the city to loosen the union's influence over who gets licensed to operate heavy machinery.

Now, only operators with city licenses can work here, and applicants must train with city crane operators - virtually all union workers. That gives the two locals a stranglehold on major projects.

"Locals 14 and 15 have the hammer. They have the power to shut down a job," said Steven Spinola, president of REBNY, which wants to be able to hire nationally licensed crane operators.
Local 14 has been under the supervision of a federal court since 2008 as part of an agreement reached between prosecutors and the International Union of Operating Engineers. Members of the locals- acting on behalf of the Genovese and Colombo crime families- were awarding no-show jobs arranged by IUOE Locals 14 and 15. Some members of the local had also been charged by Federal Prosecutors in a 61-count indictment for involvement with a mob run no-show scam during the Museum of Modern Art's renovation between 2002 and 2004.

[hat tip- Lonely Conservative: Labor Union Report/Cross Posted at Not Another New England Sports Blog!]

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