On 9/30/05 10:16 AM, "Nick Arnett" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Today I wrote a letter urging my member of Congress to sign on > to legislation reinstating the wage protections enshrined in the > Davis-Bacon Act. Two hundred representatives and 30 senators > have already signed on. These numbers are encouraging, but they > are not enough. Please join me by calling on your member of > Congress to support the "Fair Wages for Hurricane Victims Act." > The people of the Gulf Coast are counting on us.
Why is it so important to keep this piece of racist depression-era crap on the books? Enshrined? Don't make me puke. Thanks for taking the party line and avoiding any rational thought on this issue. After all the volunteers go home, and they will, you will still have two to three years of rebuilding to do. How are you going to get all the skilled workers down there? I'm sure IBEW workers from NYC are just jumping at the chance to earn 9 bucks an hour. Do you have any kind of evidence of these 5.15 jobs? An ad in the paper to prove me wrong? This isn't about wages and you know it. It's about government work and union jobs and the nice cozy relationship enjoyed between the two. Everybody loves to complain about Haliburton, but if they were strident AFL-CIO you wouldn't hear one thing about them. Like the unions have never overcharged the US taxpayer for any government project. I won't be supporting the "Rebuild New Orleans With Union Labor or Else Act" or whatever it really is called. You could also explain to me how your motives are not political in nature and only in the best interest of the people affected by these storms. Realize that any person in the skilled trades down there has more than enough work to keep them busy for years to come. They can turn down any work that won't pay them what they think they are worth. So can the unskilled. They are people, not victims. Get your hands off them. Matthew Bos _______________________________________________ http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l
