Posted by on May 14, 2013 at 01:29 PM

Learn more about the WRTA Bus Hub project by clicking here to see it in our online portfolio.
Welcome to our blog! Here you'll find updated news and information about the New England Regional Council of Carpenters

Learn more about the WRTA Bus Hub project by clicking here to see it in our online portfolio.

Learn more about the St. Vincent Cancer Center project by clicking here to see it in our online portfolio.

Learn more about the Albert Shurman Center at UMass Medical School building project by clicking here to see it in our online portfolio.
An exciting project for one of Boston's neighborhoods and some of the carpenters who live there.
Learn more about the Kensington Building project by clicking here to see it in our online portfolio.
David Rampone, President of Hart Engineering, a signatory contractor based in Cumberland, Rhode Island isn't shy about being a union contractor. Last year he volunteered to be one of the latest union contractors to do a radio ad on behalf of the New England Regional Council of Carpenters. Now, he's published an opinion piece in the Providence Journal explaining why his business is better with a union partnership. Click through to read it.
The following opinion piece appeared in the January 10 print edition of the Providence Journal-Bulletin.
DAVID RAMPONE
Regarding Charles Chieppo’s Dec. 20 column, “Unions are 1 percenters in Mass.,” in which he portrayed the construction industry inaccurately:
As the chief executive of a major Rhode lsland construction firm that does work all over New England, I’ll set the record straight. I am the president of Hart Engineering Corp., a general and process mechanical contractor founded over 70 years ago and based in Cumberland.
While I have read several opinion pieces by “public-relations experts” articulating the “evils” of the unionized construction industry, it needs to be pointed out that these experts have no actual experience in the construction industry and draw their conclusions based purely on anecdotal information provided by those who wish to see the unionized construction industry fail.
For the record, the National Labor Relations Act lets construction companies decide for themselves whether to be affiliated with the industry’s trade unions. It is the only industry that has such a provision. Since its inception, our firm has made the business-driven decision to be affiliated with several trade unions — a decision that has been beneficial to both our company and employees.
Currently we employ more than100 union tradesmen and women on dozens of jobs, large and small, throughout New England. These employees receive a fair wage, full health-care benefits and pension contributions — a package that lets them provide their families with a respectable standard of living. And in light of the negative attention cast on public-sector unions in these times, note that unionized construction workers are not guaranteed employment. In fact, Rhode Island unionized construction workers average about 1,500 hours worked a year. They do not receive vacation time, sick days or holiday pay, nor do they receive any benefits if they do not work the required number of hours a year — usually between 1,200 and 1,400, depending on the trade union involved.
Beyond my own company, the performance of Rhode Island’s trade unions and union contractors speaks for itself. There are more than 200 local contractors with union agreements in the Rhode Island area, and there have been more than 50 all-union project labor agreements (PLAs) worth billions of dollars completed in this area, including most of the state’s highest-profile projects. Most of these PLAs have been in the private sector.
These agreements symbolize the marketplace at work. Owners, construction managers and contractors enter into these agreements for one reason only: It is in their best interest to do so. And why? The trade unions in partnership with their contractors invest millions of dollars annually recruiting, training and retraining their workers to provide the safest, most skilled workforce in our industry. In today’s world, owners want their projects completed safely, on time, under budget and to the highest level of quality possible. That is why owners from small firms to Fortune 500 companies enter into project labor agreements.
While there are far fewer PLAs in the public sector than in the private sector, they are becoming more prevalent. However, before any public entity in Rhode Island can implement a PLA, it must complete an independent “objective and reasoned” study that recommends their use.
The trade unions’ record of providing contractors and owners with a safe and productive workforce is unmatched in our industry. Those who oppose them assert that using nonunionized workers would provide the owner with great savings. Unfortunately, those savings are usually the result of substandard wages, failure to provide health-care benefits to employees, or misclassifying employees to pay them a lower wage.
For 70 years we have provided our clients with the safest, most capable and productive work force in the industry, and our employees with a fair wage and benefits for them and their families. We are proud of what we have been able to achieve with our union partners.
David Rampone is president of Hart Engineering Corp., in Cumberland.
Learn more about the Unum Building project by clicking here to see it in our online portfolio.
First they helped it win approval, now they're helping it become a reality. Union carpenters in Bridgeport are now building the Fairchild Wheeler Multi-Magnet School, a combination of facilities and programs that are bringing excitement and hope to a troubled area. The building will be LEED Gold Certified and offer Aeronautics, Information Technology and Zoological/Ecological programs underwritten by corporate sponsors. The 340,000 square foot building is the largest school project in Connecticut's history and is employing hundreds of local trades workers.
See more of this project and others in NERCC's Project Portfolio.
Learn more about the Portsmouth Middle School project by clicking here to see it in our online portfolio.

Learn more about The Highlands renovation project, by clicking here to view the project in our portfolio.

Check out more images from this unique project, which is designed to reduce the risk of damage to an aircraft in the event of an under-shoot, overshoot, or exit from the runway by clicking here.

Learn more about the Congreve Hall renovation project, by clicking here to view the project in our portfolio.

Learn more about the Service Credit Union building project, by clicking here to view the project in our portfolio.
The New England Carpenters Labor-Management Program is proud to provide an interesting look at the work of union contractors and carpenters at the Old Colony Housing Project in South Boston. The time lapse video, synchronized to music was shot over the course of a year, during the project's first phase. Suffolk Construction was the Construction Manager.
Union carpenters employed by Suffolk Construction and numerous subcontractors were proud to recently complete Phase One of the redevelopment of housing at Old Colony in South Boston. The project involved demolition of old buildings and construction of 116 energy efficient affordable apartment units as well as a 10,000 square-foot community center and other improvements and amenities. As the largest property managed by the Boston Housing Authority, demolition and construction was completed on a 15 acre occupied site containing 850 housing units. The project changes the face of a community and the lives of many who will live there.
Video of the three buildings in this piece was gathered over the course of a year, from December 2010 through December 2011 during almost weekly visits. Videographer Ellen Webber of the New England Carpenters Labor Management Program produced the piece.
See more pictures of this project in our online portfolio.

Learn more about the Natcik Hich School building project, by clicking here to view the project in our portfolio.

Learn more about the Natcik Hich School building project, by clicking here to view the project in our portfolio.

Learn more about the Vertex Pharmaceutical building project, by clicking here to view the project in our portfolio.

Learn more about the Saint Mary's Parish Center building project, by clicking here to view the project in our portfolio.

Learn more about the Putnam Voc-Tech High School building project, by clicking here to view the project in our portfolio.

Learn more about the Longmeadow Hich School building project, by clicking here to view the project in our portfolio.

Learn more about the Natcik Hich School building project, by clicking here to view the project in our portfolio.
New England Cable News last week reported on the work being done to rebuild Jackson Square in Boston. The piece includes an interview with the developer and also Charles Cofield. Cofield grew up in the area and is now working there as the carpenter steward and a member of Local 67.

Learn more about the United States Federal Courthouse located in Springfield, MA, by clicking here to view the project in our portfolio.

See more images of the new Wellesley High School here in our project portfolio.

See additional images of the Brayton Point Cooling Towers project in our portfolio by clicking here.

Check out the Harvard Innovation Lab in our project portfolio by clicking here.