Prevailing Wages: Minnesota has imposed rules promising higher wages to workers in state funded projects. Those projects must pay workers the ‘prevailing wage’ established for the type of expertise required. A survey of workers is taken, and the mathematical ‘mode’ is used to determine the prevailing wage. The mathematical mode is the wage that appears most frequently on the survey results. How does this work? Not well. The legislative auditor’s February 2007 report was critical of the state’s administration of the rules. From page 23, Summary, the auditor states:
…some prevailing wage rates do not reflect the majority of wages and benefits reported to the Department of Labor and Industry. This concern arises in part because Minnesota does not require the mode to represent a minimum percentage of reported rates.
He then continues:
While the department generally calculates prevailing wage rates in accordance with state law and rules, we found instances in which the department set rates without following all of the required procedures in its rules.
From page 33 of the same report we find an example explaining some of the auditor’s concerns: (click image to enlarge)

As a consequence of these rules, in the example provided by the auditor, all Le Sueur County Pipefitters and Steamfitters will be paid $43.31 per hour, even though the average is only $22.87. A disproportionately large reporting of union scale (uniform hourly rate) can distort the earnings considerably. Likewise, the absence of uniformity in wage reporting, such as you find with the Todd County Carpenters, can result in the opposite effect.
In the current economic environment, prevailing wage artificially creates high labor rates on state projects, a burden carried by the taxpayers of Minnesota. If regular market forces were allowed to respond to real wages, the same taxpayer dollar could be used to hire considerably more workers. In addition, no effort is made to limit the dispensing of state funds to out-of-state workers, giving rise to the situation where Minnesota taxpayers are funding other state’s residents.
3) Do you support the elimination of the “Prevailing Wage” rules designed to inflate the cost of payroll on state projects?
| Benoit: I absolutely support the elimination of the “prevailing wage” rules. Prevailing wage is part of the reason local units of government are unable to effectively build, expand and overall improve the services they provide. It is time for the tax payers not unions to determine what projects are approved and funded. As a State Senator, I should be able to propose elimination of the “prevailing wage” because I am not looking for funds and endorsements by unions if they don’t share my conservative solutions to fixing what is wrong with our government. |
Newman: Yes. Prevailing wage rules hold costs artificially high on state contracts. They are based on a theory that because someone in a different geographical location has a higher wage therefore that wage is due on all government projects. This is something you would not see in the private sector because it is not based on sound business principles. In the past I routinely voted against minimum wage bills for the same reason. |
| Mahlstedt: Prevailing wage rules, all of them, need to be rescinded. |
Wilson: The prevailing wage does not reflect the wage in a certain area and far too often drives the cost of projects up. We need to reform this issue and potentially eliminate it. |