Regulation of Wages Paid to Employees by Contractors Awarded Government Building Contracts: Hearings Before the Committee on Labor, House of Representatives, Seventy-second Congress, First Session, on H. R. 12, 122, 7005, 7254, and H. J. Res. 38, Bills Relating to the Rate of Wages for Laborers and Mechanics Employed on Public Buildings of the United States and the District of Columbia by Contractors and Subcontractors, and for Other Purposes. January 13, 14, 15, 19, 20, 21, 22, and 27, 1932U.S. Government Printing Office, 1932 - 262 lappuses |
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$1 per hour 8-hour day 90 cents affiant further deposing affidavit Assistant Secretary HEATH Bacon-Davis Barksdale Field bill bricklayers BROWN building trades carpenters CARTER cents an hour cents per hour CHAIRMAN committee common labor Comptroller CONGRESS THE LIBRARY construction contracting officer contractor CowPER deposes and says District of Columbia employed employees employment engineers Executive order Federation of Labor foreman further deposing says going Government GREEN January January 25 KELLER KOPP laborer or mechanic legislation levee LIBRARY OF CONGRESS LOVETTE matter McCarl ment Minn Mississippi River Notary Public pay the prevailing post office President prevailing rate provision public buildings question rate of wage Rock Island Secretary DOAK Secretary of Labor Secretary of War Shreveport specifications statement subcontractor Subscribed and sworn thing tion tractors union United Veterans W. P. Rose wage law wage rates WALBRIDGE War Department Washington WELCH West Point workers
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3. lappuse - Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That every contract hereafter made to which the United States, any Territory, or the District of Columbia is a party, and every such contract made for or on behalf of the United States, or any Territory, or said District, which may require or involve the employment of laborers or mechanics...
3. lappuse - That in case of national .emergency the President is authorized to suspend the provisions of •this Act.
2. lappuse - Territory contracting by the officer or person whose duty it shall be to approve the payment of the moneys due under such contract, whether the violation of the provisions of such contract is by the contractor or any subcontractor.
3. lappuse - District, which may require or involve the employment of laborers or mechanics shall contain a provision that no laborer or mechanic doing any part of the work contemplated by the contract in the employ of the contractor or any subcontractor contracting for any part of said work contemplated shall be required or permitted to work more than eight hours in any one calendar day upon such work...
3. lappuse - ... not less than the prevailing rate of wages for work of a similar nature prevailing in the vicinity shall be paid to such laborers or mechanics.
238. lappuse - The result is that the application of the law depends, not upon a word of fixed meaning in itself, or one made definite by statutory or judicial definition, or by the context or other legitimate aid to its construction, but upon the probably varying impressions of juries as to whether given areas are or are not to be included within particular localities. The constitutional guaranty of due process cannot be allowed to rest upon a support so equivocal.
46. lappuse - Cole, being first duly sworn, on oath deposes and says : That he is a...
181. lappuse - ... the scale of wages to be paid shall be posted by the contractor in a prominent and easily accessible place at the site of the work...
241. lappuse - That every contract in excess of $5,000 in amount, to which the United States or the District of Columbia is a party, which requires or involves the employment of laborers or mechanics in the construction, alteration, and/or repair of any public buildings of the United States or the District of Columbia...
238. lappuse - For the vice of the statute here lies in the impossibility of ascertaining, by any reasonable test, that the legislature meant one thing rather than another, and in the futility of an attempt to apply a requirement, which assumes the existence of a rate of wages single in amount, to a rate in fact composed of a multitude of gradations. To construe the phrase