{"id":100828,"date":"2022-12-19T08:01:40","date_gmt":"2022-12-19T13:01:40","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/\/?p=100828"},"modified":"2023-03-01T13:42:40","modified_gmt":"2023-03-01T18:42:40","slug":"prevailing-wage-apprenticeship-requirements-new-challenges","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/\/2022\/12\/prevailing-wage-apprenticeship-requirements-new-challenges\/","title":{"rendered":"Prevailing wage and apprenticeship requirements bring new challenges to large solar projects"},"content":{"rendered":"
HSGS workers install a rooftop array.<\/p><\/div>\n
The Inflation Reduction Act established 10 years of solar tax incentives, but added new requirements to reach the full 30% ITC for projects 1 MWAC<\/sub> and larger. Starting on January 30, 2023, contractors with four or more workers on a jobsite must employ apprentices for a certain number of labor-hours and pay prevailing wages to all workers to receive the full tax incentive.<\/p>\n Project contractors are responsible for meeting these new requirements, adding a layer of risk for all large solar project partners that wasn\u2019t there before.<\/p>\n Categorizing workers correctly for prevailing wage calculation could be a challenge for solar companies, where workers are performing many different roles on a jobsite. In its November 2022 guidance<\/a>, the Dept. of the Treasury advised contractors to visit the Dept. of Labor’s website sam.gov<\/em> to locate the Davis-Bacon Act’s mandated prevailing wage information across the country. Sam.gov<\/em> is a database searchable by state and broken down by county and type of laborer.<\/p>\n “Part one is figuring out what the right wages are, and then it’s how do you maintain records?” said Eli Hinckley, partner at law firm Baker Botts. “I think that the key is having good justification for why you’ve categorized things the way you have.\u201d<\/p>\n If there’s no applicable prevailing wage for a type of worker in a particular county, Treasury instructs contractors to contact the Dept. of Labor\u2019s Wage and Hour Division by email at IRAprevailingwage@dol.gov<\/em><\/a>. Contractors should note in the email the type of facility, location, proposed labor classifications, proposed prevailing wage rates, job descriptions and duties, and any rationale for the proposed classifications.<\/p>\n However, Hinckley expects an email process with the federal government could pose its own issues.<\/p>\n “Ever emailed the government for anything? Unless it’s automated, it’s very difficult to get an answer on a one-off basis,” he said.<\/p>\n SEIA’s VP of state and regulatory affairs, Sean Gallagher, believes that categorizing workers will be simple in most cases and won’t require a conversation with the government. But he still believes the industry could use some more clarification to ensure that subjective worker categorizations don’t cost project owners their tax credits.<\/p>\n “Most of the work of solar projects, it’s reasonably straightforward. It’s electrical work, it\u2019s laborer work, or it\u2019s operating engineers and pile-driving work,” Gallagher said. “You assign the workers to those classifications, and the prevailing wage is published, and you pay the prevailing wage, and you keep good records, and you’re all set.”<\/p>\n A job like un-crating solar panels and moving them around the site could be done by a carpenter, an electrician or a laborer, leaving contractors to decide which prevailing wage classification applies to the worker.<\/p>\n “I think we would like more guidance from Treasury on\u2026if the employer makes a rational choice, based on precedent, to classify workers a particular way or assign the work to a particular classification, and pays the worker correctly in the classification, then the employer is not subject to later challenges,” Gallagher said.<\/p>\n Any solar contractor that employs four or more workers must now hire a certain number of apprentices based on total project labor hours. In 2023, apprentices must perform 12.5% of the total labor hours of construction, alteration or repair work. In 2024, that number increases to 15%.<\/p>\n HSGS<\/p><\/div>\n Requiring apprentices could also bring some growing pains to the solar industry. Electricians have extensive apprenticeship programs nationwide, but the Dept. of Labor doesn\u2019t recognize a national solar installer apprenticeship yet. Only Florida has successfully registered a state Solar Technician apprenticeship program<\/a> with the DOL. Solar companies might be able to find electrical apprentices but will likely need other types of apprentices on jobsites \u2014 from laborers to solar installers.<\/p>\n Big companies are already creating in-house apprenticeship programs to meet these new metrics. Moss Construction started a program in Florida, with plans to expand into all states in which it works. The company says apprentices who complete the program will receive a “Nationally Recognized Certificate in the Occupation of Solar Installer.”<\/p>\n \u201cThe Moss Apprenticeship Program was developed in response to the labor needs facing our growing industry as well as to address the recently passed IRA legislation requiring apprentice-to-journey-worker ratios,\u201d said Andrew McAllister, president and chief scaling officer at Moss, in a press statement. \u201cIt also reinforces Moss\u2019 focus on safety and quality by having an exceptional workforce.\u201d<\/p>\nPrevailing wages<\/strong><\/h3>\n
Apprenticeships<\/strong><\/h3>\n