February 15, 2006
2 Major Construction Unions Plan to Leave A.F.L.-C.I.O. Unit. 
By STEVEN GREENHOUSE
The national labor movement suffered a new split yesterday when two major 
construction unions * the laborers and the operating engineers * announced that 
they were quitting the Building and Construction Trades Department of the 
A.F.L.-C.I.O. 

The unions also said they would soon announce the creation of a rival building 
trades group, the National Construction Alliance, that would include the 
carpenters, the bricklayers, the iron workers and the Teamsters. The new group, 
officials from the two unions said, would have more than 1.5 million members 
and would be more vigorous than the Building and Construction Trades Department 
in unionizing construction workers. 

"We cannot stand idly by, tied to a past that promises only further decline for 
construction workers," said Terence M. O'Sullivan, president of the Laborers 
International Union of North America, which has 700,000 members. He indicated 
that his union would soon quit the A.F.L.-C.I.O., following five other unions 
that have left the federation in the past year. 

Mr. O'Sullivan and Vincent J. Giblin, president of the International Union of 
Operating Engineers, said the Building and Construction Trades Department had 
been ineffective in stopping a decline in construction union membership. The 
percentage of construction workers who are unionized has plunged to 13 percent 
today from 40 percent in 1973. 

In recent days, officials with the A.F.L.-C.I.O. and several construction 
unions have engaged in intense talks with Mr. O'Sullivan and Mr. Giblin to try 
to persuade them not to quit the building trades department. 

"We're saddened by their decision to leave," said Sean McGarvey, the 
department's secretary-treasurer. "This is a net negative for unionized 
construction workers as we're faced with one of the biggest building booms 
ever."

He said some builders might grow more reluctant to deal with unions if they 
risked being called on to sign differing contracts with rival construction 
federations.

The laborers and operating engineers, which has 400,000 members, had threatened 
to quit the building trades department unless four demands were met: replacing 
the department's leaders; trimming its budget; having a voting system of one 
worker, one vote; and updating a system several decades old for determining 
which unions are to have jurisdiction over which types of work. 

Mr. McGarvey and A.F.L.-C.I.O. officials said they had gone far to satisfy Mr. 
O'Sullivan and Mr. Giblin on all but one demand: replacing the leaders of the 
building trades department.

Mr. Giblin said yesterday that the department's current leadership was 
indecisive, ineffectual and directionless. But several union presidents 
rejected the demand for new leadership and rallied behind Edward C. Sullivan, 
the department's president.

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