Local hiring

Local hiring is a goal or requirement to hire people who live close to the place of work. This aim is often more specifically structured as a requirement for contractors awarded certain types of publicly funded projects to recruit a certain proportion of the people working on the project from a particular area.

Proponents of local hiring ordinances claim the practice:

Opponents of local hiring ordinances point to economic factors and public policy arguments:

The environmental benefit of local hiring comes principally because employing a greater percentage of local workers leads to shorter commutes and a greater ability to walk, bike, and take public transit to work. This results in reductions in air pollution, including greenhouse gases.

Local hiring is an aspect of the relocalization movement. Mandating that contractors hire locally means residents can work closer to home, spending less time traveling to and from their jobs. As Robert D. Putnam notes in Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community, each additional ten minutes spent commuting leads to a ten percent decline in all areas of civic engagement.[1] Therefore, local hiring may be one tool municipalities can use to increase community involvement.

The City and County of San Francisco Board of Supervisors passed the strongest local hiring ordinance in the United States on December 14, 2010.[2] This legislation, sponsored by Supervisor John Avalos, requires 20% of construction workers on city projects in 2011-12 to live locally, rising to 50% by 2017. 50% of apprentices on these projects must live locally. The ordinance has per-trade requirements set at half the overall level (e.g. by 2017, 25% of workers in any trade must live locally). The local hire requirement replaced a previous goal-based approach that had proved ineffective, with only 20% of hours on city project being worked by San Francisco residents in the period July 2009 to late 2010. The new ordinance became law on March 25, 2011.[3]

References

  1. Putnam, Robert D., Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community, New York: Simon & Schuster, p. 544, ISBN 978-0-7432-0304-3
  2. Upton, John. "SF Adopts Local Hiring Law". The Bay Citizen. Retrieved 2011-08-11.
  3. "San Francisco Local Hiring Policy for Construction" (PDF). San Francisco Board of Supervisors. Retrieved 2011-04-14.
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