Milestone Public-Private Collaboration Agreement Expands Construction Career Opportunities For Max Hayes Students
CLEVELAND, March 10, 2015 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The City of Cleveland, the Cleveland Metropolitan School District (CMSD), union representatives and the private sector today signed a milestone collaboration agreement aimed at increasing the number of diverse and City of Cleveland residents working on Greater Cleveland construction projects and facilitating a construction career path for students at the CMSD's Max Hayes High School. The signing was held at the offices of the Greater Cleveland Partnership
"I am happy our efforts led to an opportunity for Max Hayes students to enter the building trade apprenticeship program," said Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson upon signing the agreement.
Click to read the MOU amendment.
This new relationship among the construction collaboration stakeholders aligns with Max Hayes' transformational goal to be among the country's top career tech schools.
"I am particularly grateful for the full support of the Cleveland Building and Construction Trades Council (CBCTC) for their full engagement in the development of the new programming at Max Hayes planned for the Fall of 2015 as part of The Cleveland Plan and our commitment to using the public's construction dollars in support of our own students and residents," said CMSD CEO Eric Gordon.
Click to read letters from eight CBCTC member unions agreeing to partner with the CMSD.
All parties also have underscored their support for community benefit agreements—including the paying of prevailing wages—as an important component of expanding the number of diverse and local workers. This consensus represents an investment in the city and the community, said CBCTC Executive Secretary Dave Wondolowski.
"Today, the hard work of collectively convincing developers to enter into these agreements begins. But the reality of it lies in the fact that, as a developer, you want to invest in Cleveland, then you will buy into community benefits because when the people of this great city do better, local businesses will thrive and that's real investment."
The addition of prevailing wage is one of the desired outcomes of the Memorandum of Understanding that outlines the goals desired through Community Benefits. "We believe that true community benefits occur when there is equal access to opportunities, both for contracting and labor and that labor is paid at a good wage," said Brian Hall, executive director of the Commission on Economic Inclusion, a program of the GCP.
Signers of the collaboration agreement are:
Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson
Don Dreier, chairman, Construction Employers Association
Jose Feliciano, chairman, Hispanic Roundtable
William Gary, executive vice president, Cuyahoga Community College (for Tri-C President Alex Johnson)
Eric Gordon, CEO, CMSD
Marsha Mockabee, president and CEO, Urban League of Greater Cleveland
Terri Sandu, president, Hard-Hatted Women
Eddie Taylor, co-chair, Commission on Economic Inclusion
Dave Wondolowski, executive secretary, Cleveland Building and Construction Trades Council (CBCTC)
About the Commission on Economic Inclusion
The Commission on Economic Inclusion is a program of the Greater Cleveland Partnership (GCP). Its mission is "to significantly improve the level of inclusion-the meaningful involvement of minority businesses and individuals-in the economic engines that drive Northeast Ohio." www.commission-inclusion.com
SOURCE Greater Cleveland Partnership
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