THYSSEN SECURITY ELEVATOR
In re: Application of Wage Determination Nos.
PA960025, mod. 2, and PA960005, mod. 2,
applied respectively to elevator mechanics at
HUD No. 034-EE046/PA26-5951-005, Ivy House
and HUD No. 034-EE046/PA26-S941-007, Booth
Manor, both projects located in Philadelphia, PA.
Appearances:
For the Complainant:
Dale D. Goodman, pro se, King of Prussia, PA
For the Respondent:
Steven J. Mandel, Douglas J. Davidson, Leif G. Jorgenson, U.S.
Department of Labor, Washington, D.C.
REMAND ORDER
Thyssen Security Elevator ("Thyssen") has petitioned the Administrative
Review Board ("ARB") pursuant to 29 C.F.R. Parts 5 and 7, to review a determination issued
by the U.S. Department of Labor's Wage and Hour Division on July 8, 1999, in this case arising under the
Davis-Bacon Act ("DBA"), 40 U.S.C. §276a et seq. (1994). On September
15, 1999, the Deputy Administrator of the Wage and Hour Division filed a Motion to Remand for Lack
of Ripeness and to Suspend the Briefing Schedule ("Motion to Remand").
Thyssen is engaged in elevator construction work on two Davis-Bacon covered
projects, Booth Manor and Ivy House, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The initial endorsement of the
mortgage for Booth Manor took place on August 29, 1997, and for Ivy House on January 22, 1998. After
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onstruction of the projects was underway, Thyssen
asserted to the Wage and Hour Division that the rates listed in the applicable wage determinations for these
projects for elevator mechanics were erroneous.
Timothy J. Helm, leader of the Government Contracts Team in the Wage and Hour
Division, advised Thyssen in a letter dated July 8, 1999, that because Thyssen challenged the wage
determinations long after the initial endorsement of the mortgages and after the start of construction on both
projects, the challenge to the wage determinations applied to these projects was untimely. Helm's letter
also noted that it did not appear that Thyssen had submitted a request for an additional classification for
either of the two projects at issue through the "conformance" process. 29 C.F.R.
§5.5(a)(1)(v)(1999). However, Thyssen, in its Petition for Review to the ARB, submitted evidence
to show that it had submitted a Form 1444 dated March 24, 1998, to the general contractor on the Booth
Manor project, requesting the addition of a classification of "elevator tender" and proposing
a wage rate and fringe benefits for that classification. The general contractor apparently did not submit the
form to the Wage and Hour Division. In any event, the Wage and Hour Division has not yet ruled on the
"elevator tender" classification issue.
The Deputy Administrator asserts, in its Motion to Remand, that the ARB should
remand the case because there has been no final agency action with regard to the "elevator
tender" classification issue and therefore, the petition for review "is not ripe for review by the
Administrative Review Board." Motion to Remand at 1. We agree that the case should be
remanded.
The regulation governing appeals to the ARB in DBA cases involving federal and
federally assisted construction contracts provides:
Any party or aggrieved person shall have a right to file a
petition for review with the Board . . . within a reasonable time from any
final decision in any agency action under part 1, 3, or 5 of this subtitle.
29 C.F.R. §7.9(a). Thus, Thyssen's request that the ARB review the "elevator tender
" classification issue is premature, since the Wage and Hour Division has not yet issued a final
decision on that issue.
The Wage and Hour Division has issued a final decision on the wage determination
challenge. However, given the interests of efficient administration and judicial economy, we conclude that
it is preferable to defer consideration of the wage determination issue until a final determination also has
been issued on the conformance request.
Accordingly, we DISMISS Thyssen's petition for review,
WITHOUT PREJUDICE, and REMAND this case to the Deputy Administrator
to issue a final decision on the "elevator tender" classification request on or before forty-
five (45) days from the date of this order. Upon the issuance of the Deputy Administrator's final
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decision on the "elevator tender"
classification issue, Thyssen may then appeal the Deputy Administrator's final decisions of both issues to
the ARB as provided in 29 C.F.R. §7.9(a).1