Turner Construction has experienced racist incidents on its jobsites in recent months and has responded strongly.
Turner temporarily shut down two large Ohio projects—a $1.7 billion Facebook data center project and the FC Cincinnati soccer stadium—after the company discovered graffiti containing racial slurs at those jobsites, Construction Dive reports. The company, which has a zero-tolerance policy toward these incidents, then implemented anti-bias training at those sites.
Workers on jobs where Turner holds training usually stay home for a day while organizers prepare for the anti-bias program. Workers typically come into work the next day for eight hours of training and then resume work the following day.
During the last few months, reports of racist graffiti and nooses being placed around several U.S. and Canadian jobsites of multiple companies have been reported. Owners and contractors have vowed to punish responsible parties.
Related Stories
| Feb 8, 2012
OSHA offers free health and safety consulting for small businesses
The consultants offer confidential, non-punitive advice.
| Feb 8, 2012
Controversy over pay for prisoners on roofing job in Michigan
The disagreement was over whether the prisoners should have been paid prevailing wage for their brief time on the job because the project was paid for with a U.S. Department of Energy grant.
| Jan 30, 2012
ZigBee and ISO 50001: Two new standards to make buildings greener
These developments demonstrate the dynamic nature of the market and the continued need for development of program standards of many different types that help builders and owners translate high performance and sustainable buildings goals into practical measures on the ground.
| Jan 30, 2012
New firm-fixed-price rules on federal contracts impact construction industry
Contractors will need to be on the lookout for policies such as the Contractor Accountability for Quality clause.
| Jan 30, 2012
Roofer’s fatal plunge demonstrates need for fall-prevention regulations
“The biggest problem is getting our workers to use the equipment,” says Michael J. Florio, executive director of the organization.
| Jan 26, 2012
Tampa moves to streamlined online permitting system
The system will replace an inefficient patchwork of old software and is designed to provide businesses, homeowners, and contractors with online access to permitting and licensing information.
| Jan 26, 2012
EPA to collect more data, seek comments before finalizing mud rule
The EPA says it will seek more data and is accepting comments until March 5.
| Jan 26, 2012
Industry challenges Connecticut's suit over defective construction work
The dispute arose over multimillion-dollar leaks at the University of Connecticut's law library.