May 8, 2018

CT Construction Digest Tuesday May 8, 2918



CALL TO ACTION
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TIME IS RUNNING OUT AND THE LEGISLATURE HAS TO ACT SOON!
$4.3 BILLION OF PROJECTS ARE AT STAKE!...
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Osten confident House-approved casino bill won’t clear Senate

Brian Hallenbeck
State Sen. Cathy Osten, the Sprague Democrat whose district includes southeastern Connecticut’s tribal casinos, said Monday she’s confident a House-passed bill that eventually could lead to a commercial casino elsewhere in the state will fail to win Senate approval.
It’s uncertain whether the Senate will vote on the bill before the end of the current legislative session, which must conclude by midnight Wednesday. If the Senate does approve the bill, Gov. Dannel P. Malloy would have to consider whether to sign it into law or veto it.
“We will continue to monitor this proposal as it works its way through the legislative process,” David Bednarz, the governor’s spokesman, wrote Monday in an email. “With that said, Governor Malloy has consistently cautioned that in regards to gaming issues in Connecticut, we must ensure that we are honoring our existing compact with the tribal nations and that we continue to prioritize Connecticut jobs.”
“I can tell you the Senate’s not going to pass it,” Osten said of the bill. “Unless somebody wants to come up with the $270 million we’d lose from the tribes, there’s no way.”
Opponents of the bill the House narrowly approved Friday warned that it could cause the Mashantucket Pequot and Mohegan tribes, respective owners of Foxwoods Resort Casino and Mohegan Sun, to stop paying the state 25 percent of the slot-machine revenues the casinos generate. The payments amounted to more than $270 million in the fiscal year that ended last June.
State Attorney General George Jepsen, however, has said the proposed legislation should not jeopardize the payments since the bill would not violate terms of the state's revenue-sharing agreements with the tribes. Those agreements granted the tribes the exclusive right to operate casinos in the state.
The bill only calls for submission of casino proposals, the first step in a two-part process that could culminate in the licensing of another casino. Such licensing would require passage of further legislation next year. MGM Resorts International has said it will submit a proposal for a Bridgeport casino if the bill becomes law.
The tribes have said they would not participate in the bidding.
Osten also said she’s still hopeful the legislature will take action to help MMCT Venture, a Mashantucket-Mohegan partnership, move forward with development of an East Windsor casino to counter the impact of a nearly $1 billion resort casino MGM Resorts expects to open in Springfield, Mass. The federal government’s failure to act on the tribes' gaming-agreement amendments with the state has stalled the East Windsor project.
“MMCT should be authorized for construction today,” Osten said. “They don’t have to wait for (federal) approval.”
Republican Reps. Kathleen McCarty of Waterford, Mike France of Ledyard and Holly Cheeseman of East Lyme say they, along with other southeastern Connecticut lawmakers, have written to their Senate colleagues, urging them to vote against the House-approved bill. They say the measure jeopardizes existing casino jobs as well as the revenue the state derives from the casinos and puts at risk the financing necessary to complete construction of the East Windsor casino.

DPH PROMOTES NATIONAL SAFETY STAND-DOWNTO PREVENT FALLS IN CONSTRUCTION

Hartford – The CT Department of Public Health (DPH) today encouraged employers and managers to take time during National Safety Stand-Down to Prevent Falls in Construction week, May 7-11, 2018, to discuss job hazards and safety with their employees.  According to the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), each day more than a dozen workers die as a result of a traumatic injury at work.  Falls are the number one cause of construction worker fatalities in the United States, accounting for one-third of on-the-job deaths in the industry. 
Falls continue to be one of the biggest contributors to workplace fatalities in Connecticut, as well.  Just recently, a worker in Vernon fell 10 feet through an open stairwell, resulting in her death.  Many fatal workplace falls are preventable and incidents such as this highlight the need for the National Safety Stand-Down to Prevent Falls in Construction.   
“In cooperation with other state agencies, the Connecticut Department of Public Health is committed to preventing falls in the workplace by educating workers and employers about potential workplace fall hazards, informing workers of their rights to a safe and healthy workplace, and ensuring employers meet their responsibilities for providing the safest work environment possible,” said DPH Commissioner Dr. Raul Pino.
During National Safety Stand-Down to Prevent Falls in Construction week, employers are encouraged to talk directly to employees about safety by taking a break from regular operations to have a toolbox talk or other safety activity, such as conducting equipment inspections, developing emergency plans, or discussing job specific hazards focused on eliminating slip, trip, and fall hazards.  Employers can also use this opportunity to have a conversation with employees about the other job hazards they face, protective methods to eliminate hazards, and the company's safety policies and goals. It can also be an opportunity for employees to talk to management about fall and other job hazards they see.
Managers are encouraged to plan a stand-down that works best for their workplace anytime or multiple times during the week of May 7-11, 2018.  For more information about the National Safety Stand-Down to Prevent Falls in Construction or how to protect yourself and your coworkers from falls in your workplace, feel free to contact the Connecticut Department of Public Health’s Occupational Health Unit at (860) 509-7740 or dph.occhealth@ct.gov.