New
Mexico Register / Volume XXXIV, Issue 19 / October 10, 2023
This is an amendment to 11.1.2 NMAC Sections
18, 20 and 21, effective 01/1/2024.
11.1.2.18 JOB
CLASSIFICATIONS AND DESCRIPTIONS: The job classifications
and descriptions for public works projects shall be as follows:
A. Asbestos
worker or heat and frost insulator: The
preparation, alteration, application, erection, assembling, molding, spraying,
pouring, mixing, hanging, adjusting, repairing, dismantling, reconditioning,
maintenance, finishing or weatherproofing of cold or hot thermal insulations
with such materials as may be specified when those materials are to be
installed for thermal purpose in voids, or to create voids, or on either piping,
fittings, valves, boilers, ducts, flues, tanks, vats and equipment, or on any
hot or cold surfaces for the purpose of thermal control, or to be installed for
sound control on mechanical devices; equipment; piping and surfaces related in
an integral way to the thermal insulation of such mechanical devices, except
for materials applied inside sheet metal ducts and fittings. This work also includes all labor connected
with:
(1) insulation
for: temperature control (excluding batt
and blown-in); personnel protection or safety; prevention of condensation; fire
proofing of building penetrations.
(2) distribution
of, cleanup of, and removal from surfaces as described above, which surfaces
will be reinsulated with (excluding demolition which is covered under the laborers classification) the materials they apply.
B. Boilermaker: Assembles prefabricated boiler parts and
fittings to build steam boilers, tanks, vats and other vessels made of ten
gauge or heavier metal, and installs catwalks, platforms, stairways and ladders
which are erected on, and supported by storage tanks for liquid or gas when
such tanks were erected by boilermakers, and installs all catwalks, platforms,
stairways and ladders which are erected on and exclusively supported by a
pressure vessel.
C. Bricklayer,
blocklayer, stonemason: Constructs partitions, fences, walks,
fireplaces, chimneys, smokestacks, etc., using brick, structural tile, concrete
and other types of structural block.
This classification shall include the setting of stone, marble, slate,
and artificial stone. All cutting,
grouting and pointing of materials listed above shall be a part of this
classification. May also build or repair
brick, block, or stone retaining walls, cutting or placing of brick in mortar
or other similar material.
D. Carpenter
or lather: Sets batterboards,
builds and sets forms for concrete, or structural stud except as provided
elsewhere. Builds and erects wood and
metal products for the framing of structure or building, including bearing and non-bearing
walls, framework in buildings, including partitions, floor and ceiling joists,
studding, and rafters. Installs wood
subflooring and hardwood flooring.
Builds wood stairways, cabinets, steps, etc. Installs wood or premanufactured molding, paneling,
doors, windows, etc., products and components related to office interiors -
partitions, draperies, shelving, panels, doors, (metal, wood, etc.); including
hardware; insulation around concrete slabs.
Install pin metal or steel studs and wood furring (except on
roofs). Carpenters may shoot grades for
surveying and attaches “sheetrock” and similar wallboard materials to walls and
ceilings. Installs insulation material
in walls, ceilings, and under floors of buildings where such insulation is not
laid in cement or other plastic materials.
Sets all woodworking equipment and operates same. Builds forms and structural element for
pre-cast and pre-stressed concrete of all types and shapes on project
site. Erects self-supporting
scaffolding. Installs light iron and
metal furring such as rods, channels and other bars or systems to which metal
lath, rock lath or other materials used as a substitute for lath are to be
attached. Installs metal lath, rock lath, and other materials used as a
substitute for lath. Installs metal
plastering accessories such as corner beads, door and window casing beads,
metal picture mold, chair rails and other metal plastering accessories which
are covered and serve as a ground or guard, except that metallic corner beads,
when installed by using plastic material, shall be installed under the
“plasterer” classification. Cuts wood
materials using a stationary or portable power saw of one or more
horsepower. Sharpens by use of files,
all types of saws and saw blades used for the cutting of wood materials.
E. Carpenter
(millwright): Performs work necessary to
assemble, level, align, secure, dismantle, adjust and maintain permanent
stationary pumps, motors, generators, turbines, fans, compressors or torque
converters which require precision leveling and alignment of such
equipment. Installs reduction gear
boxes, fluid drives, and speed increasers, including the connection of same to
pump or compressor coupling. May align
and secure other direct drive motors and machines requiring precision
alignment. Installation, repair, or
removal of all pulleys, sheaves, sprockets, gears and flywheels including all
belts, cables and chains. Fabricates or
installs all templates, soleplates, grout pads and wedge blocks for all
machinery requiring foundation or bolts.
Installs all machinery, equipment and conveying devices in all classes
of plants, factories, buildings, amusement parks, mills, shops stores,
warehouses and construction or mining sites.
F. Carpenter
(piledriver): Rigs piledriving
equipment, signals pile rig and guides pile and leads to point pile is driven,
aligns and plumbs pile using tape and level during driving; splices piles
before, during and after driving, cuts off piles, realigns piles after driving. In “piledriving” operations, handles wood,
metal, sheetpiling, steel H-beams, concrete, or pipe,
fastens them to cable of wench or piledriver, shifts
timber piles with cant hook, cleans and points pile with axe or shovel. May drill pilot holes.
G. Cement
mason (composition or mastic - finishing machine operator): Finishes concrete to a specified finish and
grade on footings, floors, walks, steps and all concrete surfaces by using
tools of the trade such as trowels, floats, screeds, etc. Sets to grade and aligns screeds one board
high. Sets to grade and aligns forms for
sidewalk, curbs and gutters. Fabricate,
cut, bend and tie reinforcing steel and mesh to be placed within the forms for
sidewalk, curbs and gutters. Patching,
filling of voids and rubbing of concrete to a specified finish, which requires
the use of power tools and tools of the trade.
Bushammer and related finish procedure. Concrete saw operation when used on new
construction to saw control joints.
Vibrating screeds and rollers to achieve final level of concrete. Gunite, in cement
mason operation, when it is less than one and one-half inches in thickness, the
handling and control of the nozzle shall be the work of the “cement
mason.” All work involving the laser
screed including the ride-on, laser-guided, vibratory screeding machine that
establishes grades by laser which disperses concrete by auger and thoroughly
vibrates and consolidates the concrete.
Applies coloring material to concrete, also uses mastic to level and
waterproof concrete, where tools of the trade are involved. Operates troweling and floating machines
which are used in the finishing of concrete.
Cementitious insulation, screed wet material to required thickness and darby joints to leave a surface suitable for roofing.
H. Electrician
classifications and description - Outside:
(1) Groundman
(outside): Assists “lineman” and
“equipment operator” in their tasks except that the “groundman” does not climb
poles or towers.
(2) Equipment
operator (outside): Operates power
driven equipment used in the erection and installation of materials and
apparatus outlined under the “lineman” classification. Includes directional boring to install
underground pipe, conduit or cable.
(3) Lineman
or technician (outside):
(a) Performs
all electrical construction work outside of isolated plants and the property
lines of any given property, but not electric signs, and not street electrical
decorations, except when messenger or guy wire is necessary for support and
when fed and controlled from the street.
(b) Street
lighting, traffic signalization, and related wiring when fed and controlled
from the street. All line work
consisting of wood, concrete or metal (or substitutes therefore), poles or
towers, including wires, cables or other apparatus supported therefrom. Line work in public, private or amusement
parks.
(c) All
work necessary to the assembling, installation, erection, operation,
maintenance, repair, control, inspection and supervision of all electrical
apparatus, devices, wires, cables, supports, insulators, conductors, ducts and
raceways when part of distributing systems outside of buildings, railroads and
outside and directly related railroad property and yards. Installing and maintaining the catenary and
trolley work on railroad property, and bonding of rails. All underground ducts and cables when they
are installed by and are part of the system of a distributing company, except
in power stations during new construction, including ducts and cables to
adjacent switch racks or substations.
All outdoor substations and electrical connections up to and including
the setting of transformers and all connecting of the secondary buses thereto,
and all other related work.
(4) Cable
splicer (outside): Splices or terminates
power cables which are designed to be used for voltages above 2,000. Splices or terminate gas or liquid filled
power cables, when part of a distribution system
outside of buildings.
(5) Journeyman
technician (outside): Limited to
performing only street lighting, traffic signals, and wiring when fed and
controlled from the street.
I. Electrician
classifications and descriptions - Inside:
(1) Wireman
or technician (inside): Installs wiring
for automatic doors. Plans and executes
the layout and installation of electrical conduit, switch panels, buss bars,
outlet boxes, electrical wires and cables, lighting standards, lighting
fixtures, receptacles, switches, and other electrical devices and apparatus
necessary for the complete installation of wiring systems on commercial,
industrial, and residential jobs, except electrical work which is incidental to
the installation of elevators and escalators and is described under “elevator
constructor”. Analyzes proposed
telephone and communication systems during the pre-installation stage to detect
any basic conflicts in either equipment arrangements or plant facilities. Isolated trouble conditions in inoperable
telephone communications systems.
Installs a variety of equipment relating to telephone interconnect
communication systems and devices including private branch exchange (PBX-PABX),
key equipment and associated devices.
(2) Cable
splicer (inside): Splices or terminates power
cables which are designed to be used for voltages above 2,000. Splices or terminates gas or liquid filled
power cables.
J. Low
voltage electrician classification: Low
Voltage Technician: Installs pathways
(j-hooks) and wiring for low voltage cabling coax or fiber optic and terminates
ends of the different types of cables levels and tests. This work includes voice, data security,
access control, building automation and video surveillance. Repairs and services inter-communications
systems, i.e. speakers, buzzers, microphones, signal lights or other units or
components that are an integral part of such system.
K. Elevator
constructor: Assembles and installs
machinery and devices incidental to a complete elevator or escalator
installation, including elevator cars, cables, counterweights, guide rails,
hoisting machinery, etc. Installs all
electrical wiring which is incidental to the installation of automatic
elevators and escalators with the exception of power
feed wires to the controller, which shall be classified as a task of
“electricians”. Steel trusses, girders,
and supports for escalators, where riveted or welded and metal frames and bucks
for elevator door openings shall be installed under the “ironworker”
classification.
L. Elevator
constructor helper: Assist elevator
constructor in the performance of all phases of their work.
M. Glazier: Installs metal window and door frames without
glass, curtain wall systems, window wall systems, cable net systems, canopy
systems, structural glazing systems, unitized systems, interior glazing
systems, photovoltaic panels and systems, suspended glazing systems, louvers,
skylights, entranceway systems including doors and hardware, revolving and
automatic door systems, patio doors, store front systems including the
installation of all metals, column covers, panels and panel systems, glass hand
rail systems, decorative metals as part of the glazing system, and the sealing
of all architectural metal and glass systems for weatherproofing and structural
reasons, using vinyl, molding, rugger, lead, sealants, silicone and all types
of mastics in wood, iron, aluminum, sheet metal or vinyl sash, doors, frames or
any materials of the above systems as part of the glazing systems. Installs glass, including plate and window
glass, mirrors, beveled plate, rough ribbed, wire, figured, colored, art and
other type glass or substitute for glass when set in sash, frames, doors,
skylights, etc., when set with putty, molding or other methods which are common
to the glazing trade.
N. Ironworker:
(1) Journeyman Ironworker: Installs reinforcing iron and steel for
concrete structures. Installs fabricated
steel members such as girders, columns, beams, and bracing in structures to
form the steel framework. Installs metal
stairways, catwalks, ladders, and decking.
Installs ornamental iron and steel.
Erects structural steel radio and television towers. Sets wall bearing steel bar joists in
building structures. Performs layout
work for rods within project area.
Fastens rods in place with wire or fasteners; bends or adjusts as
required. Selects and places steel bars
or spirals in concrete forms to reinforce concrete; fastens rods together with
wire or patented fasteners; may cut rods with hack-saw
or oxyacetylene torch. May bend rod,
using rod bending machine, performs layout work and proper placing of steel in
the concrete forms. May prefabricate
reinforcement assembly for placement complete in forms. Works as a member of a group that raises and
places fabricated or precast concrete beams or structural steel members, such
as girders, plates, columns, and units them permanently to form a completed
structural steel framework. Heats
rivets, signals erection crane, splices cables, rigs equipment. May include dismantling and erecting large
units of equipment. May suspension
bridge cables. Erects, trims, and fits
together by means of bolts and clamps, iron grills, grating, and special
stairways. Erects ornamental enclosures
and other iron work not included in structural ironwork. Fastens ironwork to walls of buildings by
means of bolts, brackets or anchors.
Fastens newel posts, balauser, and other parts
of stairways by fastening to supports or embedding them in sockets. Forges, welds, drills and cuts as needed.
(2) Probationary Ironworker: Probationary ironworkers shall be paid at the
rate of [80%] eighty percent of the journeyman ironworker wage
rate and may only work under this classification for no more than 30 days.
O. Painter
(brush): Applies paint, stain, lacquer,
varnish, etc., to surfaces in, on or around building structures, using
appropriate brushes, rollers, sprayers or trowels. Does preparation of surfaces to receive
paint, including sandblasting, small patching, sanding and spackling. Mixes and prepares paints and other materials
which are to be applied by painters.
Seals, sands and varnishes hardwood flooring. Paints structural steel framework of bridges;
guard rails and cables of bridges; and all other surfaces requiring paint. .May erect and rig stages and platforms from
which painters are to work, including swing stage scaffolding, bosun’s chairs,
mechanical, staging, cornice or roof hooks, scaffolding, and other devices and
apparatus necessary to provide safe forking conditions for painters. Operates gasoline-powered compressor striping
machine and walking type sprayers for striping parking lots, etc.
P. Paperhanger: Applies wallpaper, fabric, or other materials
used in the same manner as wallpaper, to the interior of rooms. Performs work necessary to prepare surfaces
to receive wallpaper or other similar material including removal of old wall paper.
Q. Drywall
finisher or taper: Prepares drywall type
construction to receive paint, textone, etc. by
pointing, taping, bedding, texturing, skimming, wire brushing, stripping, wax,
or acid application and finishing.
R. Plasterer: Applies interior and exterior plastering of cement,
stucco and stone imitation or any patented materials when cast. Applies acoustical plaster or materials used
as substitutes for acoustical plaster, as well as the preparatory pointing and
taping of drywall surfaces to receive these finishes. Applies scratch and brown coats on walls and
ceilings where tile, mosaic or terrazzo is to be applied. Molds and sets ornamental plaster and trim
and runs ornamental plaster cornice and molding. Install metal corner beads when stuck by
using plastic materials. Applies gunite, in plastering operations, when it is one and
one-half inches in thickness, the handling and control of the nozzle should be
the work of the plasterer. Spray fire
proofing material on steel beams or columns.
Trowel or sprayed on foam insulation on walls before stucco, etc. Patching outside concrete walls.
S. Plumbers
and pipefitters: Fabricates and installs
piping, and tubing systems, including installation of all necessary hangers and
supports, which are to conduct water, steam, air, and other fluids or gases in
and around buildings. Also installs
vacuum piping systems. Installs drainage
and sewage lines (laterals) from buildings to the point of attachment to
mains. Installs plumbing fixtures, such
as sinks, faucets, drinking fountains, commodes, etc. Installs refrigeration equipment. Performs cutting, welding and burning which
is incidental to the work of plumbing or pipefitting, except as is described
under “lead burner”. May do other work
in connection with the installation and testing of heating and cooling
apparatus and control devices.
T. Plumbers
and pipefitters (lead burner): Performs
cutting, burning and welding operations on lead pipes, tanks, reservoirs, etc.
U. Roofer:
(1) Roofer Journeyman: Installs, alters or repairs roof systems on
new or existing roof decks to create a weatherproof and waterproof protective
membrane, with or without insulation, using asphalt, pitch, tar, sealants,
single ply or multiple ply materials, felt, shakes, shingles, roof tile, slate,
coatings, urethane, urethane foam, metal or any other approved roofing
materials, including the preparatory work necessary to bring such surfaces to a
condition where roofing can be installed, sealed, or repaired. Includes cutting, shaping fabricating and
installing or wood, metal or other approved materials for fascias,
soffits, copings, cornices, canals, flashing, gutters, leaders, rainwater
downspouts, pans, prefabricated chimneys, at or near roof lines, metal flues,
prefabricated roof curbs. Installs
roofing insulation, and other necessary waterproofing and damp proofing on
walls and floors below ground. May
perform other water-proofing operations using methods which are common to the
roofing trade. Handles all roofing
materials at job site and performs all roofing clean-up. Tears off old roof when roof is to be
replaced.
(2) Roofer Helper: Roofer helpers shall be paid at the rate of [60%]
sixty percent of the journeyman roofer wage rate. There is no restriction on the type of work
that the roofer helper may perform. The
ratio of helper to journeyman is one helper for every three journeymen.
V. Sheet
metal worker: Fabricates and installs
heating and air conditioning ducts and other ductwork. Fabricates and installs hangers, brackets,
etc., used in the installation of sheet metal, and installs grills, registers,
etc., which are part of duct systems.
Fabricates or installs architectural sheet metal in and around
buildings, including metal panel systems, canopies, awnings, exhaust louvers,
and cupolas. Installs warm air furnaces
except where necessary piping for gas or oil is performed under the plumbing
and pipefitting classification. Performs
the testing, measuring, adjusting of air and hydronic flows in a building to
meet design specifications and local building codes to ensure thermal comfort,
indoor air quality, and system energy efficiency are optimized, performs
periodic inspections of fire, smoke and combination fire and smoke dampers and
conducts differential pressure measurements across, and force testing of
stairwell egress doors and performs the functional testing and general required
maintenance of smoke control systems and is responsible for recognizing the
proper installation, application, and usage of smoke control systems. May install other heating and cooling devices
which are in connection with duct systems.
W. Soft
floor layer: Cleans and prepares floors
and other surfaces to which linoleum and floor tile is to be applied. Lays carpets.
Applies appropriate cement to floors and surfaces and installs materials
such as sheet rubber, sheet vinyl, asphalt tile, cork tile, linoleum, rubber
tile, artificial turf and other resilient floor coverings. Rolls finished floors and surfaces to smooth
and press down coverings which have been applied. Mixes and pours liquid seamless floor
covering on floor, gyms, etc. Installs
decorative or protective trim to and adjoining the above materials including
the attaching of cap strips, nosing, and slats.
X. Sprinkler
fitter: Fabricates, assembles, and
installs all piping and auxiliary devices which are necessary for the complete
installation of sprinkling systems for fire protection in buildings.
Y. Tile
setter: Applies glazed, unglazed,
mosaic, and other ceramic tiles which are used as a surface on floors, walls,
ceilings and other surfaces and which must be set to a specified grade. Applies and floats all setting beds which
these tiles are set into. Levels and
plumbs these tiles to the specified grade.
Z. Tile
setter helper: Handles and mixes
materials to be used in floating beds, generally assists tile setter by
delivering materials, cleaning and caring for tools.
AA. Power
equipment operators - group I performs the following tasks or operate the
following equipment:
(1) Concrete
paving curing machine (Bridge type):
Operates self-propelled machine and operates pump on the machine which
sprays curing compound on freshly poured concrete. May oil, grease or otherwise service and make
necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
(2) Fireman: Hand strokes or fires by gas or oil, a
portable or semi-portable steam boiler, such as is used on steam shovels, pile
drivers, cranes, dredges, hoisting equipment and asphalt plants.
(3) Oiler: A service man who lubricates mechanical equipment,
gives signals to operator when applicable, changes oil, greases and filters,
refuels equipment. May assist mechanic,
head oiler or operator in assembling, setting up, adjusting, maintaining
(including operation of steam cleaners) and repairing all types of construction
equipment. May, when servicing
equipment, drive a truck which carries fuels, oils and greases. May use the tools of the trade at and under
the direction of a mechanic, head oiler or operator.
(4) Screedman:
Manipulates handwheels or other devices to raise or lower screeds of
asphalt machine. Regulated width of
screed and depth of material. May oil,
grease, or otherwise service and make necessary adjustments to equipment as
needed.
(5) Scale
operator such as (bin-a-batch).
(6) Tractor
(under 50 drawbar h.p.
without attachments): Operates a small
diesel or gasoline powered rubber-tired, farm -type tractor, with no
attachments, to pull by drawbar, seed drills, etc. May oil, grease, or otherwise service and
make necessary adjustments.
(7) Industrial
locomotive brakeman: A semi-skilled
operator who hooks and unhooks various cars, throws switches, operates car dumps,
signals locomotive operator, manipulates controls of loading devices (hopper
conveyors, etc.) and assists locomotive operator. May oil, grease or otherwise service and make
necessary adjustments.
(8) Helpers: mechanic, welder, grease truck and crane
oiler.
AB. Power
equipment operators - group II performs the following tasks or operate the
following equipment:
(1) Tractor
(under 50 drawbar h.p. with
attachments): Operates a small diesel or
gasoline powered rubber-tired or crawler tractor. May be used with attachments such as dozer,
tampers, posthole diggers, postdrivers, etc. May be used to pull brooms, sleds, trailers,
etc. May oil, grease or otherwise
service and make necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
(2) Air
compressor (315 c.f.m. and over): Keeps compressor fueled, oiled, clean and
ready for service. Keeps oilers and air
lines working properly, full of proper oil, sets and checks valves on oiler,
sets and checks air pressure, cut off valve and gauges, checks and maintains
air tools, keeps moisture drained from air tanks, checks governor, sets
throttle to avoid compressor damage.
Checks and repairs air brakes on compressor and repairs air hose.
(3) Pumps
(six inch intake or over): Operates
water pump which pumps water for roadway, prewetting, pumping by transmission
line from water source to job area or other use. May oil, grease, prime, or otherwise service
and make necessary adjustment to equipment as needed.
(4) Mixer,
concrete (one cubic yard and less):
Operates a small, portable concrete mixing machine to mix sand, gravel,
cement and water to make concrete.
Starts power unit and does or oversees loading of materials. Controls the mixing by levers to discharge
concrete from drum. This small machine
is sometimes charged by shoveling in the proportions of materials directly into
the mixing drum and some others have a skip into which materials are shoveled
before being hoisted into the mixing drum.
Rinses drum with water to remove adhering concrete. May oil, grease or otherwise service and make
necessary adjustments as needed.
(5) Roller
(sheepsfoot or pneumatic self-propelled without dozer): Operates a diesel or gasoline driven
self-propelled machine used for compaction.
May oil, grease or otherwise service and make necessary adjustments to
equipment as needed.
(6) Service
truck operator (head oiler-type B or C work):
An operator of a truck equipped with high pressure grease and oil
dispensing equipment. Maintains service
records and performs preventative maintenance and visual inspection. Reports vehicle discrepancies to foreman or
mechanic.
(7) Screening
plants: Operates a screening plan to
sort and segregate material. Regulates
flow of material through chute to screener.
May perform other related work.
May oil, grease, or otherwise service and make necessary adjustments or
repairs to equipment as needed.
(8) Belt
type conveyors (material and concrete):
Operates an endless belt-type conveyor that is a machine designed so the
belt operates between a head pulley and tail pulley which are located on the
opposite ends of the conveyor frame. The
belt rides on carrier rollers so formed in shape and positioned that the belt
forms a trough to carry the loose material.
The operator starts and stops the belt as necessary, maintains the
carrier rollers and belt splices, regulates belt speed for correct loading for
efficient operation and belt life, maintains belt alignment to insure the belt is not loaded on one side which results in
excessive belt wear. Conveyors are used
efficiently in confined areas particularly in the placement of concrete with
portable type conveyors. (Conveyor
systems which are part of a plant shall be operated by the plant operator). May oil, grease or otherwise service and make
necessary adjustments.
(9) Concrete
paving joint or saw machine or grinder span type: Operates a self-propelled machine which
travels on paving form or pavement and cuts grooves for expansion and
contraction joints in freshly poured concrete or cured pavement. May oil, grease or otherwise service and make
necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
(10) Hoist
(one drum): Operates a single drum
machine powered by air, electric, gasoline or diesel. Actuates valves, levers, brakes or other
control devices which regulates linepull, hold or
line release in accordance with signals received by sight, hearing or other
signaling devices as necessary. Machines
are used for various pulling and hoisting operations on construction work such
as to hoist and lower material in various elevations or to hoist and lower
material in construction and assembly.
May oil, grease or otherwise service and make necessary adjustments.
(11) Air
tugger
(12) Elevating
belt type loaders: Operates a
self-propelled or tractor-drawn elevating grader, bucket, or belt loader. May oil, grease or otherwise service and make
necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
(13) Lumber
stacker: Operates machine designed to
straddle bundles or stacks of lumber or other objects suitable to be handled by
this specialized machine, hoists and moves materials to various locations. May oil, grease or otherwise service and make
necessary adjustments.
(14) Winch
truck: Drive a heavy duty gasoline or
diesel truck equipped with a winch and gin poles or other hoisting
devices. Shifts winch gears in
accordance with signals from helper on ground.
May service and make necessary adjustments for proper operation of
equipment.
(15) Front
end loader (under two cubic yards):
Operates a runner tired or crawler-type tractor with an attached bucket
on front end. Machine is used to load
materials from stockpiles, excavation, charging batch plants, loading
trucks. May oil, grease, or otherwise
service and make necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
(16) Fork lift: Operates a
machine powered by gasoline, diesel or electric power that is equipped with a
vertical hoisting and lowering device that may be canted forward and reverse of
vertical center by means of control devices.
Machine is equipped with fork lifting and
designed to slide under loads, machine is used for lifting and transporting
loads. May oil, grease or otherwise
service and make necessary adjustments.
(17) Power
plant (electric generator or welding machine):
Operates a diesel or gasoline driven machine that generates A.C or D.C.
current of 15 K.W. or more used for lighting and electrical power. Keeps cycle and synchronization control board
in adjustment adhering to manufacturers specifications. Keeps governor relay in adjustment. Operates welding machine in bank, for
arc-welding, uses armature dressing stone as required and resets welding heats
as required. May oil grease or otherwise
service and make necessary adjustment.
May perform other related duties.
(Electric power plants, when the principal use is to furnish electric
power for camp sites, shall be excluded).
(18) Cat
head winch
(19) Oiler
with CDL
(20) Concrete
curbing machine
(21) Inside
and outside material and personnel elevators
(22) Industrial
locomotive motorman: An operator of
gasoline, diesel or electric powered railroad locomotive used to push, pull or
switch railroad cards of various designs loaded with muck, concrete, aggregate,
or other applications suitable for rail transport. May oil, grease or otherwise service and make
necessary adjustments.
AC. Power
equipment operators - group III performs the following tasks or operate the
following equipment:
(1) Bituminous
distributors
(2) Boilers
(3) Asphalt
Retort heater: Operates a stationary or
portable piece of equipment designed to apply heat to a tank, tank car, or tank
truck containing asphalt. Starts fire,
controls heat applied to tank by regulating burners. Starts, stops and controls flow of
recirculating pumps. Maintains desired
temperature in asphalt, regulates valves for discharge of asphalt from
tank. May oil, grease or otherwise service
and make necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
(4) Mixer,
concrete (over one cubic yard): Operates
a large, portable or sometimes stationary concrete mixing machines to mix sand,
gravel, cement and water to make concrete.
Starts power unit and oversees the loading of proper proportions of
materials into the skip and then manipulates levers that control feeding of
material into mixing drum. Starts drum
rotating to mixmaterials;
manipulates lever to discharge concrete from drum, either by tilting drum
forward or by opening a discharge chute.
Rinses drum with water to remove adhering concrete. May oil, grease, or otherwise service and
make necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
(5) Concrete
paver mixer (single drum): Operates a
paving machine that mixes and dumps concrete, the machine consisting primarily
of a skip, concrete mixer, and a boom equipped with a traveling bucket and a
power plant, all mounted upon a crawler or wheel unit. May oil, grease or otherwise service and make
necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
(6) Drilling
machine (cable, core or rotary): Sets up
and operates a portable cable, core, diamond or rotary drill for the purpose of
drilling water wells or exploratory drilling.
May drill pilot holes for piling.
May oil, grease, or otherwise service and make necessary adjustments.
(7) Shaft
and tunnel type equipment:
(a) Refrigeration: Operates a plant designed to circulate brine
or other refrigerant through piping system to freeze specified areas for
purpose of drilling, trenching, boring, blasting and stabilizing formations to
permit such operations. Maintains
pressures, vacuum, intercooling and other related functions. May keep brine or other refrigerants at
proper levels in supply tanks.
(b) Slusher
operator: Operates hoist as described
under one or two drum hoist to raise and lower, drag
and release a bucket similar to dragline bucket without a bottom in it. To move loose material into dump chute or
other purposes. Sheaves to control line
direction are usually secured to roof, side or face of excavation by rock
bolts. May oil, grease or otherwise
service and make necessary adjustments.
(c) Jumbo
form or drilling stage: Operates a
specialized machine usually mounted on rails or rubber-tired wheels which has
surrounding it, expandable, retractable forms.
Drilling stage consists of one or more drilling stages from which
drilling operations at the phase are performed for blasting. The operator positions machine for drilling,
removes it for blasting, connects and disconnects air and water lines from the
source as needed. May oil, grease or
otherwise service and make necessary adjustments.
(8) Trenching
machine: Operates a power-driven machine
that digs trenches for sewer, water, drainage, oil and gas pipelines, footings,
etc. The trenching machine is mounted on
crawler treads or rubber tires with the digging equipment usually consisting of
an endless chain or wheel or edged buckets that excavate and deposit the
material on a conveyor belt which in turn discharges the material at the side
of the trench. May oil, grease or
otherwise service and make necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
(9) Pumpcrete machine:
Operates a concrete pumping machine that pumps fresh concrete from mixer
to forms that mold fresh concrete. Sets
up pump, operates power unit of pump and allows fresh concrete to flow into
hopper or pump. May oil, grease or
otherwise service and make necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
(10) Gunite machine:
Operates a machine designed to pump dry sand and cement mixture forced
under high air pressure to various areas specified for gunite
treatment. May oil, grease or otherwise
service and make necessary adjustments.
(11) Concrete
slip-form paving machine: Operates a
self-propelled machine with long forms attached which move along with the
machine. Machine vibrates, screeds,
spreads and finishes the surface.
Operates a roto-mill machine (machine with plane to smooth). May oil, grease or other service and make
necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
(12) Mechanical
bull floats
(13) Concrete
paving spreader: Operates a
self-propelled machine that rides on the paving forms. Operates controls to spread fresh concrete
evenly over subgrade or in concrete forms.
May oil, grease or otherwise service and make necessary adjustments to
equipment as needed.
(14) Concrete
paving finishing machine: Operates
self-propelled machine which travels on subgrade or paving forms and levels
fresh concrete to approximate grade and contour by pushing and pulling screeds
over the surface. May oil, grease or
otherwise service and make necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
(15) Subgrade
or base finisher: Sets and adjusts
machine to grade or string line.
Operates necessary controls for grading, cutting and finishing subgrade
or treated and untreated base material.
May oil, grease, or otherwise service and make necessary adjustments to
equipment as needed.
(16) Concrete
paving sub grader: Operates a machine
that finishes subgrade. Machine runs on
concrete paving forms or subgrade and is equipped with knives or blades to
loosen material and eject same from subgrade. May oil, grease or otherwise service
equipment as needed.
(17) Concrete
paving form grader: Operates a machine
that controls subgrade under forms used in concrete paving and is equipped with
knives or blades to loosen dirt and eject same from the form line grade. May oil, grease or otherwise service and make
necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
(18) Concrete
paving gang vibrator: Operates a
self-propelled machine which travels on paving forms and operates levers to
lower multiple vibrator heads into freshly poured concrete. May oil, grease or otherwise service and make
necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
(19) Concrete
paving longitudinal float: Operates a
self-propelled machine which travels on paving forms and moves levers to strike
off the concrete to correct elevation.
Machine has one or more screeds traveling longitudinally. Operates milling machine (makes ridges). May oil, grease or otherwise service and make
necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
(20) Bituminous
finishing machines
(21) Certified
forklift
(22) Asphalt
distributor: Sets spray bar and operates
valves and levers of distributor to control distribution of oil or bituminous
liquid, also may drive truck on one-man operated distributor. May oil, grease or otherwise service and make
necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
(23) Asphalt
paving or laydown machine: Manipulates
controls of paving machine that spreads and levels asphaltic concrete. May oil, grease, or otherwise service and
make necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
AD. Power equipment
operators-group IV performs the following tasks or operates the following
equipment:
(1) Front
end loader (two through ten cubic yards):
Operates a rubber tired or crawler-type tractor with an attached bucket
on front end. Machine is used to load
materials from stockpiles, excavation, charging batch plants, loading
trucks. May oil, grease, or otherwise
service and make necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
(2) Rollers steel wheeled (all types): Operates a self-propelled machine with steel
flat wheels which is used to compact and smooth earth fills, flexible bases,
bituminous roads surfaces. May oil,
grease or otherwise service and make necessary adjustments to equipment as
needed.
(3) Bulldozer: Operates a tractor with a concave steel
scraper blade mounted in front of the chassis to level, distribute and push
earth; regulates height of blade. Uses tractor as a pusher in loading earth
carrying equipment. May oil, grease or
otherwise service and make minor repairs to equipment as needed.
(4) Scrapers
(motor or towed): Operates a tractor or
self-propelled machine to pull a steel bowl-like scoop (scraper) mounted on
wheels that scrapes up earth and transports it to a designated place;
manipulates necessary scraper controls.
May oil, grease or otherwise service and make necessary adjustments to
equipment as needed, twin bowl scraper and quad eight or nine pushers ($.35
over base rate). Three bowl scraper
($.60 over base rate).
(5) Batch
or continuous mix plant (concrete, soil, cement or asphalt): Sets up and operates a large portable or stationary
plant for batching concrete, soil-cement or asphaltic materials and aggregates;
responsible for control of mixture and plant.
May oil, grease, or otherwise service and make necessary adjustments to
equipment as needed.
(6) Bobcat
with hydraulic backhoe with buckets up to one (1) and one quarter cubic yards.
(7) Backhoes
with buckets up to ¾ cubic yard-Type B or C work.
(8) Small
Articulating Truck
AE. Power equipment
operators-group V performs the following tasks or operates the following
equipment:
(1) Concrete
paver (double drum): Operates a paving
machine that mixes and dumps concrete, the machine consisting primarily of a
skip, concrete mixer and a boom equipped with a traveling bucket and a power
plant, all mounted upon a crawler or wheel unit. May oil, grease, or otherwise service and
make necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
(2) Hoist
(two drums): Operates a two drum machine
powered by air, electric, gasoline or diesel.
Actuates valves, levers, brakes or other control devices which regulates
linepull, hold or line release in accordance with
signals received various pulling and hoisting operations on construction work
such as: to hoist and lower material in
various elevations; to hoist and lower material in construction and
assembly. May oil, grease or otherwise
service and make necessary adjustments.
(3) Cat
cranes
(4) Hysters
(5) Forklifts
over 20,000 lbs. lifting capacity
(6) Auto
fine grader
AF. Power
equipment operators-group VI performs the following tasks or operates the
following equipment:
(1) Mucking
machine (all types): Operates a machine
designed especially to work in confined spaces, generally operated by air or
electric power to minimize air pollution, underground. Rocker shovel types have front-mounted
buckets that are loaded by being pushed into the material and lifted over the
machine and dumped into an attached car, or lifted to a point that gravity
dumps the material from the back of the loaded bucket onto a conveyor belt that
runs over the machine to a dumping point or into attached car. This type mucking
machine usually operates on tracks or are crawler mounted. The bucket is hinged to a boom which in turn
is hinged to a turntable on the main frame which allows the main frame to
travel in one direction while the swinging action of the bucket can reach out
to the sides to remove such loose material generally called muck. These machines are especially suited for
underground, emptying into conveyors or into cars. May oil, grease or otherwise service and make
necessary adjustments.
(2) Tractor
with hydraulic backhoe.
(3) Backhoes
with buckets up to one and one quarter cubic yards- Type B or C work.
(4) Service
truck operator (head oiler-type A or H work):
An operator of a truck equipped with high pressure grease and oil
dispensing equipment, which may have gasoline and diesel fuel tanks, who
lubricates, changes oil and filters and refuels equipment. Maintains service records and performs
preventative maintenance and visual inspection.
Reports vehicle discrepancies to foreman or mechanic.
(5) Motor
grader (rough): Operates motor
grader. Blade is mounted on a carrying
and turning circle under the frame of the machine. Equipment is used in leveling dirt to grade
and in laying asphalt and flexible base materials. May oil, grease or otherwise service and make
necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
AG. Power
equipment operators-group VII performs the following tasks or operates the
following equipment:
(1) Steam
engineers
(2) Front
end loader (over 10 cubic yards):
Operates a rubber tired or crawler-type tractor with an attached bucket
on front end. Machine is used to load
materials from stockpiles, excavation, charging batch plants, loading
trucks. May oil, grease, or otherwise
service and make necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
(3) Concrete
pump (snorkel type)
(4) Mining
machine
(5) Concrete
batching plant operator
(6) Asphalt
plant operator
(7) Crushing
plant operator- Operates a crusher to control flow of materials through
plant. Regulates flow of rock through
chute to crusher. May perform other
related work. May oil, grease, or
otherwise service and make necessary adjustments or repairs to equipment as
needed.
(8) Hot
plant operator
(9) Roof
Bolting Machine
(10) Shuttle
Car Operator
AH. Power
equipment operators-group (VIII-All shovel type equipment that does not require
a State of New Mexico crane license) performs the following tasks or operates
the following equipment:
(1) Side
boom: Operates a diesel or gasoline
powered rubber-tired or crawler-tractor on which is mounted a side boom
attachment with necessary hoisting devices.
Positions tractor, manipulates control levers, clutches, brakes, and
other controls to raise or lower boom, raise or lower load. By tractor motivation, loads may be
transported to desired location. May
oil, grease or otherwise service and make necessary adjustments.
(2) Crane
(crawler or mobile under ten tons):
Operates crane type equipment to hoist and move materials and perform
other related operations. Such equipment
is used for pouring concrete, setting steel or other miscellaneous tasks for
which crane type equipment is required.
May oil, grease or otherwise service and make necessary adjustments to
equipment as needed.
(3) Backhoes
with buckets over one and one quarter cubic yards- Type B or C work.
(4) Backhoes
over a 3/4 yard bucket—Type A or H work.
(5) Derrick,
cableway: Operates guy, stiff leg or other derrick, cableway.
(Derricks are distinguished from cranes by being stationary and being
supported by cables, or structural member, but may be repositioned to higher
levels as construction progresses).
Derricks use a hoist as described in building hoists, two drums and up,
but may vary with different designs, as the source of power for line pull, hold
or release through sheaves on the particular derrick
or cableway for lifting and moving materials to higher, lower, or the same
levels in construction. The operator
controls in accordance with signals received by sight, hearing or other
signaling devices. If necessary
may oil, grease or otherwise service and make necessary adjustments.
(6) Track
or excavator backhoe
(7) Pipemobile
(8) Pile
driver: Operates the basic machine, and
applicable hammer controls to which pile driving attachments are attached. Pile driving attachments normally consists of
leads, to service as a guide for the weight, hammer or
extractor. The drop hammer is a weight
hoisted by cable along the leads and released to fall by gravity onto the
pile. Steam, compressed air, hydraulic,
sonic and diesel hammers ride along the leads resting on top of pile or pile
cap striking blows on the down stroke of the hammer, from its power source,
onto the pile being driven. The
extractor is a steam or air hammer that strikes its blows on the upstroke of
the hammer equipped with devices for attachment onto the piling to be
pulled. May drill or jet pilot
holes. May oil, grease or otherwise
service and make necessary adjustments.
(9) Mine hoists: Operates
hoists used in mining operations and in compliance with the department of mines
regulations. Hoists and lowers men and
materials in shafts and inclines in accordance to authorized signals. May oil, grease or otherwise service and make
necessary adjustments.
(10) Motor
grader (finish)
(11) Mechanic
and welder: Assembles, sets up, adjust
and maintains and repairs all types of construction equipment, such as internal
combustion engines, air compressors, pumps, concrete mixers, heavy earth moving
equipment, rock crushers and paving equipment.
(12) Mole
operator: Operates a horizontal boring
machine which is the vertical rotating cutter head which deposits muck onto
conveyor that passes over the machine to a dump point. The operator controls the elevation and
direction and travel by hydraulic rams.
The machine is a specialized piece of machinery for tunnel boring. May oil, grease or otherwise service and make
necessary adjustments.
(13) Mobile
pipeline inspection camera
(14) Operator
or rigger
(15) Crane
inspector
(16) Continuous
mining machine
(17) VAC
jet rodder
(18) Equipment
instructor
(19) Heavy
equipment robotics operator or mechanic
(20) Ultra
high pressure waterjet cutting tool system operator/mechanic
(21) Vacuum
blasting machine operator or mechanic
(22) Master
environmental maintenance mechanic
AI. Power equipment
operators-group IX: operate hydraulic
cranes with less than 150 feet of boom and over 10 tons but less than 100 tons
lifting capacity including boom trucks (NM, Class II, license required).
AJ. Power equipment
operators-group X: operate hydraulic
cranes and boom trucks (100 tons and over); cranes and draglines with booms and
jibs over 150 feet through 199 feet; $.75 above base rate per hour additional;
cranes 200 feet and over $1.00 additional; tower cranes (NM, Class I Crane
License Required).
AK. Truck drivers
group I:
(1) Pickup
truck 3/4 ton or under: Drives a light
truck for transporting small loads of construction materials, tools or
equipment. May service and make
necessary adjustments for proper operation of equipment.
(2) Service
station attendant:
Maintains service station. Washes,
lubricates, fuels and otherwise services vehicles and equipment. Changes and repairs tires and tubes. Operates and maintains service station
equipment.
(3) Swamper or rider helper:
Assists truck driver. Shares with
a driver the duties of loading and unloading a truck, shifting articles about
on truck, handling cumbersome articles and may drive to relieve driver.
AL. Truck
drivers-group II:
(1) Bus
or taxi: Drives a bus or taxi to
transport employees to and from construction project. May oil, grease, or otherwise service and
make necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
(2) Dump or
batch truck: Drives a truck, under eight
cubic yards, for transporting loads of construction material. May service and make necessary adjustments
for proper operation of equipment.
(3) Flatbed
(bobtail) two ton and under: Drives a
truck for transporting loads of construction materials or equipment. May load and unload truck. May service and make necessary adjustments
for proper operation of equipment.
AM. Truck drivers-group
III:
(1) Dump
trucks (including all highway and off highway):
Drives a truck, eight cubic yards and under 16 cubic yards, for
transporting loads of construction material.
May service and make necessary adjustments for proper operation of
equipment.
(2) Tank
truck: Drives a truck or truck with
trailer or semi-trailer, on which is mounted a tank, under 3,000 gallons, for
transporting loads of liquid products or construction material. May oil, grease or otherwise service and make
necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
(3) Flatbed
(bobtail) over two tons: Drives a truck
for transporting loads of construction materials or equipment. May load and unload truck. May service and make necessary adjustments
for proper operation of equipment.
AN. Truck driver-group
IV:
(1) Distributor
(asphalt): Only drives truck equipped
with tank and controls for regulating distribution of bituminous
materials. Does not operate levers or
valves (See Power Equipment Operators-Group III). May oil, grease or otherwise service and make
necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
(2) Heavy
tire repairman
(3) Lumber
carrier: Drives truck that hauls logs
and lumber with truck trailer or bobtail.
(4) Transit
mix or agitator (two or three axle bobtail equipment): Drives a truck upon which is mounted a
concrete mixer. Drives truck under
loading hopper to receive sand, gravel and cement. Fills water tank and starts and stops
mixer. Drives truck to location for
unloading. Dumps concrete into chute
leading to forms. Cleans mixer
drum. May service and make necessary
adjustments for proper operation of equipment.
(5) Scissor
truck
(6) Trailer
or semi-trailer dump: Drives a truck to
which is attached a trailer or semi-trailer dump used in transporting
construction materials.
(7) Field
equipment servicemen
AO. Truck driver-group
V:
(1) Dumpster
or dumptor:
Operator of a self-propelled, four-wheeled, rubber-tired truck type
machine which is used in hauling of materials.
Machine is normally used off the highway, working around rock crushers
or excavation. Being
reverse steer, the operator rides facing the dump-bed which is dumped by
release of safety lock and sudden stop of machine, which causes off center
loading of truck bed to dump. May oil,
grease or otherwise service and make necessary adjustments to equipment as
needed.
(2) Tank
truck: Drives a truck or truck with
trailer or semi-trailer, on which is mounted a tank, 3,000 to 6,000 gallons, for
transporting loads of liquid products or construction material. May oil, grease or otherwise service and make
necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
(3) Lowboy,
light equipment: Drives a truck to which
is attached a trailer with a low frame or bed upon which light equipment or
material is hauled. May service and make
necessary adjustments for proper operation of equipment.
(4) Euclid
type tank wagon under 6,000 gallons.
AP. Truck driver-group
VI:
(1) Vacuum
truck
(2) Dump
trucks (including all highway and off highway):
Drives truck, 16 cubic yards and under 22 cubic yards, for transporting
loads of construction material. May
service and make necessary adjustments for proper operation of equipment.
AQ. Truck driver VII:
(1) Transit
mix or agitator (semi or four axle equipment):
Drives a truck upon which is mounted a concrete mixer. Drives truck under loading hopper to receive
sand, gravel and cement. Fills water
tank and starts and stops mixer. Drives
truck to location for unloading. Dumps
concrete into chute leading to forms.
Cleans mixer drum. May service
and make necessary adjustments for proper operation of equipment.
(2) Flaherty
truck type spreader box: Drives a
self-propelled vehicle, consisting primarily of a hopper mounted on
pneumatic-tired wheels, used to spread crushed aggregate on bituminous roadway
material. May service and make necessary
adjustments for proper operation of equipment.
(3) Slurry
truck driver
(4) Bulk
cement driver
(5) Semi
doubles driver
(6) Four
axle bobtail driver
(7) Dump
trucks (including all highway and off highway):
Drives truck, 22 cubic yards and under 36 cubic yards, for transporting
loads of construction material. May
service and make necessary adjustments for proper operation of equipment.
(8) Head
field equipment servicemen.
AR. Truck driver VIII:
(1) Diesel-powered
transport (non-self-loading) 10 yards and over:
Drives diesel powered Euclid Turnarocker,
Terra Cobra, D.W.-10, D.W.-20 Le Tourneau pulls and similar diesel powered
equipment when used to haul material and assigned to a “teamster”.
(2) Lowboy,
heavy equipment: Drives a truck to which
is attached a trailer with a low frame or bed upon which light equipment or
material is hauled. May service and make
necessary adjustments for proper operation of equipment.
(3) Tank
truck: Drives a truck or truck with
trailer or semi-trailer, on which is mounted a tank 6,000 gallons and over, for
transporting loads of liquid products or construction material. May oil, grease or otherwise service and make
necessary adjustments to equipment as needed.
(4) Semi-trailer
drivers (flatbed or van, tandems)
(5) Light
equipment mechanic
(6) Dump
trucks (including all highway and off highway):
Drives truck, 36 cubic yards and over, for transporting loads of
construction material. May service and
make necessary adjustments for proper operation of equipment.
AS. Truck driver IX:
(1) Warehouseman: Maintains warehouse for construction supplies
and materials. May operate necessary
equipment and machinery within warehouse area.
(2) Cardex men
(3) Expediter
(4) Lowboy
(heavy equipment double gooseneck
(5) Heavy
equipment mechanic
(6) Welder
(body and fender man)
AT. Semi-skilled
laborers Group II:
(1) Carpenter tender: Performs labor such as hand handling of
materials used by carpenters. Assists in
erecting and removing of forms, removes nails and clears lumber.
(2) Concrete
worker or buggy operator: Pours and
performs other work in relation to the lining with concrete. Operates buggy by pushing or pulling by hand
between mixer or other source to site of work.
[(3) Fire watch: a
laborer who watches the work area for fires when craftsmen are cutting or
welding.]
(3) Curbing machine, asphalt or
cement: Operates a machine which applies
asphalt or concrete along the edge of highways or parking aprons to form a
small curb.
(4) Scaffold
tender: Tends to the scaffold builder.
(5) Certified
flagman: Supervises flag and signing
personnel. Prepares revision to the
traffic control plan.
(6) Bleacher
seating: Unloads, moves to place of
erection, assembles and installation of all stadium seating.
(7) Fence
builder: Digs post holes, pours concrete
for posts, sets posts, stretches fencing material.
(8) Guardrail
builder: Attaches and assists in the
installation of guardrails, (other than guardrails on bridges) guardrail posts,
informational signs and metal fencing; including barb wire, woven wire, and
chain link which is used to define right of way,
medians or driving lanes or provide safety for such areas. May require the use of small hand tools such
as hammer and spud wrench.
(9) Form
stripper: Strips, cleans and oils all
types of concrete forms.
(10) Gabian
basket builders: Assembles wire baskets
for rip rap.
(11) Rip
rap stoneman: One who places stones into
gabian baskets.
(12) Drywall,
stocking and handling: Carries and
handles of all materials by hand to a point adjacent to place of erection. Assists in placement of materials.
(13) Fly
ash vacuum operator: Installs vacuum
lines and operates nozzle of vacuum hose at power plants in the cleanup of ash.
(14) Landscaping
and planter: Duties include site
development, soil preparation, rototilling, fine grading, soil amending,
installation of plants, seeded and sodded grasses, gravel and bark
mulches. Installation of landscape
sprinkler systems including landscape irrigation backflow preventers, and all
components downstream including pipe, valves, low voltage control wiring,
irrigation controllers, sprinkler heads, and drip components. May operate small behind and stand-on only
landscape equipment (including miniskid steers with
attachments). Maintenance of landscapes
including weeding, mowing, and irrigation repair. Duties do not include electrical work,
fencing, concrete retaining walls or other work that is generally performed by
skilled craftsmen.
(15) Manhole
builder: Constructs a means of permanent
access to water, electrical and sewer lines for maintenance purposes.
(16) Tool
room person:
manages, inspects and coordinates all tool room activities and
exchanges.
(17) Rodmen: holds survey rod.
(18) Tenderers (to cement mason and
plasterer): Assists in the pouring of
concrete by spreading concrete, cleaning and caring of cement mason’s tools,
mixes mortar used in the patching of concrete.
Mixes mortar for plasterers and delivers same to location where
plasterers are working. Sets up
scaffolding as directed by foreman where necessary, and cleans and cares for
tools and equipment used in the preparation and application of plaster.
AU. Skilled laborers: Group III:
(1) Air
and power tool man (not a carpenter’s tool):
A worker who uses a tool driven by compressed air, gas or electric power
to perform such work as breaking old pavement, loosening or digging hard earth,
trimming bottom and sides of trenches, breaking large rocks, driving sheeting,
chipping concrete, trimming or cutting
stone, calking steel plates, or compaction of earthen backfill. Install plastic and PVC linings on
ponds. Rotary man operates a hand-held
device to make cuts on road with a person holding a nozzle to fill cuts with
oil.
(2) Asphalt
raker: Distributes asphaltic
road-building materials evenly over road surface by raking and brushing
materials to correct thickness; may control straight edge to regulate width and
depth of materials; directs “asphalt shovelers” when to add or take away material
to fill low spots or to reduce high spots.
Applies color to tennis courts, etc.
by using a squeegee. Applies
epoxy on concrete floors to seal.
(3) Asphalt
heaterman:
Tends a stationary or portable liquid asphalt kettle, starts fires
(usually fuel oil) under the kettle, controls heat applied to the kettle by
regulating dials or burners, maintains desired temperature in asphalt, and
regulates valves for discharge of asphalt from kettle.
(4) Asphalt
jointman:
Cleans and pours asphalt joints in concrete paving with nozzle or
can. Takes care of asphalt kettle
heaters.
(5) Chain
saw-man: Operates a power driven chain
saw to clear areas of timber. Fells
trees, and sometimes cuts the fallen trees into short sections to facilitate
their removal.
(6) Oxy
or Gasoline torch operators: Uses
cutting torch only for demolition work on steel or other metal structures.
(7) Cutting
torch or welding torch operator or burner person: Uses cutting torch only for demolition work
on steel or other metal structures.
(8) Gunite rebound men:
A laborer who shoots gunite into place.
(9) Concrete
power buggy operator: Drives
self-propelled buggy to transport concrete from mixer or source of supply to
place of deposit. Operates levers to
dump load.
(10) Sandblaster: Cleans and prepares surfaces by the use of sandblasting equipment other than preparation
for painting (see painter).
(11) Potman: Cleans screens and feeds sand to hopper or
pot of sandblasting machine.
(12) Wagon,
air track, drill and diamond driller (outside):
Sets up and operates air driven drilling mechanism that drills holes
into concrete or rock. Levels machine by placing timbers under wheels. Inserts and fastens drill steel in
chuck. Adjusts angle of drill tower and
bolts into position. Controls drilling
and speed of drill by moving levers. May
make other adjustments to equipment as needed.
(13) Multi-plate
setter: Assembles large diameter metal
culverts by bolting together semi-circular pieces of metal to form a complete
circle, and bolts each section of this circle to similar sections which are
placed adjacently, repeating these processes until the required length of
culvert is formed.
(14) Concrete
burner: Operates a devise used to burn
holes, etc., through concrete. This
devise consists of a consumable aluminum-magnesium rod inside a small iron
pipe. Oxygen is forced through the pipe
under pressure, and the end of the assembly is lighted. The concrete is melted by the intense heat of
the device.
[(15) Tenderers (to cement mason and plasterer): Assists in the pouring of concrete by
spreading concrete, cleaning and caring of cement mason’s tools, mixes mortar
used in the patching of concrete. Mixes
mortar for plasterers and delivers same to location where plasterers are
working. Sets up scaffolding as directed
by foreman where necessary, and cleans and cares for tools and equipment used
in the preparation and application of plaster.
(16)] (15) Mortar mixer and mason
tender: Mechanically mixes mortar
ingredients to proper consistency and delivers to mason on scaffold or at site
of work. Keeps materials supplied to
mason.
[(17)] (16) Batching plant scaleman: Manually operates a stationary or portable
batching scale that weighs out concrete materials. Adjusts scales for required weight of the
materials. Operates controls that admit
materials separately from storage hoppers to weighing bins. Observes scales or indicators that show when
proper amount of materials have been made. Discharges materials from weighing bin into
truck or other carrier or mixer. He may measure materials by volume instead of
weight.
[(18)] (17) Concrete touch-up man: Prepares the surfaces of concrete masonry
which is not to be finished (using tools other than those normally used by
“cement masons’) by patching holes and broken corners, and removing high spots
and defective concrete.
[(19)] (18) Concrete sawman - coring machine: Operates
a power driven, hand guided, water-cooled saw or diamond driller
which is used to cut through slabs of concrete, except as otherwise provided
elsewhere.
[(20) Curbing machine, asphalt or cement: Operates a machine which applies asphalt or
concrete along the edge of highways or parking aprons to form a small curb.
(21)] (19) Metal form setter-road: Fits together, aligns and grades metal road
forms for holding concrete in place on road and street surfaces. Dismantles, moves and cleans forms after
concrete hardens.
[(22)] (20) Grade setter or checker: Keeps stakes and stringline set in place out
in front of trenching machine so that machine will cut ditch in correct
location. Sets stakes so that pipelayers
can fine-grade ditch and measure from the batter board down to correct depth of
ditch.
[(23)] (21) Gunite, pumpcreteman and nozzleman:
Assists operator and handles the equipment and directs the placing of
concrete or mortar that is moved by pressures or pneumatic equipment, such as gunite. May
fine-grade and place wire mesh at times.
[(24)] (22) Vibrator operator (hand type): Lowers hose-like flexible shaft of vibrator
into newly poured concrete. Starts power
unit and holds shaft, allowing hammerhead on shaft to vibrate, thus compacting
the concrete. Air, electric or gasoline
operated vibrators are used.
[(25)] (23) Vibratory compactor (hand
type): Operates hand guided vibratory or
impact compactor. Adjusts levers,
throttles and other devices necessary for operation.
[(26)] (24) Hod carrier: Assists brickmasons,
stonemasons and blockmasons by preparing mortar mix,
either by hand or machine, delivers material to masons on scaffold, operates
small material moving equipment such as power buggy, hoists, mortar mix pumps
and other similar equipment. May erect
and dismantle bricklayer scaffolds.
[(27)] (25) Pipelayer: Unloading, handling, distribution and
installation, concrete, corrugated metal pipe and corrugated and smooth wall
plastic pipe, PVC and polyethylene pipe.
Receives pipe lowered from top of trench; joins pipe ends; adjusts pipe
to line and grade; seals joints with cement or other
sealing compound. Lowers pipe.
[(28)] (26) Plaster spreader operator: Mixes plaster to be used in a machine which
is designed to apply plaster to surfaces by means of a hose. Handles and maintains hose, places and moves
machine, and services and maintains machine.
[(29)] (27) Jack hammer and chipping hammer
operator: Operates jackhammer, chipping hammer,
whether powered by air or electric or any other means.
[(30)] (28) Tamper operator: Performs the compacting of soil using walk or
stand behind equipment.
[(31)] (29) Scaffold builder: Erects and dismantles all types of
scaffolding, except wood scaffolding, for job site.
[(32)] (30) Powderman tender: Carries powder or other explosive to blaster
or powderman and assists by placing prepared explosive in hole, connecting lead
wire to blasting machine, and performing other duties as directed.
[(33)] (31) Water pump tender: fuels and tends to all water pumps under 6”
for the purpose of moving water on the job site.
[(34)] (32) Certified scissor lift or man lift
operator: Person who completes competent
person training certification in the operation of scissor and man lifts.
AV. Specialty
laborer: Group IV:
(1) Asbestos
abatement remover: A person who has
proper certifications for removal of asbestos from pipes, ceiling and other
parts of existing buildings, either by scraping or by using pressure by
water. In addition, this definition
includes a person who cleans up and disposes of asbestos after it has been
removed.
(2) Toxic
and hazardous waste remover: Person who
has the proper certification for the removal of toxic and hazardous materials.
(3) Lead
base paint remover: Person who has the
proper certifications for the removal of lead base paints.
(4) Powderman
and blaster: Prepares blasting material
and inserts this material into predrilled holes. Performs electrical wiring necessary for
detonation and assures that all charges have detonated before other workmen
resume work in the area made hazardous by the charges.
(5) Pest
technician (Licensed by the Bureau of Rodent Management): Technician certified for the removal and handling
of rodents and pests.
(6) Radiation
worker II: Person that completes proper
training for work in areas containing radiation.
AW. Unskilled
laborers: Group I:
(1) Chainman,
stake driver, stake hopper: Carries
supplies, drags chain, holds survey rod, drives stakes and assists surveyor in
other related duties.
(2) Building
and common laborer: A general term used
on construction work covering many unskilled occupations. A laborer works with all crews doing
everything from pick and shovel work to cleaning up lumber with hammer;
shoveling and placing concrete; applying coats of oil to inside face of forms;
stripping forms; working on rock crusher to feed trap; opening cement sacks at
batch plant; working with dirt crew to move construction layout stakes; working
as flagman, signalman or spotter to control traffic; serving as dumpman; spreading hot asphaltic material over roadbed with
shovel; operating hand concrete buggy or wheelbarrow; helping painter to
prepare surfaces for painting and cleaning paint equipment. Does not include roofing cleanup.
(3) Concrete
buggy operator (hand): Operating buggy
by pushing or pulling by hand between mixer or other source to site of work.
(4) Fire watch: a laborer who watches the work area for fires
when craftsmen are cutting or welding.
[(4)] (5) Flagman:
Flagman is stationed at strategic locations to control flow of traffic
by hand held flags or other hand held warning device.
[(5)] (6) Window washer:
Cleans and washes windows.
[(6)] (7) Unloading of furniture and fixtures: Unloads furniture and fixtures from trucks
and moves them to the place of installation or storage.
[(7)] (8) Heat tenders:
Fuels and tends to heaters use on the job sites.
AX. Underground laborers: Group I
Tunnel
workers: Outside laborer, minimum tunnel, labor, dry houseman and hand muckers,
top landers, trackmen.
AY. Underground laborers: Group II
Chuck tender, cable or base tenders,
concrete laborers, dumpmen, whirley pump operators,
tenders on shotcrete, gunniting and sandblasting, tenders core and diamond drills, pot tenders, concrete
specialist (1) including finishing, grouting, patching, and curing, concrete
specialist tender (2), applying of concrete processing materials, concrete
worker, (including all chipping and finishing underground).
AZ. Underground Laborers: Group III
Shaft Miner, tunnel miner, air tugger
operators, collapsible form movers and setters, machine men and bit grinders,
nippers, powdermen and blasters, reinforcing steel setters, timbermen (steel or
wood tunnel support, including the placement of sheeting when required), tunnel
liners, plate setters, all cutting and welding incidental to miners’ work,
vibrator men, internal and external, unloading, stopping and starting of moran agitator cars, diamond and core drill operators,
shotcrete operator, gunnnite nozzelmen.
[11.1.2.18
NMAC - Rp, 11.1.2.17 NMAC, 12/30/2016; A, 1/1/2023; A, 5/19/2023; A, 1/1/2024]
11.1.2.20 PREVAILING
WAGE AND FRINGE BENEFIT AND APPRENTICESHIP CONTRIBUTION RATES: Pursuant to 11.1.2.13 NMAC, the director of the labor relations
division of the department of workforce solutions hereby publishes the [2023]
2024 prevailing wage and fringe benefit rates and apprenticeship
contributions that will apply to all wage rate decisions issued from January 1, [2023] 2024 through
December 31, [2023] 2024.
A. TYPE
A: STREET, HIGHWAY, UTILITY AND LIGHT
ENGINEERING |
|
|
|
Trade Classification |
Base Rate |
Fringe Rate |
Apprenticeship |
Bricklayer/block layer/stonemason |
[ |
[ |
|
Bricklayer/block layer/stonemason: Curry,
DeBaca, Quay and Roosevelt counties |
23.10 |
8.98 |
|
Bricklayer/block layer/stonemason: Dona Ana,
Otero, Eddy, and Lea counties |
29.56 |
14.10 |
|
Carpenter/lather |
[ |
[ |
|
Carpenter: Los Alamos county |
33.18 |
13.58 |
|
Cement mason |
[ |
[ |
|
Drywall Finisher/Taper |
[ |
[ |
|
Glazier/Fabricator |
21.75 |
7.10 |
|
[ |
[ |
[ |
|
[ |
[ |
[ |
|
Ironworker |
|
||
Ironworker
journeyman |
[ |
[ |
|
Probationary
ironworker |
[ |
[ |
|
Painter – Commercial |
[ |
[ |
|
Paper Hanger |
[ |
[ |
|
Plumber/pipefitter |
[ |
[ |
|
Electricians – outside classifications: Zone 1 |
|
||
Ground man |
[ |
[ |
|
Equipment operator |
[ |
[ |
|
Lineman |
[ |
[ |
|
Journeyman
technician |
[ |
[ |
|
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
|
Electricians – outside classifications: Zone 2 |
|
|
|
Ground man |
[ |
[ |
|
Equipment operator |
[ |
[ |
|
Lineman |
[ |
[ |
|
Journeyman technician |
[ |
[ |
|
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
|
Electricians
– outside classifications: Los Alamos
county |
|
|
|
Ground man |
[ |
[ |
|
Equipment Operator |
[ |
[ |
|
Lineman/Technician |
[ |
[ |
|
Journeyman
technician |
[ |
[ |
|
Cable Splicer |
[ |
[ |
|
Laborers |
|
|
|
Group
I – Unskilled |
[ |
[ |
|
Group
II – Semi-Skilled |
[ |
[ |
|
Group
III – Skilled |
[ |
[ |
|
Group
IV - Specialty |
[ |
[ |
|
Operators |
|
||
Group
I |
[ |
[ |
|
Group
II |
[ |
[ |
|
Group
III |
[ |
[ |
|
Group
IV |
[ |
[ |
|
Group
V |
[ |
[ |
|
Group
VI |
[ |
[ |
|
Group VII |
[ |
[ |
|
Group
VIII |
[ |
[ |
|
Group
IX |
[ |
[ |
|
Group
X |
[ |
[ |
|
Soft Floor Layer |
21.00 |
[ |
|
Truck drivers |
|
||
Group
I – IX |
[ |
[ |
|
B. TYPE B: GENERAL BUILDING |
|
|
|
Trade Classification |
Base Rate |
Fringe Rate |
Apprenticeship |
Asbestos
workers/heat & frost insulators |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Asbestos
workers/heat & frost insulators:
Los Alamos county |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Boilermaker/blacksmith |
35.88 |
32.28 |
.60 |
Boilermaker/blacksmith: San Juan county |
36.83 |
31.88 |
.60 |
Bricklayer/block
layer/stonemason |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Bricklayer/block layer/stonemason: Curry,
DeBaca, Quay, and Roosevelt counties |
23.10 |
8.98 |
.60 |
Bricklayer/block layer/stonemason: Dona Ana,
Otero, Eddy, and Lea |
26.42 |
8.98 |
.60 |
Carpenter/lather |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Carpenter: Los Alamos county |
33.18 |
13.58 |
.60 |
Millwright/pile
driver |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cement
mason |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians – outside classifications: Zone 1 |
|
||
Ground man |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Equipment operator |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Lineman/technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians – outside classifications: Zone 2 |
|
|
|
Ground man |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Equipment operator |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Lineman/technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians
– outside classifications: Los Alamos county |
|
|
|
Ground man |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Equipment operator |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Lineman/technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians – inside classifications: Zone 1 |
|
|
|
Wireman/low
voltage technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians – inside classifications: Zone 2 |
|
|
|
Wireman/low
voltage technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians – inside classifications: Zone 3 |
|
|
|
Wireman/low voltage
technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians – inside classifications: Zone 4 |
|
|
|
Wireman/low voltage technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians – inside classifications: Dona Ana county, Hidalgo county, Luna
county and Otero county |
|
|
|
Wireman/low
voltage technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians – inside
classifications: Los Alamos county |
|
|
|
Wireman/low
voltage technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Elevator
constructor |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Elevator
constructor helper |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Glazier/Fabricator |
21.75 |
7.10 |
|
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
Glazier: Los Alamos county |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Ironworker |
|
|
|
Ironworker
journeyman |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Probationary
ironworker |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Painter
|
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Painter: Los Alamos county |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Paper
Hanger |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Paper
Hanger: Los Alamos county |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Drywall
Finisher/Taper – Light commercial & residential |
|||
Ames tool operator
|
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Hand
finisher/machine texture |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Drywall
Finisher/Taper: Los Alamos county |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Plasterer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Plumber/pipefitter |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Roofer |
|||
Roofer journeyman |
26.94 |
9.36 |
.60 |
Roofer helper |
16.16 |
9.36 |
.60 |
Sheet
metal worker |
|||
Zone 1 |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Zone 2 – Industrial |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Zone 3 – Los Alamos county |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Soft
floor layer |
21.00 |
9.20 |
.60 |
Soft
floor layer: Los Alamos county |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Sprinkler
fitter |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Tile
setter |
24.46 |
8.81 |
.60 |
Tile
setter helper/finisher |
16.53 |
8.81 |
.60 |
Laborers |
|||
Group I –
Unskilled |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group II –
Semi-Skilled |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group III –
Skilled |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group IV –
Specialty |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
[ |
|||
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
Operators |
|
|
|
Group I |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group II |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group III |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group IV |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group V |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group VI |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group VII |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group VIII |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group IX |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group X |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Truck drivers |
|||
Group I – VII |
16.65 |
8.27 |
.60 |
Group VIII |
16.71 |
8.27 |
.60 |
Group IX |
18.65 |
8.27 |
.60 |
C. TYPE C: RESIDENTIAL |
|||
Trade classification |
Base
rate |
Fringe
rate |
Apprenticeship |
Asbestos
workers/heat & frost insulators |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Asbestos
workers/heat & frost insulators: Los Alamos county |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Boilermaker/blacksmith |
35.88 |
32.28 |
.60 |
Boilermaker/blacksmith: San Juan county |
36.83 |
31.88 |
.60 |
Bricklayer/block
layer/stonemason |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Bricklayer/block layer/stonemason: Curry,
DeBaca, Quay, and Roosevelt counties |
23.10 |
8.98 |
.60 |
Bricklayer/block layer/stonemason: Dona Ana, Otero, Eddy and Lea
counties |
26.42 |
8.98 |
.60 |
Carpenter/lather |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Carpenter: Los Alamos county |
33.18 |
13.58 |
.60 |
Cement
mason |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians – outside classifications: Zone 1 |
|||
Ground man |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Equipment operator |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Lineman/technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians – outside classifications: Zone 2 |
|||
Ground man |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Equipment operator |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Lineman/technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians
– outside classifications: Los Alamos
county |
|||
Ground man |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Equipment operator |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Lineman/technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians – inside classifications: Zone 1 |
|
|
|
Wireman/low
voltage technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians – inside classifications: Zone 2 |
|
|
|
Wireman/low
voltage technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians – inside classifications: Zone 3 |
|
|
|
Wireman/low voltage
technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians – inside classifications: Zone 4 |
|
|
|
Wireman/low
voltage technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians – inside classifications: Dona Ana county, Hidalgo county, Luna
county and Otero county |
|
|
|
Wireman/low
voltage technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians – inside classifications: Los Alamos county |
|
|
|
Wireman/low
voltage technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Elevator
constructor |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Elevator
constructor helper |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Glazier/Fabricator
|
21.75 |
7.10 |
|
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
Ironworker |
|||
Ironworker journeyman |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Probationary ironworker |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Painter
– Residential |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Drywall
Finisher/Taper – Light commercial & residential |
|
|
|
Ames tool operator
|
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Hand finisher/machine
texture |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Paper
hanger |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Plasterer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Plumber/pipefitter |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Roofer |
|||
Roofer Journeyman |
26.94 |
9.36 |
.60 |
Roofer Helper |
16.16 |
9.36 |
.60 |
Sheet
metal worker |
|||
Zone 1 |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Zone 2 – Industrial |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Zone 3 – Los Alamos county |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Soft
floor layer |
21.00 |
9.20 |
.60 |
Sprinkler
fitter |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Tile
setter |
24.46 |
8.81 |
.60 |
Tile
setter help/finisher |
16.53 |
8.81 |
.60 |
Laborers |
|||
Group I –
Unskilled |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group II –
Semi-skilled |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group III –
Skilled |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group IV –
Specialty |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Operators |
|||
Group I |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group V |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group VII |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group VIII |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Truck drivers |
|||
Group I – IX |
20.75 |
6.27 |
.60 |
D. TYPE H: HEAVY ENGINEERING |
|||
Trade Classification |
Base Rate |
Fringe Rate |
Apprenticeship |
Asbestos
workers/heat & frost insulators |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Asbestos
workers/heat & frost insulators:
Los Alamos county |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Boilermaker/blacksmith |
35.88 |
32.28 |
.60 |
Boilermaker/blacksmith: San Juan county |
36.83 |
31.88 |
.60 |
Bricklayer/block
layer/stonemason |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Bricklayer/block layer/stonemason: Curry, DeBaca, Quay and Roosevelt counties |
23.10 |
8.98 |
.60 |
Bricklayer/block layer/stonemason: Dona Ana, Otero, Eddy, and Lea counties |
26.42 |
8.98 |
.60 |
Carpenter/lather |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Carpenter: Los Alamos county |
33.18 |
13.58 |
.60 |
Millwright/pile
driver |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cement
mason |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians - outside classifications: Zone 1 |
|
|
|
Ground man |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Equipment operator |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Lineman/technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians - outside classifications: Zone 2 |
|||
Ground man |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Equipment operator |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Lineman/technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians
– outside classifications: Los Alamos
county |
|||
Ground man |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Equipment operator |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Lineman/technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians – inside classifications: Zone 1 |
|
|
|
Wireman/low voltage
technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians - inside classifications: Zone 2 |
|
|
|
Wireman/low
voltage technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians - inside classifications: Zone 3 |
|
|
|
Wireman/low
voltage technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians - inside classifications: Zone 4 |
|
|
|
Wireman/low
voltage technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians – inside classifications: Dona Ana county,
Hidalgo county, Luna county and Otero county |
|
|
|
Wireman/low
voltage technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Electricians – inside classifications: Los Alamos county |
|
|
|
Wireman/low
voltage technician |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Cable splicer |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Glazier/Fabricator |
21.75 |
7.10 |
|
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
Ironworker |
|
|
|
Ironworker
journeyman |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Probationary
ironworker |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Painter
– Industrial |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Paperhanger |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Drywall
Finisher/Taper – Industrial |
|
|
|
Ames tool operator
|
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Hand
finisher/machine texture |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Plumber/pipefitter |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Roofer |
|
|
|
Roofer journeyman |
26.94 |
9.36 |
.60 |
Roofer helper |
16.16 |
9.36 |
.60 |
Sheet
metal worker |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Operators |
|
|
|
Group I |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group II |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group III |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group IV |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group V |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group VI |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group VII |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group VIII |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group IX |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group X |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Laborers |
|||
Group I –
Unskilled |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group II –
Semi-Skilled |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group III –
Skilled |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group IV- Specialty |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Laborers – Underground |
|||
Group I |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group II |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group III |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Soft
Floor Layer |
21.00 |
9.20 |
.60 |
Truck drivers |
|
|
|
Group I |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group II |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group III |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group IV |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group V |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group VI |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group VII |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group VIII |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
Group IX |
[ |
[ |
.60 |
[ |
|
|
|
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[ |
[11.1.2.20 NMAC - N, 02-29-2016; Rp, 1/1/2017; A, 1/1/2018, A, 1/1/2019; A,
1/1/2020; A, 1/1/2021; A, 1/1/2022; A, 1/1/2023; A, 5/19/2023; A, 1/1/2024]
11.1.2.21 Subsistence, zone, and incentive pay
rates. All contractors are required to
pay subsistence, zone, and incentive pay according to the particular
trade.
A. Asbestos workers
or heat and frost insulators
(1) Zone
1 shall consist of the area lying within the city limits of a circle whose
radius is 66 miles from the city hall in Albuquerque or the city hall in El
Paso - $0.00 per day.
(2) Zone
2 shall consist of Los Alamos county - $40.00 per day if not furnished a
company owned vehicle.
(3) Zone
3 shall consist of the area lying beyond a circle whose radius is over 66 miles
from the city hall in Albuquerque or the city hall in El Paso - $85.00 per day.
B. Boilermakers/blacksmiths
(1) Per
diem is calculated from city hall of the dispatch city or the employee’s
home address, whichever is closer to the job location.
(2) Per
diem is $55.00 per day for travel between 70 and 120 miles and $85.00 per day
for travel over 120 miles.
C. Bricklayers
[(1) Between 70 and 120 miles, $55.00 per day
(2) 121
or more miles, $70.00 per day]
(1) For Albuquerque area contractors,
the starting point shall be at the intersection of I-40 and I-25 and shall
continue to the job site. All other
areas, the starting point shall be the employer’s main office address.
(2) Between
50 and 75 miles from the starting point, $35.00 per day.
(3) 76 or more miles from the
starting point, $55.00 per day.
(4) All covered refractory work over
75 miles from the intersection of I-40 and I-25, $80.00 per day.
D. Cement Masons
(1) For
employees who travel to Santa Fe from Albuquerque or vice versa, $20.00
per day.
(2) In
all other work performed more than 50 miles from the employer’s main office,
$50.00 per day.
(3) Mutually
agreed-upon lodging or transportation paid for by the employer will substitute
for subsistence pay.
E. Drywall
Finishers and Tapers:
(1) $40.00
per day ($5.00 per hour for eight hours work) for over 60 miles over the most
typically traveled route, or other mutually agreed upon suitable lodging or
transportation.
(2) If
an employee has worked the full week on four10-hour days, the
employee shall be paid the full week of per diem of $200.00.
(3) Special
provision for Santa Fe and Albuquerque:
Employees who travel between Santa Fe and Albuquerque will be paid
$15.00 per day or other mutually agreed upon lodging or transportation.
F. Electricians
(inside classifications)
(1) For
Albuquerque only:
(a) Zone
1 is classified as being within 40 miles from the main post office.
(b) Zone
2 shall extend up to 10 miles beyond zone 1.
Work performed within zone 2 shall be compensated nine percent above the
journeyman rate for zone 1.
(c) Zone
3 shall extend up to 20 miles beyond zone 1.
Work performed within zone 3 shall be compensated fifteen percent above
the journeyman rate for zone 1.
(d) Zone
4 shall extend 20 miles or more beyond zone 1.
Work performed within zone 4 shall be compensated twenty six percent
above the journeyman rate for zone 1.
(2) For
Los Alamos county only: work performed within
the county shall be compensated fifteen percent above the zone 1 journeyman
rate.
(3) For
all other counties:
(a) Zone
1 is:
(i) within six miles from the main post
office for Raton, Tucumcari, and Farmington.
(ii) within
eight miles from the main post office for Las Vegas.
(iii) within
ten miles from the main post office for Santa Fe and Gallup.
(iv) within
twelve miles from the main post office for Belen, Carrizozo, Clovis, Los Lunas,
Portales, Roswell, Ruidoso, Artesia, Carlsbad, Hobbs, and Lovington.
(v) within
fourteen miles from the main post office for Espanola.
(b) Zone
2 shall extend up to 20 miles beyond zone 1.
Work performed within zone 2 shall be compensated nine percent above the
journeyman rate for zone 1.
(c) Zone
3 shall extend up to 30 miles from zone 1.
Work performed within zone 3 shall be compensated fifteen percent above
the journeyman rate for zone 1.
(d) Zone
4 shall extend beyond 30 miles from zone 1.
Work performed within zone 4 shall be compensated twenty six percent
above the journeyman rate for zone 1.
(4) Commuting time to and from a job site at the beginning and end of each workday is not compensable. However, if workers are required to report to the shop at the start of the day or return to the shop at the end of the day, then that time spent traveling is compensable. Similarly, time spent traveling from job to job is compensable. In both cases, workers shall be paid for the time spent traveling and shall be furnished transportation by the employer. Under these conditions the Zone 1 rate and any applicable overtime will be paid.
G. Electricians
(outside classification – Zone 2):
$50.00 per diem to be paid for work 30 miles outside of Santa Fe and 60
miles outside of Albuquerque. No per
diam in Los Alamos county.
H. Glaziers
(1) When
out-of-town travel is required, the employer shall [pay the employee for]provide
suitable lodging with no more than two people per room and $20.00 per night for
food.
(2) Employees
required to use a personal vehicle for travel to a jobsite beyond a 30 mile
radius of the main post office in town where the employer’s shop is located
shall be compensated at the current Internal Revenue Service (IRS) rate for
actual mileage incurred beyond the 30 mile radius, plus their regular rate of
pay for travel time.
I. Ironworkers:
(1) Travel
more than 50 miles from the interchange of Interstate 25 and Interstate 40 or
from the employee’s home should be paid at $9.00 per hour.
(2) If
travel is within Santa Fe county, travel should be paid at $3.00 per hour.
J. Laborers:
(1) Type
A:
(a) Work
travel between 50 and 85 miles from the employer’s primary address should be
compensated at $3.50 per hour.
(b) Work
travel 86 miles or greater from the employer’s primary address should be
compensated at $5.00 per hour.
(2) Types
B and C:
[(a) Work travel under 50 miles is a “free zone”;
(b) The
municipal limit of the city of Santa Fe is $30.00 per day;
(c) Work
travel between 50 and 75 miles from the union hall to include the municipal
limits of Estancia, Grants, and Socorro is $40.00 per day;
(d) All
work over 75 miles from the union hall is $50.00 per day.]
(a) Work travel over 70 miles from the
union halls of Albuquerque, Espanola, Farmington or Las Cruces shall be paid at
$7.00 per hour in travel pay, not to exceed 10 hours per day.
(b) If an overnight stay is necessary,
the employer shall pay $40.00 per day for meals, in addition to travel pay.
(3) Type
H – no zone subsistence pay.
(4) If
an employer provides the employee transportation and mutually agreeable,
suitable lodging with no more than two people in a room in areas where
overnight stays are necessary, subsistence rates do not apply.
K. Millwrights
[(1) Work travel between 76 and 150 miles should be compensated
at $50.00 per day.
(2) Work
travel greater than 150 miles should be compensated at $75.00 per day.]
(1) All zone
pay shall be calculated from the address of the city hall of the respective
dispatch point.
(2) Zone
1: Work traveled up to 45 miles from the
address of the city hall of the respective dispatch points is a free zone.
(3) Zone 2: Work traveled between 45 miles and 100 miles
shall be compensated at $4.00 per hour above base wage.
(4) Zone 3: Work traveled 101 miles or more shall be
compensated at $6.00 per hour above base wage.
(5) If employer fails to provide
suitable lodging, employer shall pay $110.00 per diem.
(6) If an employee’s principal place
of residence is within 45 road miles from the project, no subsistence or travel
time shall be paid.
L. Operating
Engineers
(1) Type
A operators should be compensated for zone and subsistence as follows:
(a) Work
travel between 50 and 85 miles from the interchange of Interstate 25 and
Interstate 40 in Albuquerque, or from the Farmington City Hall in Farmington,
should be compensated at $2.50 per hour.
(b) Work
travel 86 miles or more from the interchange of Interstate 25 and Interstate 40
in Albuquerque or from the Farmington City Hall in Farmington, should be
compensated at $4.00 per hour.
(2) Type
B and C operators:
(a) Base
points for operators are 30 miles and beyond:
(i) Bernalillo county courthouse in
Albuquerque;
(ii) state
capital building in Santa Fe;
(iii) city
hall in Farmington.
(b) Zone
and subsistence for Albuquerque, [and]Santa Fe, and Farmington
are as follows:
(i) work travel between 30 and 50 miles
from the base point compensated at $20.00 per day;
(ii) work
travel between 51 and 100 miles from the base point compensated at [$45.00]
$50.00 per day;
(iii) work
travel over 100 miles from the base point that involves an overnight stay
compensated at [$75.00] $100.00 per day.
(c) Zone
and subsistence for Los Alamos county, [$50.00] $100.00
per day. This takes precedence over the 50 mile
radius for Santa Fe zone and subsistence.
[(d) Zone
and subsistence for Farmington is as follows:
(i) work
travel between 35 and 75 miles from the base point compensated at $45.00 per
day;
(ii) work travel over 100 miles from the
base point compensated at $75.00 per day.
(e)] (d) If an employer provides the
employee transportation and mutually agreeable, suitable lodging in areas where
overnight stays are necessary, subsistence rates do not apply.
(3) Type
H operators are not eligible for zone and subsistence pay.
M. Painters
[(1) Zone 1: Base pay for
an area within a 30 mile radius from the main post office in the city or town
where the employee permanently resides. Albuquerque,
Santa Fe, and Belen shall be considered Zone 1.
(2) Zone
2: Work travel between 30 and 75 miles
from the main post office in the town where an employee permanently resides
shall be compensated at $1.00 per hour above base pay.
(3) Zone
3: Work travel 75 miles or more from the
main post office in the town where an employee permanently resides shall be
compensated at $2.50 per hour above base pay.
(4) When
the employee is required to stay overnight, the employer should provide and pay
for suitable lodging.
(5) Employer
will furnish transportation or gasoline for all work performed beyond the 30
mile radius that encompasses the free cities of Albuquerque, Santa Fe, or
Belen.]
(1) When out-of-town travel is required, the employer shall provide
suitable lodging with no more than two people per room and $30.00 per day for
expenses.
(2) When
out-of-town travel is required and employer and employer does not provide
lodging, employer shall pay $100 per day for expenses, plus their regular rate
of pay.
(3) Employees required to use a
personal vehicle for travel to a jobsite beyond a 60-mile radius from their
residence or the employer’s shop, whichever is closest to the job, shall be
compensated at the current IRS rate for actual mileage incurred beyond the
60-mile radius, plus their regular rate of pay for travel time.
(4) Employer shall furnish
transportation or gasoline for all work performed beyond the 30-mile radius
that encompasses the free cities of Albuquerque, Santa Fe, and Belen.
N. Paper hangers
(1) Zone
1: Base pay for an area within a 30 mile
radius from the main post office in the city or town where the employee
permanently resides. Albuquerque, Santa
Fe, and Belen shall be considered Zone 1.
(2) Zone
2: Work travel between 30 and 75 miles
from the main post office in the town where an employee permanently resides
shall be compensated at $1.00 per hour above base pay.
(3) Zone
3: Work travel 75 miles or more from the
main post office in the town where an employee permanently resides shall be
compensated at $2.50 per hour above base pay.
(4) When
the employee is required to stay overnight, the employer should provide and pay
for suitable lodging.
(5) Employer
will furnish transportation or gasoline for all work performed beyond the 30
mile radius that encompasses the free cities of Albuquerque, Santa Fe, or
Belen.
O. Plasterers
(1) Employees
who travel from Albuquerque to Santa Fe should be compensated at $20.00 per
day.
(2) Except
for employees who travel from Santa Fe to Albuquerque, work travel 75 miles or
more from the employer’s office over the most typically traveled route should
be compensated at $5.00 per hour and capped at $40.00 per day.
P. Plumbers and
pipefitters
(1) Work
travel for 90 or more miles from an employee’s primary residence, and involving
an overnight stay, should be compensated at $80.00 per day.
(2) No
zone or subsistence pay is required should the employer elect to cover the room
cost.
[(3) Los
Alamos county workers receive $0.80 per hour incentive pay plus base and
fringe.]
Q. Roofers - work travel requiring an overnight stay
should be compensated at $35.00 per day for food. Employer should provide and pay for a
suitable hotel. When employees are
assigned to jobs located 60 or more miles from the employer’s place of
business, transportation to and from the job site must be provided.
R. Sheet metal
workers
(1) Work
travel 90 miles or more from the contractor’s home base and employee’s home,
should be paid at [$80.00] $120.00 per day subsistence pay plus
base and fringe, regardless of county.
(2) Los
Alamos county: $2.00 per hour incentive
pay plus base and fringe.
(3) Workers
living 60 or more miles from a San Juan county job site shall receive $3.00 per
hour subsistence pay plus base and fringe.
S. Soft floor
layer
(1) Zone
1: Base pay for an area within a 30 mile
radius from the main post office in the city or town where the employee
permanently resides. Albuquerque, Santa
Fe, and Belen shall be considered Zone 1.
(2) Zone
2: Work travel between 30 and 75 miles
from the main post office in the town where an employee permanently resides
shall be compensated at $1.00 per hour above base pay.
(3) Zone
3: Work travel 75 miles or more from the
main post office in the town where an employee permanently resides shall be
compensated at $3.13 per hour above base pay.
(4) Employer
will furnish transportation or gasoline for all work performed beyond the 30
mile radius that encompasses the free cities of Albuquerque, Santa Fe, or
Belen.
(5) When
the employee is directed to report to a job site and the distance to the job
site requires the employee to stay out of town overnight, the employer shall
provide housing arrangements.
T. Sprinkler
fitters
(1) Work
travel between 60 and 80 miles from the employee’s primary residence should be
compensated at [$22.00] $23.00 per day.
(2) Work
travel between 81 and 100 miles from the employee’s primary residence should be
compensated at [$32.00] $33.00 per day.
(3) Work
travel of 101 miles or more from the employee’s primary residence should be
compensated at [$120.00] $125.00 per day.
(4) No
zone or subsistence pay shall be paid when the employer provides daily
transportation and the employee elects to travel back and forth from home.
[11.1.2.21 NMAC - N,
1/1/2019; A, 1/1/2020; A, 1/1/2021; A, 1/1/2022; A, 1/1/2024]