Organization: MCAA

Saddle Up for the Sunday Night Opening Party at MCAA25

The Sunday Night Opening Party at the MCAA Annual Convention is always an attendee favorite. It’s the first opportunity to see old friends, to grab a bite and drink with a colleague and to unwind and get ready for a fantastic week of education, entertainment and excitement with some great country music and dancing to round out the night.

We are going full Texas theme at MCAA25 and the Opening Party is no exception! We’re encouraging our members to dress the part. Denim, boots and hats will be the dress code for the evening, and for all MCAA25.

Special thanks to our sponsors, SIEMENS (beverages), GF Uponor (dinner), EVAPCO (souvenir photos) and Procore Technologies (light up western hats) for making this evening extra special! Don’t forget to register for MCAA25 to be a part of this memorable night.

When registering, you will find a list of available hotel options. All official MCAA25 events and meetings will take place at the JW Marriott Austin.

Important: Please carefully review the MCAA Cancellation Policy during your registration.

Resource Highlight: MCAA’s Avoiding Potential Liability from Employees’ Use of Company Vehicles

Companies that let employees use company vehicles may face liability should an accident occur. MCAA’s Avoiding Potential Liability from Employees’ Use of Company Vehicles describes the most common types of liabilities and offers tips to help reduce them. It’s just one of MCAA’s educational resources that are free to MCAA members as a benefit of membership.

The bulletin covers:

  • Vicarious liability
  • Negligent hiring or retention
  • Negligent lending of a vehicle
  • Negligent maintenance of a vehicle

For a full list of available Management Methods Bulletins, visit the Management Methods Bulletins page.

Have Questions or Need Personal Assistance?

Contact MCAA’s Frank Wall.

Register Now for MCAA25: MCAA25 Regular Rate Deadline Is TODAY, January 31

The Regular Rate Deadline of January 31, 2025, is here! Register for MCAA25 today to lock in the Convention’s most favorable registration rates.

The late registration period will begin tomorrow, February 1, 2025.

Sessions by Contractors, for Contractors to Enhance Competitiveness

MCAA25 will feature a series of engaging and highly relevant sessions designed to provide real-world solutions to the challenges mechanical construction, service and plumbing professionals face every day. The MCAA25 website has all the details, plus information about our can’t-miss social events.

Don’t Miss Out – Register Today!

By registering today, you’ll lock in the best available rates for MCAA25 and ensure your place at the premier event for mechanical contracting professionals. Registration rates will increase starting February 1, 2025, so now is the time to act.

Register today and join industry leaders, experts, and peers for an unforgettable educational experience at MCAA25! Act before the Regular Rate Deadline of January 31, 2025, and take advantage of these rates!

When registering, you will find a list of available hotel options. All official MCAA25 events and meetings will take place at the JW Marriott Austin.

Important: Please carefully review the MCAA Cancellation Policy during your registration.

Connect With the Latest Training from Johnson Controls, Inc. and Watts Water Technologies at MCAA.org

The Manufacturer/Supplier Training area of MCAA’s website connects our contractor members with training opportunities available from the members of MCAA’s Manufacturer/Supplier Council.

Participating companies highlight and link to new webinars and training opportunities across their product lines, services, solutions or web pages. Here are just a few of the recent additions:

Johnson Controls, Inc.
For training services tailored to your specific needs, explore Johnson Controls courses and programs for all your HVAC Controls and Equipment, Fire Systems, and Security. From hands-on to CEU coursework, our comprehensive programs are designed to provide current industry knowledge about today’s connected building environments.

Watts Water Technologies
Watts eLearning system provides access to a wide selection of products and solutions from our family of brands. Courses can be accessed anytime, anywhere; perfect for your busy schedule!

Interested in More Training from Our Supplier Partners?

Be sure to visit the Manufacturer/Supplier Training area for all the latest offerings.

Foundations of Field Leadership Course 9

WHAT IS IT?

  • A new online program for new or aspiring field leaders.
  • An 8-week course made up of live lectures, short assignments, quizzes, and video segments.
  • An overview of concepts and practices essential to running a successful mechanical jobsite.

WHO SHOULD ATTEND?

  • Field leaders who have relatively little (0-2 years) experience running work.
  • Anyone who has been identified as a potential future field leader.
  • Journeyworkers and apprentices interested in becoming field leaders.

WHAT DO PARTICIPANTS NEED TO ENROLL IN THIS PROGRAM?

  • The support of their MCAA contractor.
  • The consent of their direct supervisor to step away from their work area for 90 minutes each week to participate in the live online lecture.
  • An additional hour per week for completing weekly course requirements (assignments & quizzes).
  • Access to a laptop or tablet and a stable internet connection fast enough to allow for video streaming.
  • An email address to receive course information and reminders; a web browser to access the online course portal; and a Zoom account to join the lectures.
  • A desire to learn and an interest in field leadership!

HOW WAS THIS PROGRAM DEVELOPED?

  • The FFL is taught by senior field leaders with extensive experience running mechanical jobs.
  • The curriculum is built from the input of 42 mechanical field leaders from MCAA member companies across the country. The topics covered in this course were identified by these 42 experts as being the most important things for new field leaders to learn.
  • Each lecture is a combination of best practices, lessons learned, and tips and tricks.
  • Upon completion of all course requirements (weekly lecture attendance, video assignments, and quizzes), participants will receive an MCAA Foundations of Field Leadership diploma.

CURRICULUM OVERVIEW BY TOPIC

  • The Field Leader’s Role
  • Productivity & Goal Setting
  • Documentation & Communication
  • Planning & Scheduling
  • Relationships
  • Safety & Compliance
  • Technology As A Tool
  • Leadership

WHAT DO OUR RECENT GRADUATES HAVE TO SAY ABOUT THEIR FFL EXPERIENCE?

About the course overall:

  • “This program gave me confidence by letting me by letting me know someone above saw my work ethic and thought I could become a leader. Also helping me take steps to become a good one.”
  • “Very informative on the basics of field leadership. And the tips on how to be a good leader.”
  • “I really enjoyed everything about it.”

About the instructors:

  • “I liked the [instructors] because they gave a lot of great stories/examples to better understand the material.”
  • “It was nice to hear from people who know the trade and have been in our situations.”
  • “I liked the personal stories they would tell that were relatable; making the information stick easier.”

About the course content:

  • “The class was very informative and provided plenty of information I could use to help myself in the future.”
  • “I enjoyed the pointers followed with examples to help paint the picture for me to understand the topic.”
  • “Informative and easy to understand.”

PARTICIPATION REQUIREMENTS

  • Show up on time to lecture and attend all eight lectures in the program.
    • We understand that due to the nature of jobsite work, participants may not be able to make it to all 8 live lectures. Participants may watch lecture recordings of up to two of the eight lectures, provided they attend a minimum of 6 live lectures.
  • Watch a weekly video clip and answer a few short questions about it.
  • Participate in lectures, including the polls and short-answer chat questions during class.
  • Complete all eight weekly quizzes by their deadlines.
  • On-time completion of all requirements is required for participants to receive an FFL Diploma.

2025 COURSE DATES & TIME COMMITMENTS

  • An FFL course is 8 weeks long. Lectures take place once a week, always on the same day of the week.
  • Lectures are 90-minutes long.
    • This includes 15 minutes for participants to put down their tools, leave their worksite, and log in via their laptop/tablet in a quiet place. Lecture begins 15min. after the hour.

NEW MCAA Video Highlights Electrical Safety for the Mechanical Construction and Service Industry

There are more than 30,000 non-fatal electrical accidents and approximately 1,000 deaths as a result of an electrical injury in the United States every year. Many of these occur in the mechanical construction and service industry. Year after year, electrocutions remain one of the top four leading causes of death among the construction trades.

MCAA’s new Electrical Safety Video for the Mechanical Construction and Service Industry highlights how can you avoid becoming one of these statistics by:

  • Understanding the electrical concepts of path to ground and path of least resistance
  • Keeping your powered equipment in good working order
  • Using Ground Fault Circuit Interrupters (or GFCIs) when necessary
  • Recognizing work situations that are particularly hazardous and knowing how to handle them safely

This video is available in both English and Spanish, part of MCAA’s continued commitment to adding Spanish-language safety resources to help ensure the safety of all our industry’s workers.

For additional safety and health videos and a list of all 700+ mechanical industry safety and health resources available from MCAA, click here.

If you have questions, please contact Raffi Elchemmas, MCAA’s Executive Director of Safety, Health, and Risk Management.

Find the Latest from HGG Profiling Equipment, Inc. and Morris Group International in MCAA’s Virtual Trade Show

MCAA’s Virtual Trade Show connects our contractor members with the members of MCAA’s Manufacturer/Supplier Council.

Participating companies highlight and link to new products, product lines, services, solutions or web pages of particular interest. Here are just a few of the recent additions:

HGG Profiling Equipment, Inc.
Cerris Systems, Inc. (formerly MMC Contractors) partnered with HGG to develop the ProCutter 900 RB, a heavy-duty pipe spool cutter that improves efficiency, cuts production time and enhances overall efficiency.

Morris Group International
Murdock’s SpringH2O® Bottle Fillers feature Murdock Maintenance Advantage features, making it easy to simplify maintenance. Murdock Manufacturing is a division of Morris Group International.

Need Something Else?

Find many more smart solutions in MCAA’s Virtual Trade Show!

Speaking of Smart Solutions

Visit the Smart Solutions Case Studies area of our website to learn how other mechanical contractors found their win-win with cost-saving and productivity-enhancing applications from members of MCAA’s Manufacturer/Supplier Council.

This section of our website also includes tips and ideas to help your company save money and enhance your productivity. Don’t miss it!

Connect With Additional Manufacturer/Supplier Training

Save yourself time and let MCAA connect you to the latest Manufacturer/Supplier member’s training opportunities. Visit the Manufacturer/Supplier Training area of the Resource Center to get started. 

Register Now for MCAA25: MCAA25 Regular Rate Deadline Is January 31

The Regular Rate Deadline of January 31, 2025, is approaching fast! Register for MCAA25 today to lock in the Convention’s most favorable registration rates.

The late registration period will begin on February 1, 2025.

Sessions by Contractors, for Contractors to Enhance Competitiveness

MCAA25 will feature a series of engaging and highly relevant sessions designed to provide real-world solutions to the challenges mechanical construction, service and plumbing professionals face every day. The MCAA25 website has all the details, plus information about our can’t-miss social events.

Don’t Miss Out – Register Today!

By registering today, you’ll lock in the best available rates for MCAA25 and ensure your place at the premier event for mechanical contracting professionals. Registration rates will increase starting February 1, 2025, so now is the time to act.

Register today and join industry leaders, experts, and peers for an unforgettable educational experience at MCAA25! Act before the Regular Rate Deadline of January 31, 2025, and take advantage of these rates!

When registering, you will find a list of available hotel options. All official MCAA25 events and meetings will take place at the JW Marriott Austin.

Important: Please carefully review the MCAA Cancellation Policy during your registration.

MCAA Government Affairs Update for January 27, 2025: The Latest Developments Impacting Our Industry

As part of its ongoing commitment to protecting your livelihood and setting the stage for a bright future, MCAA has secured the services of Longbow Public Policy Group to advise our MCAA Government Affairs Committee (GAC). GAC Chair, Jim Gaffney will be passing along information relative to our industry on a regular basis.

On Monday, January 27, 2025 MCAA Lobbying Firm, Longbow Public Policy Group provided the following information:

Trump Administration

MCAA continued tracking new Trump nominees and appointees to job critical to MCAA members. 

Trump Announces Key Nominees, Chairs, and Acting Chairs of Several Agencies

On January 16th, 2025, President Trump nominated former Rep. Brandon Williams (R-NY), who lost re-election to New York’s 22nd Congressional District last November, as Undersecretary for Nuclear Security and National Nuclear Security Administrator. MCAA knows Williams from his time in Congress. On January 15th, President Trump announced Keith Sonderling as his nominee for Deputy Secretary of the Department of Labor. MCAA knows Sonderling well from Trump’s first term when he served as Commissioner on the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and as Acting Wage and Hour Administrator at the Labor Department. These nominations followed Trump’s January 12th announcements of James P. Danly to be Deputy Energy Secretary (Danly served as General Counsel, Commissioner, and Chair of FERC during Trump’s first term); David Fotouhi as Deputy Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator (Fotouhi served as EPA’s Acting General Counsel during Trump’s first term); and Katharine MacGregor as Deputy Interior Secretary (MacGregor served as Deputy Assistant Secretary for Lands and Minerals Management at the Interior Department during Trump’s first term).

Last Monday, the Trump Labor Department (DOL) posted a new leadership organizational chart designating Vince Micone as the acting head of DOL, pending the confirmation of former Rep. Lori Chavez-DeRemer (R-OR) to be Secretary of Labor. MCAA is actively supporting her nomination. Acting Secretary Micone is a career civil servant who formerly served as Deputy Assistant Secretary for Operations in DOL’s Office of Administration and Management. Keith Sonderling, Trump’s pick for Deputy Labor Secretary, will serve as Senior Advisor to the Secretary while awaiting confirmation. Also on January 20th, President Trump designated Chairs and Acting Chairs of several other federal agencies of interest to MCAA, including: (1) Marvin Kaplan as Chair of the National Labor Relations Board; (2) Mark Christie as Chair of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission; (3) David Wright as Chair of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission; (4) Andrea Lucas as Acting Chair of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission; and (5) Andrew Ferguson as Chair of the Federal Trade Commission.

Trump Signs Energy-Related Executive Order

Among the many executive actions President Trump took last week was an Executive Order (EO) related to energy and critical minerals. The EO: (1) declares a national emergency related to energy, allowing Trump to use the Defense Production Act to bolster energy deployment; (2) accelerates permitting and regulations to expand domestic energy production; (3) expedites the permitting and development of domestic critical minerals to reduce dependence on China; and (4) facilitates the utilization of Alaska’s oil, gas, minerals, timber, and other resources. This follows the Trump Energy Department’s (DOE) announcement that it is ending the liquefied natural gas (LNG) pause instituted during the Biden Administration. DOE will now resume consideration of pending applications to export American LNG to countries without a free trade agreement with the United States.

Congress

Speaker Johnson Taps Rep. Foxx to Lead House Rules Committee in 119th Congress

On January 14th, House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) appointed Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-NC) as chair of the influential House Rules Committee. Foxx is one of the most stridently anti-union members of the House. She previously served as chair of the House Education and Workforce Committee in the last Congress but was term-limited as chair in the 119th Congress. Speaker Johnson also announced two changes to the committee’s Republican roster: Rep. Morgan Griffith (R-VA), a member of the conservative House Freedom Caucus, will replace Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) on the committee, and first-term Rep. Brian Jack (R-GA) will take the spot previously held by Rep. Guy Reschenthaler (R-PA). Conservative Freedom Caucus members Reps. Chip Roy (R-TX) and Ralph Norman (R-SC) will remain on the panel.

House Education & Workforce Approves Oversight Plan 

On January 15th, the House Education and Workforce Committee approved its oversight plan for the next two years. The Committee’s oversight priorities include: (1) Wage and Hour oversight involving “workers, employers, and other stakeholders to consider how best to modernize federal wage and hour laws”; (2) Retirement Security and Pensions oversight focused on engaging with “workers, employers, retirees, and other stakeholders to consider how best to strengthen laws governing retirement security,” reviewing the “PBGC’s recovery efforts of amounts improperly paid under the Biden-Harris administration’s Special Financial Assistance program to multiemployer plans on the basis of deceased participants” and reviewing the Employee Benefits Secretary Administration’s enforcement activity and rulemakings implementing…ERISA; (3) Healthcare oversight dedicated to “ensuring employers have the flexibility and tools to offer workers and their families affordable, employer-sponsored health care coverage that fits their individual needs,” overseeing the “implementation of laws governing mental health and substance abuse treatment” and maintaining “the protection of ERISA preemption of state insurance law”; (4) Workplace Safety and Health oversight targeting “OSHA’s efforts” on “Biden-Harris administration regulatory efforts that burden job creators while doing little to improve workplace safety”; (5) National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) oversight dedicated to ensuring the NLRB is interpreting and implementing the National Labor Relations Act in a manner that supports workers and employers”; (6) Equal Employment Opportunity oversight scrutinizing the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and the Department of Labor’s Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP) “to ensure proper implementation and enforcement of employment nondiscrimination laws with a specific focus on the EEOC’s implementation of the 2024 final rule on the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act and of the 2024 enforcement guidance on harassment in the workplace”; and (7) Union Accountability and Transparency Oversight focused on the Labor Department’s “implementation of the Labor Management Reporting and Disclosure Act and conducting oversight on unions, as needed, to ensure they are respecting the democratic rights of their members and properly managing their members’ dues, education funds, and pension programs.”

House Education and Workforce Committee Announces Subcommittee Chairs and Ranking Members

Also on January 15th, House Education and Workforce Committee Chair Tim Walberg (R-MI) announced the following Subcommittee Chairs for the 119th Congress: (1) Rep. Rick Allen (R-GA) as chair of the Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Subcommittee; (2) Rep. Ryan Mackenzie (R-PA) as chair of the Workforce Protections Subcommittee; (3) Rep. Burgess Owens (R-UT) as chair of the Higher Education and Workforce Development Subcommittee; and (4) Rep. Kevin Kiley (R-CA) as chair of the Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education. Separately, House Education and Workforce Committee Democratic Ranking Member Bobby Scott (D-VA) announced the following Subcommittee Ranking Members for the 119thCongress: (1) Rep. Mark DeSaulnier (D-CA) will serve as Ranking Member of the Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Subcommittee; (2) Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) will serve as Ranking Member of the Workforce Protections Subcommittee; (3) Rep. Suzanne Bonamici (D-OR) will serve as Ranking Member of the Early Childhood, Elementary and Secondary Education Subcommittee; and (4) Rep. Alma Adams (D-NC) will serve as Ranking Member of the Higher Education and Workforce Development. 

House Transportation and Infrastructure Announces Subcommittee Chairs and Ranking Members 

Last Tuesday, House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Chair Sam Graves (R-MO) announced the new Subcommittee Chairs, Ranking Members, and Subcommittee members for the 119th Congress. The new Republican Subcommittee Chairs are: (1) Rep. Scott Perry (R-PA) as Chair of the Subcommittee on Economic Development, Public Buildings, and Emergency Management; (2) Rep. Daniel Webster (R-FL) as Chair of the Subcommittee on Railroads, Pipelines, and Hazardous Materials; (3) Rep. Mike Collins as Chair of the Subcommittee on Water Resources and the Environment; (4) Rep. David Rouzer (R-NC) as Chair of the Subcommittee on Highways and Transit; (5) Rep. Troy Nehls (R-TX) as Chair of the Subcommittee on Aviation; and (6) Rep. Mike Ezell (R-MS) as Chair of the Subcommittee on Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation. The new Democratic Subcommittee Ranking Members are: (1) Rep. Greg Stanton (D-AZ) as Ranking Member of the Subcommittee on Economic Development, Public Buildings, and Emergency Management; (2) Rep. Dina Titus (D-NV) as Ranking Member of the Subcommittee on Railroads, Pipelines, and Hazardous Materials; (3) Rep. Frederica Wilson (D-FL) as Ranking Member of the Subcommittee on Water Resources and the Environment; (4) Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC) as Ranking Member of the Subcommittee on Highways and Transit; (5) Rep. Steve Cohen (D-TN) as Ranking Member of the Subcommittee on Aviation; and (6) Rep. Salud Carbajal (D-CA) as Ranking Member of the Subcommittee on Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation.

Biden Administration

ERISA Industry Committee Files Lawsuit Against Mental Health Parity Final Rule

On January 17th, the ERISA Industry Committee (ERIC) filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Departments of Labor, Treasury, and Health and Human Services, seeking to invalidate the Biden Administration’s September 2024 final rule implementing the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008 (MHPAEA). This rule poses many practical administrative concerns for MCAA plans based on assessment we have received from the National Coordinating Committee on Multiemployer Plans (NCCMP) and we have been raising our concerns about this rule with the new Administration. The lawsuit alleges that the final rule is unlawful because it exceeds the departments’ authority under the MHPAEA and the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2021, violates the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment, is “arbitrary and capricious,” and violates the Administrative Procedure Act. The lawsuit also claims that the January 1, 2025, effective date for many of the final rule’s provisions is arbitrary and capricious because it did not provide enough time for ERISA-governed plans to comply with the new and “vaguely worded” regulations. The lawsuit was filed the same day the Biden Labor Department, Health and Human Services Department, and Treasury Department issued their 2024 Report to Congress on enforcement and implementation of the MHPAEA, along with an associated fact sheet. The report is notable because it includes as an appendix the entirety of a settlement agreement entered into by a Boilermakers National Plan to settle claims by the federal government that it failed to meet its Mental Health Parity Obligations.   

MCAA Issues and Interests 

Safety and Health 

MCAA Joins with CISC to Submit Comments on OSHA Heat Injury and Illness Proposed Rule 

On January 14th, the MCAA and other members of the Construction Industry Safety Coalition (CISC) submitted joint comments to the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) on its proposed rule regarding Heat Injury and Illness in Outdoor and Indoor Work Settings. In the letter, the MCAA and other CISC members urged OSHA to develop a construction-specific heat standard rather than applying the one-size-fits-all approach outlined in the proposed rule. We also detailed the job tasks, work activities, and environmental conditions that construction employees face, which justify the need for a specialized standard, similar to what OSHA has implemented for other health and safety issues. The letter also identified major problems in the proposed rule, including: (1) the unworkable heat triggers that require revision; (2) the problematic prescriptive requirements tied to those triggers; (3) the need for flexible acclimatization procedures that allow employers to create training and protocols tailored to unique climatic conditions in different regions; and (4) the importance of straightforward training requirements that emphasize “water, rest, and shade.”

OSHA Terminates Rulemaking Extending COVID-19 ETS to Construction Workers at Healthcare Facilities

On January 15th, OSHA terminated its June 21, 2021 interim final rule (IFR) implementing an emergency temporary standard (ETS) to protect healthcare and “healthcare support” workers from occupational exposure to COVID-19 in settings where COVID-19 cases were reasonably expected (e.g.,hospitals). The MCAA had been educating OSHA, the Small Business Administration (SBA), and other federal agencies about concerns we had with the IFR. The MCAA also participated in several SBA Advisory Committee meetings to discuss these concerns and their impact on our members—particularly regarding the IFR’s inclusion of healthcare facility maintenance staff (including HVAC contractors) in its definition of “healthcare support” workers. 

Project Labor Agreements (PLAs)

U.S. Federal Court of Claims Invalidates Bids Based on PLAs Pursuant to Biden PLA Executive Order and Related FAR Council Rules

On January 19th, the U.S. Federal Court of Claims invalidated project labor agreements (PLAs) on several federal construction contract bids, ruling that PLAs are set-aside programs requiring authorization by an act of Congress. The Associated General Contractors (AGC) praised the decision and announced plans to continue “conversations with the incoming Trump Administration about the need to officially revoke President Biden’s illegal project labor agreement Executive Order and FAR Council Rules” in light of the ruling. On January 20th, the Associated Builders and Contractors (ABC) issued a press release expressing their enthusiasm for the ruling and urged its members to “continue to file protests against individual federal agency PLA mandates on a case-by-case basis and expect similar outcomes.” ABC argued that “[t]his is the best solution to defeat the Biden rule on federal contracts until a court issues an injunction against the rule or the Trump Administration rescinds it via executive action.” The group also reported that its members secured 54% of the $205.56 billion in federal construction contracts worth $35 million or more during fiscal years 2009–2023.

MCAA Urges President Trump to Maintain MCAA-Supported Executive Order on PLAs

On January 13th, the MCAA joined other members of the Construction Employers of America (CEA) in a letter to President Trump urging him to reject the Associated Builders and Contractors’ (ABC) request to rescind President Biden’s MCAA-supported executive order (EO) creating a presumption that project labor agreements (PLAs) will be used for large-scale federal construction projects valued at $35 million or more. 

In the letter, the CEA emphasized that “nothing in [President Biden’s EO] or the Federal Acquisition Regulatory Council rules implementing it prevents any contractor from submitting a bid on a large-scale federal construction project.” The letter also highlights data confirming “the productivity advantages union craftworkers have over their open shop peers,” including “lower staffing levels.”

Following our advocacy push on PLAs last Monday, MCAA was relieved to see that President Trump’s Executive Order (EO) titled “Initial Rescissions of Harmful Executive Orders and Actions,” rescinding dozens of Biden-era EOs left President Biden’s EO on PLAs intact. But given the Court of Claims decision and similar bid protests MCAA expects on federal construction contracts with a PLA, this is an ongoing fight and the outcome remains uncertain.

Registered Apprenticeship

DOL White Paper Confirms Value of Jointly Trusteed Apprenticeship Programs

Last Monday, shortly before the end of President Biden’s term, the Biden Labor Department released a white paper it sponsored affirming the benefit of jointly trusteed (union) registered apprenticeship programs. Among the findings are: (1) the construction industry trained more apprentices than any other industry from 2019 through 2022 and joint labor-management (union) programs trained 70 percent of all construction apprentices; (2) joint-labor management construction programs had a 56% completion rate compared to 46% in employer-only construction programs; (3) joint labor-management programs graduated 87% of women, 80% of military veterans, and 75% of Black apprentices in construction; (4) in construction, workers from joint labor-management programs earned exit wages of $38 per hour, while those from employer-only programs earned $25 per hour; (5) exit wages from joint construction programs were between $36 and $39 per hour for White, Black, Hispanic, male, female, and veteran construction workers; (6) the states with the highest apprenticeship exit wages for union journey workers were Massachusetts ($45 per hour), Illinois ($44 per hour), and Hawaii ($40 per hour); and (7) prevailing wage laws statistically increased construction apprenticeship wages by $3 per hour. 

Pension Reform

Most of the activity of the last two weeks on pensions occurred on the regulatory front.

DOL EBSA Updates Enforcement Policy on Missing Participants 

On January 14th, the Biden Department of Labor’s Employee Benefits Security Administration (EBSA) announced its updated enforcement policy on missing participants to provide retirement plan fiduciaries with an option to help manage small benefit amounts owed to individuals who cannot be located. Under the policy, EBSA will not act under the fiduciary provisions of ERISA against fiduciaries who transfer entire benefit payments owed to missing participants of $1,000 or less to state unclaimed property funds, if certain conditions are met. To qualify for relief under this policy, fiduciaries must meet the conditions set forth in the policy, including: (1) meeting conditions designed to protect the interest of the missing individuals; (2) adopting best practices for locating missing participants and beneficiaries; and (3) selecting state unclaimed property funds that meet the minimum standards outlined in the policy.

DOL EBSA Announces Updates to Voluntary Fiduciary Correction Program 

Also on January 14th, the Biden Department of Labor’s Employee Benefits Security Administration (EBSA) announced updates to its Voluntary Fiduciary Correction Program (VFCP), providing employers and other plan officials with more efficient ways to voluntarily correct compliance issues in retirement, health and other employee benefit plans. The most significant change is a self-correction tool that employers and other plan officials can use to remedy delays in sending participant contributions, such as employee payroll deductions, and participant loan repayments to retirement plans. Employers and other plan officials can also fix mistakes related to participant loans from retirement plans, as provided by the SECURE 2.0 Act. In addition, EBSA’s 2025 update to the VFCP: (1) expands the scope of transactions eligible for correction; (2) clarifies transactions that are already eligible for correction; (3) simplifies administrative and procedural requirements; and (4) amends the VFCP class exemption so plan officials can avoid the imposition of excise taxes.

Federal Contracting 

Trump Rescinds 1965 Executive Order Imposing Affirmative Action for Federal Contractors

Last Tuesday, President Trump signed an Executive Order (EO) entitled Ending Illegal Discrimination and Restoring Merit-Based Opportunity that rescinds President Lyndon Johnson’s 1965 EO 11246—which authorized the affirmative action obligations federal contractors have complied with for almost 60 years. The White House released a fact sheet on the EO available here. Under Trump’s EO “[f]or 90 days from the date of this order, federal contractors may continue to comply with the regulatory scheme in effect on January 20, 2025.” The EO bars the Department of Labor’s Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP) from holding federal contractors and subcontractors responsible for taking “affirmative action” based on race, color, sex, sexual preference, religion, or national origin. Going forward, federal contractors will be required to certify that they “do not operate any programs promoting Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) that violate any applicable federal anti-discrimination laws” and “to agree that [their] compliance in all respects with all applicable federal anti-discrimination laws is material to” whether they are in compliance with the Federal False Claims Act. 

President Trump’s EO further directs “all executive departments and agencies to terminate all discriminatory and illegal preferences, mandates, policies, programs, activities, guidance, regulations, enforcement actions, consent orders, and requirements…and to combat illegal private-sector DEI preferences, mandates, policies, programs, and activities.” To this end, the U.S. Attorney General must, within 120 days of the order, “submit a report to the Assistant to the President for Domestic Policy containing recommendations for enforcing federal civil rights laws and taking other appropriate measures to encourage the private sector to end illegal discrimination and preferences, including DEI.” The report is to detail “sectors of concern” as far as improper DEI practices within each federal agency’s jurisdiction, examples of the most “egregious and discriminatory DEI practitioners” in each such sector and provide “a plan of specific steps or measures to deter DEI programs or principles (whether specifically denominated ‘DEI’ or otherwise)” that constitute illegal discrimination or preferences in the private sector. Each federal agency shall identify up to “nine potential civil compliance investigations of publicly traded corporations, large non-profit corporations or associations, foundations with assets of 500 million dollars or more, state and local bar and medical associations, and institutions of higher education with endowments over 1 billion dollars,” and well as litigation and sub regulatory guidance that would promote the EO’s purpose of ending affirmative action and DEI. The EO “does not apply to lawful federal or private-sector employment and contracting preferences for veterans of the U.S. armed forces.”

Following up on this executive order, last Wednesday, the Trump Labor Department’s Employment and Training Administration (ETA) issued Training and Employment Notice (TEN) 21-24 directing state workforce agencies, state apprenticeship agencies, and other stakeholders on changes the ETA is making to federal financial assistance awards to prohibit diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) activities prohibited by President Trump’s order. Per the TEN, “all recipients of federal financial assistance awards are directed to cease all activities related to “diversity, equity, and inclusion” (DEI) or ‘diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility’ (DEIA) under their federal awards, consistent with the requirements of the EOs.” The TEN goes on to state that ETA “like all federal agencies, will provide further guidance on specific programs and activities within those programs.”

Decarbonization

Since the November elections, MCAA and its allies urged the Biden Administration to obligate as much money as possible for clean energy projects authorized under the Inflation Reduction Act and the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. We were pleased to see such efforts throughout the final days of the Biden Administration.

IRS Announces $6B in Tax Credits under Section 48C Qualifying Energy Project Tax Credit 

On January 11th, the Biden Treasury Department and Internal Revenue Service (IRS) announced $6 billion in tax credits for the second round of the Inflation Reduction Act’sSection 48C Qualifying Energy Project Tax Credit for projects in 30 states. The 48C program is a competitive funding program and companies have the opportunity to apply for infrastructure project funding in the form of an investment tax credit for projects that: (1) expand U.S. clean energy manufacturing and recycling capacity ($3.8 billion in available tax credits); (2) expand U.S. critical minerals processing and refining capacity ($1.5 billion in available tax credits); and (3) drive process efficiency and reduce greenhouse gas emissions at U.S. industrial facilities ($700 million in available tax credits). 

DOE Opens Funding Opportunity for Regional Partnerships for Geothermal Data Projects 

On January 13th, the Biden Energy Department (DOE) announced that it has opened an initial funding opportunity for six awards totaling $19 million for Regional Partnerships for Geothermal Data to support partnerships to identify regional data gaps and prioritize, plan, and execute geothermal data collection and dissemination activities. The aim of the funding opportunity is to incentivize and stimulate follow-up geothermal exploration and development activities. The funding opportunity is available here

FHWA Releases $635 Million for Natural Gas and EV Refueling Infrastructure

The Biden Transportation Department’s Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) announced $635 million in grants through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law for 49 projects to construct more than 11,500 EV charging ports and hydrogen and natural gas fueling infrastructure across 27 States, four Tribes, and the District of Columbia. Of the total, $368 million will be allocated for 42 “community projects” that expand EV charging infrastructure within communities across the country and $268 million will go towards seven “corridor fast-charging projects” that build out the national charging and alternative-fueling network along designated Alternative Fuel Corridors. A full list of grant recipients under this announcement is available here.

Energy Department Releases $960 Million for Energy Grid Modernization

The Biden Energy Department announced updates on finalized projects awarded from its Grid Deployment Office for the month of January. The announcement includes: (1) a $360 million contract with Southern Spirit Transmission to construct a new 320-mile, 525 kV High-Voltage Direct-Current (HVDC) line to create substantial new transmission capacity between the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) grid and electric grids in the Southeastern United States; and (2) $600 million in funding for the California Harnessing Advanced Reliable Grid Enhancing Technologies for Transmission (CHARGE 2T) project to reconductor more than 100 miles of transmission lines with advanced conductor technologies and deploy dynamic line ratings (DLR) to quickly and significantly increase the state’s system capacity to integrate more renewable energy onto the grid, and supports process improvements and investments in the workforce.

DOE Announces Funding to Develop COCapture, Removal, and Conversion Test Centers

On January 14th, the Biden Energy Department (DOE) announced $101 million in funding, subject to appropriations, for five projects to support the development of carbon dioxide capture, removal, and conversion test centers. The recipients receiving funding under this announcement include: (1) Holcim US, which plans to establish a domestic Cement Carbon Management Innovation Center at its Hagerstown Cement Facility in Maryland; and (2) Southern Company Services, Inc. of Birmingham, Alabama, which intends to maintain and operate the National Carbon Capture Center, a comprehensive test facility capable of evaluating carbon dioxide capture, removal, and conversion technologies under electric generating plant operating conditions. The recipients also include three universities in Illinois, North Dakota, and Wyoming, which plan to design and enhance carbon capture, removal and conversion test centers for power plants, natural gas and industrial facilities, and cement industry operations.

Interior Department Makes $1.5 Billion Available to Clean Up Orphaned Oil and Gas Wells

On January 15th, The Biden Interior Department released final guidance on how states can apply for $1.5 billion (up to $40 million each) in Regulatory Improvement Grant funding available under the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to clean up polluting and unsafe orphaned oil and gas wells across the country. States are eligible for two types of Regulatory Improvement Grants: (1) Plugging Standard Grants, which are intended to incentivize states to implement standards and procedures designed to ensure that wells located in the state are plugged in an effective manner that protects groundwater and other natural resources, public health and safety, and the environment; and (2) Program Improvement Grants, which are intended to incentivize states to implement other improvements to state programs designed to reduce future orphaned well burdens, such as financial assurance reform, alternative funding mechanisms for orphaned well programs, and reforms to programs relating to well transfer or temporary abandonment. Under the guidance, states are eligible to receive a Plugging Standards Regulatory Improvement Grant of $20 million, and a Program Improvement Regulatory Improvement Grant of $20 million, for a total of $40 million per state.

Energy Department Releases $23 Billion to Retool Energy Infrastructure 

On January 16th, the Biden Energy Department’s Loan Office announced $22.92 billion in conditional financing to several energy utilities—including DTE Energy Company in Michigan, Consumers Energy Company in Michigan, and PacificCorp, a utility that serves six western states—for projects that retool or replace energy infrastructure that has stopped operating or that enables reductions in emissions blamed for global warming.

Interior Department Provides $223 Million for Water Infrastructure Projects

On January 14th, the Biden Interior Department (DOI) announced $223 million from President Biden’s Investing in America Agenda for 18 projects in Arizona, California, Hawaii, Idaho, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas, and Washington State for water recycling and desalination projects aimed at addressing the impacts of drought. Projects under this announcement include water infrastructure projects such as water storage, conservation and conveyance, nature-based solutions, dam safety, water purification and reuse, and desalination. The full list of projects is available here.

Energy Department Released $38 Million to Support Hydrogen Hub Development

On January 17th, the Biden Energy Department (DOE) announced $38.8 million to support planning, design, and community and labor engagement activities for two Hydrogen Hubs, including: (1) $18.8 million to the Mid-Atlantic Hydrogen Hub (Pennsylvania, Delaware, and New Jersey) for the development of hydrogen production facilities used in industrial applications (e.g., power generation and replacement fuel for process heaters) and heavy-duty transportation, including for refueling stations for trash trucks, street sweepers, cargo handling equipment, and fuel cell electric buses; and (2) $20 million for the Heartland Hydrogen Hub (Colorado, Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wisconsin) to leverage new and existing energy resources and infrastructure to produce commercial-scale quantities of clean hydrogen for low-carbon nitrogen fertilizer.

Other Interesting Things Since Our Last Report 

January 23, 2025

  • During his virtual appearance before the World Economic Forum in Davos, in responding to a question about LNG markets, President Trump said he will expedite the construction of power plants for artificial intelligence (AI) through an emergency declaration. He added that, “we’re going to build electric generating facilities. I’m going to get the approval under emergency declaration. I can get the approvals done myself without having to go through years of waiting.” Trump added that the generating facilities can use whatever fuel they want, making clear that his administration would not hold the AI industry to any climate targets. He even suggested the facilities use coal for emergency backup power. During the speech, President Trump also promised countries and businesses lower taxes if they bring manufacturing to the U.S. and threatened to impose tariffs if they don’t. World Trade Organization Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala said that any tit-for-tat trade wars prompted by Trump’s tariff threats would have catastrophic consequences for global growth and urged states to refrain from retaliation. President Trump also foreshadowed a fight with the Federal Reserve over its independence, saying he will “demand that interest rates drop immediately.” 
  • The U.S. Supreme Court issued an emergency stay temporarily halting a lower court injunction blocking implementation of the Corporate Transparency Act (CTA) and its beneficial ownership reporting requirements that compel millions of business entities to disclose personal information about the individuals who directly and indirectly own or control them. The case will now go back to the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals for a trial on the merits of the legality of the CTA. While that case is pending, the Supreme Court will allow FinCEN to collect beneficial ownership disclosure information that it was supposed to begin getting on January 1, 2025 but for the injunction. Following the Supreme Court’s decision, FinCEN posted a notice on its website stating that “reporting companies are not currently required to file beneficial ownership information with FinCEN and are not subject to liability if they fail to do so while the order remains in force. However, reporting companies may continue to voluntarily submit beneficial ownership information reports.” 

January 22, 2025

  • Discussions on tax provisions—including the State and Local Tax (SALT) deduction limit—picked up steam as Rep. Mike Lawler (R-NY) met with President Trump on revising the SALT deduction and other tax provisions that GOP moderates want addressed as a condition of allowing a reconciliation tax package to move forward. Republican House members from New York, New Jersey, California, and other “blue states” have been clear they want more than a $10,000 increase. They are also discussing refinements to the SALT deduction, such as the eligibility of second properties, a marriage penalty, and some income restrictions to prevent “billionaires” from using any increased deduction.

January 21, 2025

  • At the organizational meeting of the U.S. Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee, Committee, Chair Bill Cassidy (R-LA), and Senate HELP Committee Ranking Member Bernie Sanders (I-VT) expressed a bipartisan commitment to prioritize legislation on the cost of prescription drugs and pharmacy benefit manager (PBM) reform in the 119thCongress. Cassidy noted that while the PBM Reform Act and legislation to bring lower-cost generic drugs to market more quickly did not pass last Congress, committee leadership will again focus on advancing these bills. 

January 20, 2025 

January 17, 2025

  • MCAA members monitoring issues around noncompete agreements should know that the Biden Federal Trade Commission (FTC) finalized a consent order requiring building services contractor Guardian Service Industries, Inc. (Guardian) to stop enforcing a no-hire agreement prohibited building owners and competing building service contractors from hiring Guardian’s maintenance technicians, custodians, and concierges. The final consent order requires Guardian to cease and desist from, directly or indirectly, enforcing a no-hire agreement or communicating to any prospective or current customer that a Guardian employee is subject to a no-hire agreement. It is unclear whether the FTC will continue its aggressive enforcement against non-compete agreements under newly appointed Trump FTC Chair Andrew Ferguson.

January 16, 2025

January 15, 2025

  • The Biden Transportation Department’s Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) released a proposed rule establishing new standards for carbon dioxide gas pipelines. The proposal addresses: (1) design, installation, operation, maintenance, and reporting requirements for carbon dioxide gas pipelines; (2) requirements for pipeline operators when converting existing pipelines to transport carbon dioxide; (3) requirements for all carbon dioxide pipeline operators to provide training to emergency responders and ensure carbon dioxide detection and other equipment is available for local first responders to use and efficiently respond during an emergency; (4) implementation of more robust requirements for communicating with the public during an emergency; and (5) a requirement of more detailed vapor dispersion analyses to better protect the public and the environment in the case of a pipeline failure. An advanced copy of the proposed rule is available here and it will be open for comment for 60 days following publication in the Federal Register.
  • In a unanimous 9-0 decision, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in EMD Sales v. Carrera that the preponderance-of-the-evidence standard applies when an employer seeks to establish under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) that an employee is exempt from the minimum wage and overtime requirements of the FLSA. The decision reverses a Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals ruling that the FLSA requires employers to use a more onerous clear and convincing evidence standard to prevail on claims that an employee is exempt from FLSA minimum wage and overtime requirements.

January 14, 2025 

  • The Biden Transportation Department’s Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) issued a safety advisory notice to request that consumers, retailers, shippers, and DOT-regulated entities ensure their cylinders containing hazardous gases are in compliance with the hazardous materials regulations. PHMSA is issuing this notice after finding several instances of empty cylinders being sold by major retailers to consumers, shippers, and heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) personnel and service technicians that were not manufactured to a DOT specification or UN standard and lack certification markings. The safety advisory notice is available here.
  • The Biden Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced the addition of 37 entities based in China to the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act (UFLPA) Entity List that requires U.S. Customs to bar their products from entry into the U.S. Tuesday’s announcement is the largest single expansion of the list to date. Eleven of the designated Chinese entities are in the energy sector, including companies engaged in: (1) the manufacturing of solar energy (e.g., silicon rods, wafers, and solar cell modules) and “green energy” technologies (e.g., energy power stations, batteries, and modules); (2) the development of coal, wind, photovoltaic, and oil and gas resources; and (3) critical minerals production and/or refining.
  • The Biden Energy Department (DOE) announced that it has released the 179D Portal, a tool to estimate potential federal tax deductions for installing eligible energy-efficient technologies in commercial buildings. The Inflation Reduction Act revised the 179D deduction to enable two different pathways for compliance: (1) the traditional pathway based on modeled savings beyond a reference building code; and (2) an alternative pathway for buildings to reduce their energy use based on utility data from previous levels. The 179D Portal provides tools for both the traditional compliance pathway and for the alternative compliance pathway for qualifying upgrades beginning in tax year 2023.

January 13, 2025

Around the Country

Northeast 

  • On January 16th, Rep. Nick LaLota (R-NY) led a bloc of five House Republicans in announcing plans to vote together and oppose any broader Trump tax package unless it contains significant changes to the current State and Local Tax (SALT) cap provisions beyond just an increase of the cap from $10,000 to $20,000. The other members of the bloc are Reps. Andrew Garbarino (R-NY), Mike Lawler (R-NY), and Tom Kean Jr. (R-NJ), and Young Kim (R-CA) Given the small GOP majority, this bloc could sink any party-line tax bill seeking to enact the Trump tax cuts. 

West

  • On January 17th, the Biden Energy Department (DOE) announced that it closed a $15 billion loan guarantee to Pacific Gas & Electric Company (PG&E), a combined natural gas and electric utility serving northern and central California, for the company’s Project Polaris to support a portfolio of projects to expand hydropower generation and battery storage, upgrade transmission capacity through reconductoring (i.e., replacing cables or wires on an electric circuit) and grid enhancing technologies, and enable virtual power plants throughout PG&E’s service area. The Biden DOE noted that PG&E will partner with the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) Local 1245 to train and employ members of underserved groups interested in operational roles through its existing Power Pathway.

Northwest 

Midwest

Southeast

  • On January 15th, Florida Sen. Rick Scott (R) was elected chair of the Senate GOP Steering Committee, which serves as a Senate version of the House Freedom Caucus. The committee hosts weekly lunches and includes many of the most conservative Republicans in the Senate, though there is no formal roster.
  • On January 14th, the Biden General Services Administration (GSA) announced the award of a $210 million Energy Savings Performance Contract to CEG Solutions, LLC to implement energy and water upgrades at the following GSA facilities in the National Capital Region: (1) the Markey National Courts Building; (2) the Dolley Madison House; (3) the Cosmos Club Tayloe House; (4) the National Building Museum; (5) the Sidney Yates Federal Building; (6) the Lyndon B. Johnson Federal Building; (7) the Mary E. Switzer Federal Building; and (8) the U.S. Tax Court Building. The upgrades include deep energy retrofits through energy conservation measures, building electrification and the use of American-made low-embodied carbon materials. Other energy conservation measures to be implemented include upgrades to building envelopes, chillers, lighting and controls, building automation systems, domestic water systems, and replacement of transformers.
  • On January 13th, Sen. Jim Justice (R-WV) was officially sworn in, replacing Sen. Joe Manchin (I-WV) in the U.S. Senate.

Southwest

  • On January 21st, the Trump Administration announced that Oracle, OpenAI, and SoftBank have committed $500 billion as part of a private investment to build out artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure in the U.S. The joint venture, called Stargate, will see each company initially commit $100 billion and will kick off with the construction of a data center in Texas.

Highlights from MCAA, SMACNA & TAUC’s 2025 Safety & Health Conference

Last week, the construction industry came together at the 2025 Safety & Health Conference, where over 500 safety and health professionals from the Mechanical Contractors Association of America (MCAA), the Sheet Metal and Air Conditioning Contractors’ National Association (SMACNA), and The Association of Union Contractors (TAUC) reaffirmed their commitment to advancing safety and health across the trades.

Attendees engaged in 35 hours of education and training, highlighted by a powerful presentation from father-daughter duo Brad Livingston and Kayla Rath on The Ripple Effect—a compelling message about the lasting impact of jobsite accidents.

In a collective effort to give back, our blood drive contributed 30 pints toward the national blood shortage, and together, we raised $7,500 for the Construction Industry Alliance for Suicide Prevention, an organization dedicated to supporting the well-being of the men and women in our field.

The conference also featured 40 exhibitors, including industry leaders such as MILWAUKEE TOOLLittle Giant LadderTyfoomClickSafetyProcore, DeWaltHilti, and ServiceTitan.

A special session brought insights from MCAA President Rick Gopparth, SMACNA President Tom Martin Jr., and TAUC President Justin Bruce, reinforcing our shared commitment to safety and health.

At MCAA, SMACNA, and TAUC, the safety and well-being of our workers, teams, and companies remain our top priority. We look forward to strengthening our collaboration and advancing industry safety in the years ahead.

Mark your calendars for the 2026 Safety & Health Conference, taking place January 12-15, 2026, in Austin, Texas—we look forward to seeing you there!

Last Call: MCAA and Partners Industrial Head Protection Study – Your Participation Can Help Save Lives

Workplace head injuries remain a significant concern in the construction industry. To address this, the John R. Gentille Foundation (JRGF), ELECTRI International, the American Society of Concrete Contractors (ASCC), and The Association of Union Constructors (TAUC) have partnered with the Virginia Tech Helmet Lab on a study to improve industrial helmet safety. The success of this research depends on industry participation to provide real-world data on workplace head injuries for use in developing test protocols. Help advance helmet technology, reduce the risk of traumatic brain injuries, and make a lasting impact on worker safety. Take the survey today!

Survey Will Provide Valuable Industry Insights

To conduct tests representative of real-world head impacts experienced in an industrial setting, researchers need to learn how industrial workers get injured on a job site. Information such as the injuries incurred, approximate fall height, fall surface, head impact location, and the head impact surface are crucial in reconstructing these scenarios in a laboratory setting. This information is being collected in a short survey that allows individuals to anonymously describe workplace injuries and “near-misses” that will provide us with the data necessary to perform laboratory testing. We ask that you help us by distributing the survey to your workforce to help us collect this information. 

We understand this information is extremely sensitive, and companies or individuals may be reluctant to share their experiences. As such, the entire survey will remain completely confidential and anonymous. No identifiable personal (i.e., name, date, contact information, location) or company information will be collected, and all data will be stored securely at Virginia Tech. Further, Virginia Tech researchers will not know which companies and organizations that JRGF, TAUC, ASCC, and Electri distributed this memo and survey to. JRGF, TAUC, ASCC, and ELECTRI International will not have access to the survey responses. Survey responses will go directly to Virginia Tech, and no data will be shared outside of the researchers involved in the study. 

If you, the company or organization, are willing to share additional information or data about workplace injuries; specifically, accident reports, images, or surveillance video of workplace injuries would be extremely valuable to the research. Any shared report or video would be completely de-identified and treated as highly confidential. If willing, please use this form to submit files. 

Thank you for your consideration and help with this important research that will ultimately reduce traumatic brain injuries and deaths in the workplace. 

Survey Available in English and Spanish

The survey is available in both English and Spanish to reach as many workers as possible. Help advance helmet technology, reduce the risk of traumatic brain injuries, and make a lasting impact on worker safety. Take the survey today!

MCAA 2029 Annual Convention

The MCAA Annual Convention is the highlight of the association’s year. With a reputation as the industry’s premier educational event, the MCAA Convention offers something for all members. Attendees will experience a first class trade show featuring the members of MCAA’s Manufacturer/Supplier Council, social functions that never cease to amaze and delight, exceptional education seminars and the chance to network and connect with industry peers. Don’t miss the opportunity to see what your trade association can do for you.

Find the Latest from Copeland and The Harris Products Group, A Lincoln Electric Company in MCAA’s Virtual Trade Show

MCAA’s Virtual Trade Show connects our contractor members with the members of MCAA’s Manufacturer/Supplier Council.

Participating companies highlight and link to new products, product lines, services, solutions or web pages of particular interest. Here are just a few of the recent additions:

Copeland
Introducing Scout, the new AI-powered feature on the Copeland Mobile App. Access HVACR product info, troubleshooting, and tech support—helping you complete jobs faster and more accurately.

The Harris Products Group, A Lincoln Electric Company
HVAC/R service techs will love this kit! It meets the needs for most field repairs. This six-piece kit features Aluxcor® for aluminum and Stay-Silv® 15, the industry’s most used copper brazing alloy.

Need Something Else?

Find many more smart solutions in MCAA’s Virtual Trade Show!

Speaking of Smart Solutions

Visit the Smart Solutions Case Studies area of our website to learn how other mechanical contractors found their win-win with cost-saving and productivity-enhancing applications from members of MCAA’s Manufacturer/Supplier Council.

This section of our website also includes tips and ideas to help your company save money and enhance your productivity. Don’t miss it!

Connect With Additional Manufacturer/Supplier Training

Save yourself time and let MCAA connect you to the latest Manufacturer/Supplier member’s training opportunities. Visit the Manufacturer/Supplier Training area of the Resource Center to get started. 

Trump Administration II Webinar: A Virtual Discussion on Coming Tax, Regulatory & Trade/Tariff Policies

On February 6, 2025, at 2:00 p.m. EST, Daniel Bunn, President & CEO of the Tax Foundation, will provide an in-depth analysis of expected federal policy changes during the second Trump administration. The session will be moderated by Jim Gaffney and Chuck Daniel.

Daniel Bunn is President and CEO of the Tax Foundation. Daniel has been with the organization since 2018 and, prior to becoming President, successfully built its Center for Global Tax Policy, expanding the Tax Foundation’s reach and impact around the world. Prior to joining the Tax Foundation, Daniel worked in the United States Senate at the Joint Economic Committee as part of Senator Mike Lee’s (R-UT) Social Capital Project and on the policy staff for both Senator Lee and Senator Tim Scott (R-SC). In his time in the Senate, Daniel developed legislative initiatives on tax, trade, regulatory, and budget policy. He has a master’s degree in Economic Policy from Central European University in Budapest, Hungary, and a bachelor’s degree in Business Administration from North Greenville University in South Carolina. Daniel lives in Halethorpe, Maryland, with his wife and their three children.

Don’t miss this opportunity to gain valuable insights from a leading expert in the field.

Connect With the Latest Training from Victaulic and The Harris Products Group at MCAA.org

The Manufacturer/Supplier Training area of MCAA’s website connects our contractor members with training opportunities available from the members of MCAA’s Manufacturer/Supplier Council.

Participating companies highlight and link to new webinars and training opportunities across their product lines, services, solutions or web pages. Here are just a few of the recent additions:

Victaulic
From one-hour seminars to full-day events, Victaulic University Continuing Education courses provide training on key industry concepts, including piping movement design, grooving and installation fundamentals, and gasket technology, as well as Victaulic HVAC and fire protection solutions. Request an instructor-led course or enroll in an online course today!

Parker Hannifin
Harris Products Group, maker of brazing and soldering equipment and consumables, provides NATE training on the basics of brazing, base and filler metals and fluxes, and torch safety. Includes brazing demonstrations and hands-on practice.

Interested in More Training from Our Supplier Partners?

Be sure to visit the Manufacturer/Supplier Training area for all the latest offerings.

Find the Latest from Wheatland Tube and Morris Group International in MCAA’s Virtual Trade Show

MCAA’s Virtual Trade Show connects our contractor members with the members of MCAA’s Manufacturer/Supplier Council.

Participating companies highlight and link to new products, product lines, services, solutions or web pages of particular interest. Here are just a few of the recent additions:

Wheatland Tube SureThread Continuous Weld Pipe

Wheatland Tube
Now ASTM A53, Grade B certified, SureThread continuous weld standard pipe offers exceptional strength and ductility for better threading, bending and cutting in steam, water, gas and air lines.

Morris Group International
Acorn-Sinks® drop-in sinks is available in single and double bowl configurations, including ADA, for multiple applications. Acorn Engineering Company is a division of Morris Group International.

Need Something Else?

Find many more smart solutions in MCAA’s Virtual Trade Show!

Speaking of Smart Solutions

Visit the Smart Solutions Case Studies area of our website to learn how other mechanical contractors found their win-win with cost-saving and productivity-enhancing applications from members of MCAA’s Manufacturer/Supplier Council.

This section of our website also includes tips and ideas to help your company save money and enhance your productivity. Don’t miss it!

Connect With Additional Manufacturer/Supplier Training

Save yourself time and let MCAA connect you to the latest Manufacturer/Supplier member’s training opportunities. Visit the Manufacturer/Supplier Training area of the Resource Center to get started. 

MEP Innovation Conference Will Go On As Planned

January 27-30, 2025 | Los Angeles, CA

As the wildfires in Los Angeles remain top of mind for all of us, our thoughts are with those affected by this challenging situation. We want to assure you that we are continuously monitoring the evolving circumstances and prioritizing the safety of all involved.

The safety of our attendees is always our foremost concern, and NECA, MCAA, and SMACNA are committed to working together to ensure a safe environment for everyone. 

At this time, the MEP Innovation Conference is still moving forward as planned January 27-30, at the Intercontinental Hotel in downtown Los Angeles. This decision is based on the fact that infrastructure and locations that the meeting is taking place are currently unaffected and not within an area likely to be.   

LAX airport is operating normally, and the areas where our meetings are scheduled remain unaffected. We are monitoring air quality and the situation closely, including the forecasted winds this week, and will act swiftly if conditions require us to make any changes to the event.   

We are proud to share that the MCAA Charitable FundNECA Disaster Relief FundSMACNA and the New Horizons Foundation, have joined forces to donate up to $60,000 for member relief efforts in areas impacted by the fires. You can make a difference too. A portion of the proceeds from this event will go directly toward relief efforts, and we encourage you to consider making an additional donation if you want to help as well through the charity of your affiliated association in the links attached. Our local partners look forward to seeing everyone in Los Angeles, where we can support the community. 

Your safety is our top priority, and we will keep you updated on any changes to the event. Please contact us if you have any questions or concerns.   

Thank you for your understanding and support as we navigate this together. 

Explore the full Conference Website.

Help Those Impacted by the California Wildfires

The MCAA Charitable Fund is collecting donations to help the members and residents is Southern California who have lost their homes and businesses in the California wildfires. Let’s unite as a community to provide hope and support for our family members affected by these fires. Your generosity can make a lasting difference in their recovery.

MCAA Government Affairs Update for January 13, 2025: The Latest Developments Impacting Our Industry

As part of its ongoing commitment to protecting your livelihood and setting the stage for a bright future, MCAA has secured the services of Longbow Public Policy Group to advise our MCAA Government Affairs Committee (GAC). GAC Chair, Jim Gaffney will be passing along information relative to our industry on a regular basis.

On Monday, January 13, 2025 MCAA Lobbying Firm, Longbow Public Policy Group provided the following information:

Congress

Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) Re-Elected Speaker on First Ballot

On January 3rd, Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) was re-elected as House Speaker, securing enough support to remain Speaker on the first ballot. During the vote, Reps. Ralph Norman (R-SC) and Keith Self (R-TX) originally voted against Johnson, but ultimately flipped their votes to him before the vote closed after reportedly receiving phone calls from President-elect Trump. Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) was the only Republican House member to vote against Johnson. Following the vote, Johnson vowed to tackle the size of government, lead House Republicans in holding “the bureaucracy accountable” and move the United States “to a more sustainable fiscal trajectory.” Johnson also committed to set up a “working group comprised of independent experts” to work with President-elect Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency “to implement recommended government and spending reforms to protect the American taxpayer.”

Senate Finalizes Committee Assignments

On December 20th, Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) unveiled the Republican Conference’s committee assignments for the 119th Congress. Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA) will be the new chair of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee and will be joined by new Committee members Sens. Tim Scott (R-SC), Josh Hawley (R-MO), Jim Banks (R-IN), Mike Crapo (R-ID), and Marsha Blackburn (R-TN). Sen. Mike Crapo (R-ID) will take over as chair of the Senate Finance Committee and will be joined by new Committee member Sen. Roger Marshall (R-KS). Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) will serve as the new chair of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee (HSGAC) and will be joined by new Committee members Sens. Joni Ernst (R-IA), Bernie Moreno (R-OH), and Tim Scott (R-SC). Thune also announced several new Chairs of committees that are important to MCAA, including: (1) Sen. Lindsey Graham as chair of the Senate Budget Committee; (2) Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) as chair of the Senate Energy Committee; and (3) Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV) as Chair of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee. Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME) will also serve as chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee and will be joined by new Committee members Sens. Markwayne Mullin (R-OK) and Mike Rounds (R-SD). 

On January 2nd, Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) announced the new Senate Democratic Committee Assignments for the 119th Congress. Newly elected Sen. Andy Kim (D-NJ) will serve on the Senate HELP Committee, Senate Banking Committee, Senate Commerce Committee, and Senate HSGAC. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) will remain top Democrat on the Senate HELP Committee and, in addition to Senator Kim, will be joined by new Committee member Sen. Lisa Blunt Rochester (D-DE). Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR) will also remain the top Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee and will be joined by new Committee members Sens. Raphael Warnock (D-GA) and Bernie Sanders (I-VT). Sen. Gary Peters (D-MI) will serve as Homeland Security & Governmental Affairs Committee (HSGAC) Ranking Member and be joined by new Committee members Sens. Andy Kim (D-NJ), Ruben Gallego (D-AZ), and Elissa Slotkin (D-MI). Schumer also announced changes in the Ranking Democrats for several Senate committees of interest to MCAA, including: (1) Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-OR) as Ranking Member on Senate Budget; (2) Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-NM) as Ranking Member on Senate Energy; and (3) Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) as Ranking Member on Senate Environment and Public Works. Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA) remains the top Democrat on the Senate Appropriations Committee and will be joined by new Committee members Sens. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) and Jon Ossoff (D-GA).

Senate Begins Confirmation Hearings for Trump Cabinet Nominees This Week

The Senate is expected to hold several confirmation hearings for Trump nominees this week, including: (1) Trump Interior Secretary nominee former North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum before the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee on January 14, 2025; (2) Trump Energy Secretary nominee Liberty Energy CEO Chris Wright before the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee on January 15, 2025; (3) Trump Transportation Secretary nominee former Rep. Sean Duffy (R-WI), before the Senate Commerce Committee on January 15, 2025; (4) Trump Homeland Security Secretary nominee South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem (R) before the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee (HSGAC) on January 15, 2025; (5) Trump Treasury Secretary nominee hedge fund manager Scott Bessent before the Senate Finance Committee on January 16, 2025; and (6) Trump Attorney General nominee former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi before the Senate Judiciary Committee on January 15-16, 2025. 

House Democrats Fill Six Open Spots on House Energy and Commerce Committee

Last Tuesday, the House Democratic Steering and Policy Committee filled six open slots on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which has jurisdiction over many issues of interest to MCAA. The Steering Committee selected: (1) Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY); (2) Rep. Kevin Mullen (D-CA); (3) Rep. Troy Carter (D-LA); (4) Rep. Jennifer McClellan (D-VA); (5) Rep. Greg Landsman (D-OH); and (6) Rep. Jake Auchincloss (D-MA).

House Votes to Finalize Rules Package for the 119th Congress Making it Harder to Remove the Speaker

On January 3rdthe House adopted a new rules package for the 119th Congress by a vote of 215-209. It includes several notable changes to the rules of the House. Most notably, it raises the threshold to introduce a motion to vacate that forces a vote on removing the Speaker of the House so that instead of any single House member being able to force such a vote, such a motion will have to be introduced by a Republican and be joined by eight additional Republican co-sponsors.

The rules package also directs the House to consider a dozen to-be-introduced bills, including:

  • A bill reversing President Biden’s moratorium on hydraulic fracturing. 
  • A bill requiring the Secretary of Homeland Security to take into custody aliens who have been charged in the United States with theft and certain other crimes and empowering state Attorneys General to sue when they believe federal authorities are not properly enforcing or applying immigration law. (This bill, entitled the Laken Riley Actpassed the House last week by a vote of 264-159, with 48 Democrats joining all Republicans in support. The Senate last Thursday voted 84-9 to move to debate and potentially amend the bill ahead of a vote on final passage sometime this week.)

To appease budget hawks, the new rules also require the Director of the Congressional Budget Office, “to the extent practicable,” to prepare an estimate of whether a bill or joint resolution reported by a committee (other than the Committee on Appropriations), or amendment or conference report, would cause, relative to current law, a net increase in direct spending in excess of $2.5 billion in any of the four consecutive ten fiscal year periods beginning with the first fiscal year that is ten fiscal years after the current fiscal year. Moreover, a point of order may be raised to prevent consideration of any bill or joint resolution reported by a committee, or amendment thereto or conference report thereon, that would cause such a net increase in direct spending. Finally, the new rules also authorize subpoenas of Attorney General Merrick Garland and other Justice Department officials as part of House Republicans’ investigations into the Biden family’s finances. 

MCAA Issues and Interests 

Project Labor Agreements

ABC Leads 22 Organizationsxz∂√ƒ in Letter to President-elect Trump Urging Him to Rescind MCAA-Supported Executive Order on PLAs

Last Thursday, the Associated Builders and Contractors (ABC) led 22 organizations—including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the Construction Industry Round Table—in a letter to President-elect Donald Trump urging him to repeal President Biden’s MCAA-supported Executive Order and related implementation rules creating a presumption that project labor agreements (PLAs) will be used on large-scale federal construction projects valued at $35 million or more. Notably, the Associated General Contractors of America did not join ABC’s letter. The letter argues that “PLAs exacerbate the construction industry’s estimated skilled labor shortage of more than half a million workers by unfairly discouraging competition from quality non-union contractors and their employees, who comprise 89.3% of the private U.S. construction workforce.” The ABC-led letter calls on President-elect Trump to undo President Biden’s “rampant special-interest favoritism” by issuing a new executive order “that restricts government-mandated PLAs and to restore robust fair and open competition on federal and federally assisted construction projects.” MCAA previously filed comments on the rulemaking to implement President Biden’s PLA Executive Order and contributed to the Construction Employers of America’s (CEA) comments supporting the Executive Order in October 2022. The policy team is currently taking the lead on a group letter for the Construction Employers of America to President-elect Trump rebutting ABC’s letter and reminding him that he declined ABC’s pleas to attack PLAs during his first term and has used PLAs on some of the most recognizable properties he developed.  

Registered Apprenticeship

Biden DOL Withdraws Rulemaking on “National Apprenticeship System Enhancements”

On December 27th, the Department of Labor’s Employment and Training Administration (ETA) published the withdrawal of its rulemaking on “National Apprenticeship System Enhancements.” The withdrawal of this rulemaking is the culmination of a joint effort between the MCAA and the UA dating back to our organizations’ joint comments opposing key elements of the rule that were submitted to the ETA in March 2024. 

Independent Contractors and Misclassification of Workers 

IRS Guidance Regarding Worker Classification Issues Under Section 530 of the Revenue Act of 1978

As the MCAA policy team and its CEA allies continue engaging Congress and various federal agencies regarding the misclassification of construction workers as independent contractors, we wanted to be sure you were aware of several relevant developments last week at the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) below. 

Last Wednesday, the IRS issued Revenue Procedure 2025-10 modifying and superseding its Revenue Ruling and guidance previously issued regarding the application of Section 530 of the Revenue Act of 1978. Section 530 relieves employers from paying large employment tax assessments when the IRS determines that they misclassified workers as independent contractors instead of employees. Revenue Procedure 2025-10 discusses facts that may vitiate the “good faith” of an employer’s assertion under Section 530 that it deemed a worker to be a non-employee such that it can rely on Section 530. Such facts include: (1) claiming income tax deductions, or treating payments made to or on behalf of the workers as excludable from income under provisions of the tax code applicable only to employees; (2) claiming employer credits, such as credits for paid sick and/or family leave under laws like the Families First Coronavirus Response Act, the Employee Retention Credit, or any other tax credits specified in future guidance that are calculated with respect to wages or compensation paid to an employee; (3) treating the individual as an employee for purposes of collectively bargained agreements entered into by the taxpayer; (4) permitting participation of the individual in any qualified pension, profit sharing, or stock bonus plan; (5) permitting participation of the individual in any nonqualified deferred compensation plan if such participation is limited to employees of the taxpayer; and (6) providing state unemployment insurance or worker’s compensation insurance coverage for such individual if the requirements for obtaining such state unemployment or worker’s compensation insurance is that coverage is limited to individuals performing services for the taxpayer as common law employees. The Revenue Procedure goes on to clarify several other key elements of the Section 530 Safe Harbor that seem likely to curtail the ability of employers to use it.

Separately, the IRS also issued Revenue Ruling 2025-3 further clarifying the application of Section 530 of the Revenue Act of 1978 by illustrating the application of the Section 530 Safe Harbor to five common workplace compensation scenarios. The IRS also reminds the public that Section 530 relief does not extend to individual workers, who remain liable for their personal income taxes and the employee share of FICA taxes that may result from the reclassification of a worker.

On a related legislative note, last Wednesday, the IRS National Taxpayer Advocate Erin Collins also released her 2024 Annual Report to Congress, known as “The Purple Book.” Among the 69 legislative recommendations was a recommendation to amend current law to encourage and authorize independent contractors and service recipients to enter into voluntary withholding agreements (recommendation #63). Recognizing that some businesses may be reluctant to withhold due to concerns that the IRS may cite the existence of withholding agreements to challenge underlying worker classification arrangements, Collins suggested Congress address these fears by amending the law to give both businesses and independent contractors reassurance “that entering into a voluntary withholding agreement will not affect worker classification.” 

Decarbonization

Treasury Releases Final Rules for Clean Hydrogen Production Credit 

Last Friday, following a lobbying effort by the MCAA policy team over the last few months, the Treasury Department released final rules for the section 45V Clean Hydrogen Production Tax Credit established by the Inflation Reduction Act. In general terms, the final rules clarify how producers of hydrogen, including those using electricity from various sources, natural gas with carbon capture, renewable natural gas (RNG), and coal mine methane can determine eligibility for the credit. To qualify for the full credit, projects must also meet the MCAA-supported prevailing wage and apprenticeship standards. The rules enable pathways for hydrogen produced using both electricity and methane, providing investment certainty while ensuring that clean hydrogen production meets the law’s lifecycle emissions standards.

On a related note, last Tuesday, the Energy Department (DOE) announced that its Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technologies Office (HFTO) is seeking applications for hydrogen and fuel cell project reviewer experts to review federal funding applications for clean hydrogen programs and to review the merit of ongoing projects. DOE seeks applicants with expertise in hydrogen production, storage, and delivery technologies, hydrogen and energy infrastructure, and integrated energy systems, and community engagement (e.g.,workforce, labor, and other community concerns), among other things. Those interested in applying to be an HFTO reviewer must email a copy of their most recent resume and a brief summary of their experience along with LinkedIn profile (if available) to H2Reviewer@ee.doe.gov.

Treasury Releases Final Rules for Clean Electricity Investment and Production Tax Credits 

Last Tuesday, the Treasury Department made public final rules for the Clean Electricity Investment (Section 48E) and Clean Electricity Production (Section 45Y) Credits that were also the subject of significant lobbying on the part of the MCAA policy team. Together, these Clean Electricity Credits provide clarity and certainty around what clean electricity zero-emissions technologies qualify for the credits—including wind, solar, hydropower, marine, and hydrokinetic, geothermal, nuclear, and certain waste energy recovery property. The final rules also provide guidance to clarify how combustion and gasification technologies can qualify in the future—including on how lifecycle analysis assessments will be conducted. The existing Production Tax Credit and Investment Tax Credit will be available to projects that began construction before 2025. Qualifying projects placed in service after December 31, 2024, will be eligible for the new Clean Electricity Credits. To receive the full value of the credits, taxpayers must meet standards for paying prevailing wages and employing registered apprentices. The final rules are scheduled for publication in the Federal Register and will take effect on January 15, 2025.

Treasury Releases Final Rules and Guidance for Clean Electricity Low-Income Communities Bonus Credit Program 

Last Wednesday, the Treasury Department and the Internal Revenue Service cleared final rules and a procedural guidance document for the Section 48E(h) Clean Electricity Low-Income Communities Bonus Credit Amount Program allocating bonuses to 1.8 gigawatts of clean electricity generation serving low-income communities from 2025 through at least 2032. The final rules expand the types of clean energy investments eligible for these tax credits beyond solar and wind technologies to other zero-emission technologies, including hydropower, geothermal, and nuclear. The final rule also clarifies eligibility requirements for qualified low-income residential building projects and provides a pathway for emerging clean energy businesses to receive priority in applying for the program. The final rule is scheduled to be published in the Federal Register on Monday, January 13, 2025.

DOE Releases FY25 Geothermal Research Funding 

On January 2nd, the Department of Energy’s Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) and Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) Programs announced the release of the fiscal year 2025 Phase I, Release 2 Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) for Geothermal Research. Under this NOFO, there will be approximately $65,000,000 available for qualified small businesses to carry out projects on two topics: one on geothermal heating and cooling and a second on enhanced geothermal systems. The geothermal heating topic areas are: (1) low-impact drilling systems for geothermal heat pumps (GHPs); (2) rapid site assessment for GHPs; and (3) geothermal heating and cooling for protected agriculture, like greenhouses and other controlled farming environments. The enhanced geothermal topic area focuses on improving elastomeric materials used in harsh downhole geothermal environments. Applications should focus on improving elastomeric materials specifically for use in geothermal wells, including for use in seals, o-rings, zonal isolation devices, pumps, valves, motors, and wellbore monitoring tools. Letters of intent are due by January 14, 2025 and full applications are due by February 26, 2025. Full applications can be submitted to Grants.gov by entering Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance No. 81.049. 

Other Interesting Things Since Our Last Report 

January 9, 2025

  • The Energy Department announced more than $136 million for 66 projects to support research and development of technologies to reduce energy demand and improve productivity, including: (1) projects that improve energy and material efficiency, utilize advanced energy sources, and develop technologies which utilize sustainable chemical feedstocks; (2) projects that develop technologies to address industrial emissions for cement and concrete, asphalt, and glass; and (4) developments in energy-intensive pulp, paper, and wood products manufacturing through dewatering and drying technologies and fiber preparation, pulping, and chemical recovery processes. A full list of projects is available here.
  • BlackRock, the world’s biggest asset manager, said it will leave the Net Zero Asset Managers Initiative, a coalition of top corporations that pledged to reach zero-carbon emissions by 2050. BlackRock’s departure followed a week after Morgan Stanley, Citigroup, and Bank of America withdrew from an aggressive climate change coalition focused on decarbonizing industries these banks serve. That followed withdrawals over the past month by Wells Fargo and Goldman Sachs from the United Nations-backed coalition, known as the Net-Zero Banking Alliance. JPMorgan Chase, the largest bank in the nation by assets and the only major U.S. bank left in the coalition, is also considering withdrawing from it. Members of the coalition, launched in 2021, had vowed to align “lending, investment and capital markets activities with net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.” The recent exodus from these decarbonization coalitions reflects a broad pullback by companies ahead of the second Trump administration from environmental, social and corporate-governance initiatives that Trump has strongly criticized.

January 8, 2025

January 7, 2025

  • The Health and Human Services Department announced fiscal year 2025 allocation decisions for $700 million in funding from the President’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to support 67 construction projects to develop Tribal water infrastructure, including drinking water sources, sewage systems, and effective solid waste disposal facilities.
  • The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) announced that three oil companies—XCL Resource Holdings, Verdun Oil Company II, and EP Energy LLC—agreed to pay a record $5.6 million penalty to settle allegations that they illegally coordinated before a merger between them was complete in 2021 and 2022. The FTC says XCL halted EP’s oil development activities “at a time when the United States was experiencing significant supply shortages and spiking crude oil prices” due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Janaury 6, 2025

  • The Energy Department (DOE) announced $45 million in funding for six projects in Alaska, Illinois, Texas, Utah, Virginia, and Wyoming to create regional consortia to accelerate the development of critical mineral and materials supply chains, including for novel nonfuel carbon-based products from secondary and unconventional feedstocks (e.g., coal and coal by-products, effluent waters from oil and gas development, acid mine drainage) for American manufacturing and production of technologies essential to clean energy.

January 2, 2025

  • Beginning on January 2nd, an estimated 19 million Medicare beneficiaries will see their out of pocket spending under Medicare Part D prescription drug plans capped at $2,000 for 2025 after the provision was included in the Inflation Reduction Act in 2022. This annual cap will be indexed to the rate of inflation going forward every year. President Biden issued a statement marking implementation of the cap, calling it a “game changer for the American people” and will help Americans “afford the quality health care they need.”  MCAA is working to educate policy makers about the pressure this price cap is placing on self-insured plans and how it is shifting the costs of drugs onto plans rather than lowering the overall cost of drugs.

December 30, 2024 

  • The Department of Labor (DOL) announced the award of $65 million to 18 colleges in Alabama, California, Colorado, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Jersey, Ohio, Oregon, Texas, Virginia, Washington, and West Virginia to support programs at community colleges that scale “affordable, high-quality” workforce training in “critical industry sectors” such as clean energy, advanced manufacturing, semiconductors, and biotechnology. Administered by DOL’s Employment and Training Administration, the fifth round of Strengthening Community Colleges Training Grants are intended to enhance career pathway programs and support equitable outcomes for marginalized and underrepresented populations. The full list of grant awards is available here.

Around the Country 

Northeast 

West

  • On January 8th, the Interior Department (DOI) announced $514 million in funding from the President’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law for five water storage and conveyance projects. Projects funded under this announcement include: (1) $250 million for the Arkansas Valley Conduit Project to fund the installation of nearly 10 miles of pipeline; (2) $129 million for the Sites Reservoir Project to develop up to 1.5 million acre-feet of new water storage on the Sacramento River system located near Maxwell, California; (3) $125 million for the B.F. Sisk Dam Raise and Reservoir Expansion Project in California to enhance off-stream storage capabilities; (4) $7 million for the Anderson Ranch Dam Raise Project to raise the Anderson Ranch Dam in Idaho by 6 feet to add 29,000 acre-feet of storage; and (5) $3 million for the Cle Elum Pool Raise Project in Washington State to continue to increase the reservoir’s capacity an additional 14,600 acre-feet to be managed for instream flows for fish.
  • On December 31st, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced the issuance of four Underground Injection Control Class VI well permits to Carbon TerraVault JV Storage Company Sub 1, LLC (CTV), a subsidiary of California Resources Corporation. The four Class VI UIC permits are for the first permitted Class VI injection wells in California and represent the first such permits issued by EPA’s Pacific Southwest Region. Class VI UIC wells are used to inject carbon dioxide into deep rock formations for permanent underground storage. This technology, called carbon capture and underground storage or geologic sequestration, can be used to reduce carbon dioxide emissions to the atmosphere and mitigate climate change. The permits authorize CTV to construct four deep injection wells in the Elk Hills Oil Field, approximately 20 miles west of Bakersfield, California. The wells will be constructed to depths of more than a mile below surface level, into the Monterey Formation. CTV plans to inject about 1.5 million metric tons of carbon dioxide per year for 26 years, totaling almost 38 million metric tons of carbon dioxide removed andstored.

Northwest 

  • On January 2nd, the Labor Department announced the award of $627,124 to the Washington State Employment Security Department to continue providing disaster-relief jobs and employment and training services for people in southwest Washington communities affected significantly by the health and economic effects of widespread opioid use, addiction, and overdose.

Midwest 

Southeast

Southwest

Andy Dieguez Joins the MCAA Staff

MCAA welcomes Andy Dieguez, who joined the staff January 6, 2025, as Director of Revenue Management. Andy will be focusing on member dues as Jocelyn Jackson transitions out of that aspect of her current role. Andy joins us after a 15+ year career in accounting with experience in audit and financial reporting for various industries. In his downtime, Andy enjoys traveling and has visited 37 countries and 47 US states. MCAA is pleased to welcome Andy to the MCAA staff family.