[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 29, Volume 1]
[Revised as of July 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 29CFR4.51]

[Page 46-47]
 
                             TITLE 29--LABOR
 
PART 4_LABOR STANDARDS FOR FEDERAL SERVICE CONTRACTS--Table of Contents
 
                 Subpart B_Wage Determination Procedures
 
Sec. 4.51  Prevailing in the locality determinations.

    (a) Information considered. The minimum monetary wages and fringe 
benefits set forth in determinations of the Secretary are based on all 
available pertinent information as to wage rates and fringe benefits 
being paid at the time the determination is made. Such information is 
most frequently derived from area surveys made by the Bureau of Labor 
Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor, or other Labor Department 
personnel. Information may also be obtained from Government contracting 
officers and from other available sources, including employees and their 
representatives and employers and their associations. The determinations 
may be based on the wage rates and fringe benefits contained in 
collective bargaining agreements where they have been determined to 
prevail in a locality for specified occupational class(es) of employees.
    (b) Determination of prevailing rates. Where a single rate is paid 
to a majority (50 percent or more) of the workers in a class of service 
employees engaged in similar work in a particular locality, that rate is 
determined to prevail. The wage rates and fringe benefits in a 
collective bargaining agreement covering 2,001 janitors in a locality, 
for example, prevail if it is determined that no more than 4,000 workers 
are engaged in such janitorial work in that locality. In the case of 
information developed from surveys, statistical measurements of central 
tendency such as a median (a point in a distribution of wage rates where 
50 percent of the surveyed workers receive that or a higher rate and an 
equal number receive a lesser rate) or the mean (average) are considered 
reliable indicators of the prevailing rate. Which of these statistical 
measurements will be applied in a given case will be determined after a 
careful analysis of the overall survey, separate classification data, 
patterns existing between survey periods, and the way the separate 
classification data interrelate. Use of the median is the general rule. 
However, the mean (average) rate may be used in situations where, after 
analysis, it is determined that the median is not a reliable indicator. 
Examples where the mean may be used include situations where:
    (1) The number of workers studied for the job classification 
constitutes a relatively small sample and the computed median results in 
an actual rate that is paid to few of the studied workers in the class;
    (2) Statistical deviation such as a skewed (bimodal or multimodal) 
frequency distribution biases the median rate due to large 
concentrations of workers toward either end of the distribution curve 
and the computed median results in an actual rate that is paid to few of 
the studied workers in the class; or
    (3) The computed median rate distorts historic wage relationships 
between job levels within a classification family (i.e., Electronic 
Technician Classes A, B, and C levels within the Electronic technician 
classification family), between classifications of different skill 
levels (i.e., a maintenance electrician as compared with a maintenance 
carpenter), or, for example, yields a wage movement inconsistent with 
the pattern shown by the survey

[[Page 47]]

overall or with related and/or similarly skilled job classifications.
    (c) Slotting wage rates. In some instances, a wage survey for a 
particular locality may result in insufficient data for one or more job 
classifications that are required in the performance of a contract. 
Establishment of a prevailing wage rate for certain such classifications 
may be accomplished through a ``slotting'' procedure, such as that used 
under the Federal pay system. Under this procedure, wage rates are 
derived for a classification based on a comparison of equivalent or 
similar job duty and skill characteristics between the classifications 
studied and those for which no survey data is available. As an example, 
a wage rate found prevailing for the janitorial classification may be 
adopted for the classification of mess attendant if the skill and duties 
attributed to each classification are known to be rated similarly under 
pay classification schemes. (Both classifications are assigned the same 
wage grade under the Coordinated Federal Wage System and are paid at the 
Wage Board grade 2 when hired directly by a Federal agency.)
    (d) Due consideration. In making wage and fringe benefit 
determinations, section 2(a)(5) of the Act requires that due 
consideration be given to the rates that would be paid by the Federal 
agency to the various classes of service employees if section 5341 or 
section 5332 of title 5 U.S.C., were applicable to them. Section 5341 
refers to the Wage Board or Coordinated Federal Wage System for ``blue 
collar'' workers and section 5332 refers to the General Schedule pay 
system for ``white collar'' workers. The term due consideration implies 
the exercise of discretion on the basis of the facts and circumstances 
surrounding each determination, recognizing the legislative objective of 
narrowing the gap between the wage rates and fringe benefits prevailing 
for service employees and those established for Federal employees. Each 
wage determination is based on a survey or other information on the wage 
rates and fringe benefits being paid in a particular locality and also 
takes into account those wage rates and fringe benefits which would be 
paid under Federal pay systems.