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The latest news from every corner of the state, including policy emerging from Missouri's capitol.

MSD shows major progress in hiring more female and minority contractors

The Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District has made significant progress in hiring more women and minorities to do its contract work. On Thursday, advocacy groups that signed a community benefits agreement with the utility recognized those efforts.
Eli Chen | St. Louis Public Radio
The Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District has made significant progress in hiring more women and minorities to do its contract work. On Thursday, advocacy groups that signed a community benefits agreement with the utility recognized those efforts.

Updated Jan. 26 with more details from MSD's research — The Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District announced Thursday that it has made strides in hiring more women and minorities for contract work. 

The NAACP and minority advocacy groups like MOKAN have pushed the sewer utility for several years to make more diverse hires for its contractual engineering and construction work. They stepped up such efforts after a Clean Water Act settlement in 2011 required the MSD to spend $4.7 billion on sewer upgrades over the next two decades. 

In 2013, MSD and multiple community organizations signed a community benefits agreement that committed the utility to create training programs for female and minority engineers and construction workers. MSD also set goals to increase the number of minority vendors hired for contractual work. For example, MSD aimed to hire African-American firms for at least 17 percent of its construction work, which it achieved. 

"We are extremely, extremely happy that MSD took the time and effort to sit with us continually to work through all the issues we had identified as potential problems," said Adolphus Pruitt, president of the NAACP's St. Louis branch.

There still remain areas, however, that the utility needs to improve, said Brian Hoelscher, executive director and CEO of MSD. He said the utility hasn't met its goal of obtaining 30 percent of its work on treatment plants and pump stations from minority vendors. It also set a goal of increasing the number of women working in construction to 7 percent, but currently the utility is only halfway there. 

"Our issue is not getting the women out of the labor halls," Hoelscher said. "It's helping the unions find women who want to do that type of work." 

MSD has funded work training programs for women, but the district also wants to start approaching younger women who may be interested in construction work while they're still in high school, instead of waiting until they reach their early 20s. 

Hiring more female and minority contractors improves community relations and helps lower costs, Hoelscher said. 

"By doing this diversity program, allowing other companies to participate, build their expertise, build their size, it always guarantees we have vendors available who have the capacity to do the work as we go forward," Hoelscher said. "If we didn't and we ended up with a vendor pool that ran out of capacity, they'd start kicking the prices up. This prevents that from happening." 

MSD will hire a consultant this year to update a 2013 study of contractor and workforce disparities for its capital construction projects. The research could set new goals for the utility. 

"We do want to get to a point where you don't have to monitor goals and diversity just kind of happens as a normal course of business," Hoelscher said. 

Follow Eli on Twitter: @StoriesByEli

Copyright 2018 St. Louis Public Radio

Eli Chen is the science and environment reporter at St. Louis Public Radio. She comes to St. Louis after covering the eroding Delaware coast, bat-friendly wind turbine technology, mouse love songs and various science stories for Delaware Public Media/WDDE-FM. Before that, she corralled robots and citizen scientists for the World Science Festival in New York City and spent a brief stint booking guests for Science Friday’s live events in 2013. Eli grew up in the northwest suburbs of Chicago, where a mixture of teen angst, a love for Ray Bradbury novels and the growing awareness about climate change propelled her to become the science storyteller she is today. When not working, Eli enjoys a solid bike ride, collects classic disco, watches standup comedy and is often found cuddling other people’s dogs. She has a bachelor’s in environmental sustainability and creative writing at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and has a master’s degree in journalism, with a focus on science reporting, from the City University of New York Graduate School of Journalism.