Boots on the Ground

Subcontractors, The Heartbeat of Construction

Tag: American Subcontractors Association

Report on National Affiliation

The following report on National Affiliation was delivered my me (Art Rouse) at the NCSA Annual Business Meeting on June 18, 2014:

North Carolina Subcontractors Alliance, Inc.

Annual Meeting – June 18, 2014

Topic: National Affiliation

One year ago, the ASAC Charlotte Chapter changed its name and disaffiliated with the American Subcontractors Association and ASA of the Carolinas. At the Board of Directors meeting about a week later, I was asked as Past President, to investigate the possibilities of national affiliation and make a recommendation.

My first meeting was with ASA. Since my company had already paid for the ASAC Convention and July dues, I attended the convention. During the course of the convention, I was able to have a meeting with Walter Bazan, outgoing ASA president, Jack Austhof, incoming ASA president, Brian Johnson, incoming ASA vice president and Marty Swain, ASAC president. During the course of this meeting, we had a frank discussion of the reasons leading up to our decision to leave ASAC and our intention to affiliate with a national organization after NCSA stabilized its finances. I made it clear that an affiliation with ASA would need to be direct and not with ASAC. Bazan and Austhof asked to have further discussions when that happened to see if a direct membership would be available. Ensuing phone calls with Jack Austhof did not lead to an offer of direct affiliation, only an offer to review the charter with ASAC to see if it could be done in the Carolinas.

My next contact was to the National Subcontractors Alliance. I spoke to Lynne Black, executive director of NSA for several hours over the course of two days and for a couple hours more with Pete Snider, executive director of the Subcontractors Association of the Metroplex (Dallas-Fort Worth.) I got a good feeling for how NSA operates and how it differs from ASA.

The NSA has two meetings per year. One is the Executive Directors Meeting in Chicago in the fall. They invited us to send our ED to the meeting to get to know the other ED’s and how the NSA functions. We sent Margaret to the meeting and she came back with a very favorable report.

The other meeting is the annual Spring Conference. This year it was held in Denver, Colorado. I attended on behalf of the NCSA. There were two excellent seminars, one on building your business’ brand and the other on embracing technology as tools rather than toys. An example would be utilizing video conferencing to broaden the associations’ reach and how easily it can be done with Google Hangouts.

There were also breakout groups. While the lawyers’ council was meeting, the ED’s were having their meetings and the volunteer leaders had a workshop on increasing and retaining membership. There was plenty of time to network with the other chapter leaders as well as a great dinner at a steakhouse overlooking the Denver and an entertaining tour of the ghosts and scandals of Denver. Since the NSA is for the benefit of the members, the NSA only charges the actual cost of the conference to members. It is not a profit making venture like the ASAC convention. The total cost for me, including the airfare, was less that it cost to attend the ASAC convention last year. At the end of the conference, the NSA board held a special meeting and voted to offer membership to the NCSA. After my report and recommendation to the NCSA board, it was voted to affiliate with NSA.

That is really how the NSA works. Rather than a big national organization headquartered in the most exclusive section of the Washington DC area, the NSA staff consists of only the Executive Director and her assistant. They work out of space donated by one of the member companies. What makes them great is the network of business and legal contacts across the country to lean on for advice and guidance. Almost everyone came up to introduce themselves, give me a business card and an offer of help anytime it is needed. I have been able to use those offers twice already to check out general contractors from out-of-town.

All of the NSA member chapters are disassociated ASA chapters. Unlike ASA, you are members of your local organization, not the national association. The NSA is an umbrella organization of member associations. The NSA represents over 3,500 member companies. The local association pays an annual membership fee of $800 to $2500 depending on the size of the association. The rest of the local members’ dues stays with the local association. That means the local association is solidly funded and can spend their efforts on living up to the NSA motto: “Our business is helping you do yours,” and the NCSA pledge of Advocacy, Education and Networking.
The NSA itself is a member organization of ASC, the Associated Specialty Contractors. The ASC is an umbrella organization of 9 national associations with over 25,000 members. So, when we need representation in Washington, we carry the voice of 25,000 companies.

The NSA is a stakeholder and on the governing committee of Consensus Docs. The NSA has a benefit package of negotiated discounts and special rates for UPS, Fedex, Office Max, YRC Freight and other national service vendors and suppliers.

The NSA is the antithesis of ASA. It is locally focused and low overhead. Each local association is independent and self-governing. It is low overhead so the NCSA can have the benefits of a national affiliation without breaking the bank.

NC Subcontractors – First year on our own

The following is a review of the first year since the NCSA separated from the ASA of the Carolinas as written by Margaret Drummond and submitted to the National Subcontractors Alliance quarterly newsletter:

This July, the North Carolina Subcontractors Alliance celebrates our first year as a subcontractor group independent of the American Subcontractors Association. Twelve months ago, our meager fellowship (then as the Charlotte Chapter of the American Subcontractors Association of the Carolinas) unanimously voted to disassociate from ASA and rename our organization. Under the leadership of our devoted Board of Directors, we have spent this first year working toward our renewed goals of community leadership, unity, and support for our subcontractors.

Though we changed our name when we disaffiliated with ASA, we have not changed the strong tradition associated with North Carolina subcontractors. We are still a member-driven association and proud of our accomplishments. In March, we proudly joined the National Subcontractors Alliance. Having made contact with Executive Director Lynne Black in our early days, the NSA has nurtured our first year and provided the NCSA with continued support and encouragement. Even prior to joining officially, members of the NSA have offered their guidance and experience to help our local chapter re-establish ourselves as a stronger organization for our subcontractors. NCSA knew from our first encounter with NSA that this was where we were meant to be; an affiliation with a group of like-minded, trustworthy professionals whose goal is the betterment of our businesses.
NCSA membership has continually grown since our formal disassociation from ASA; and our membership is much more active and engaged. The positives have far outweighed the challenges already. We are confident with the help of NSA our membership will continue to grow. Our current benefits of Networking, including our Business Information Exchange meeting, Educational Materials & Programs, Monthly Newsletter, Government & Industry Legislative Advocacy, and Mentorship will continue, but joining NSA will help our members to boost their bottom line. As an NSA member, they are now eligible to receive valuable discounts that include: FedEx Shipping Services, YRC Transportation, UPS, OfficeMax Advantage Program, TSYS Merchant Solutions, Lenovo Affinity Program, Intercall, and AchieveLinks. One member has already reported the advantage of reaching out to an NSA member in another state to exchange notes on their experience with a national General Contractor.
I have discovered firsthand that if we work together and rely on one another, we are less likely to feel isolated. It is comforting to not have to “reinvent the wheel” every time we try something innovative, because through NSA, we are working together with other leading associations who freely offer their experience. Moving forward will be nothing short of an adventure. After a year we are a more successful and stronger association and are looking forward to our new relationship with NSA to continue that growth. Our membership has already been priceless.

The momentum must continue because much still needs to be done. We cannot allow our progress to stagnate. We have actively been attending local meetings, participating in the North Carolina level construction legislation, networking to keep our interests on the front line and partnering with other associations across the country with the same interests and more. For NCSA change is the new status quo. Everyone owns the responsibility for making the changes work. By joining NSA we have chosen to be a part of a national organization that is leading the construction industry into the future. “NCSA is a part of those that lead and not those that follow”…and we are very excited to see what’s next.

Margaret Drummond
North Carolina Subcontractors Alliance
PO Box 30604
Charlotte, NC 28204
ncsubcontractors@gmail.com
http://www.ncsubcontractors.com

Construction Trends – Green Globes and Net Zero

At a recent NC Subcontractors Alliance meet and greet, Bill Lorenzo, pre-construction manager with Balfour Beatty Construction’s Carolina Division, presented things that are trending in North Carolina. The most important is energy sustainability. He showed a chart showing that over the lifetime of a building, only 11% of the cost is related to construction and 85% is the cost of energy to power the building and its systems. It is becoming more accepted that an investment in sustainability saves money over the long run. More and more building owners and developers are requesting their new buildings be energy sustainable. But, they want to do it without all the rules and paperwork involved in the LEED program.

The big trend, now, is the movement away from LEED and toward a program called Green Globes. Green Globes is a web based program that began in Canada. The Green Building Initiative acquired the US rights to the program and administers it in the US. A building is awarded points for various attributes, the largest attribute being energy consumption. Upon verification by a third party, the building is awarded 1 to 4 globes. The use of Green Globes substantially reduces the administrative cost of obtaining a certified energy sustainable building.

The next thing to come will be Net Zero Sustainable. This is becoming common in California and Balfour Beatty is working on designs for the first one in Charlotte. In Net Zero, the building must produce as much renewable energy over the course of a year as it consumes. The building is connected to the grid and sells surplus energy to the grid on sunny days and buys energy from the grid on cloudy days, with the goal of achieving a net zero energy consumption. This is more challenging on the east coast because there are more cloudy days in the Carolinas than in California. We will have to wait and see how that works out.
Lunch n Learn at Balfor Beatty
The bottom line is that subcontractors need to be more aware of sustainability. It is not just a government mandate now, it is a trend coming from building owners and developers.

In The Beginning

Art-1iwMy name is Art Rouse. I have been employed by Binswanger Glass for 39+ years. I have worked as a sales representative, office/operations manager, branch manager and now as the area administrative manager. I have been involved in all aspects of subcontracting, from estimating to project management. My current job is to assist Binswanger locations in North Carolina and western Virginia with the administrative side of subcontracting and requires that I stay current with legal issues that affect subcontractors.

I will be blogging for the North Carolina Subcontractors Alliance. This is the former Charlotte Chapter of the American Subcontractors Association of the Carolinas. In a special meeting of the membership in June 2013, a majority of the membership voted to disassociate itself from ASAC and focus on legislation and construction issues at the state and local level.

The plan is to link this blog to the NCSA website and online newsletter. Since the organization will be using the WordPress templates for the website and newsletter, I have been asked to do my blogging on WordPress as well. My original posts were done on my personal blog on BlogSpot, so my next few postings will be re-posts from BlogSpot.

I hope you find these posts helpful and relevant. I will try to keep them interesting and timely. Comments are always appreciated.