Saint Paul, MN — On Friday, October 14, Minnesota’s infrastructure union presented three 2022 LIUNA Leadership Awards during the LIUNA Open House. The recipients were Senator Bill Weber, Representative Zack Stephenson and House Speaker Melissa Hortman.
LIUNA Minnesota and North Dakota established the annual award to recognize bold and effective public leaders who have impacted infrastructure policy and funding to the benefit of Minnesota as a whole.
Sen. Bill Weber, R-Luverne, was awarded as a result of his efforts to pass the Natural Gas Innovation Act (NGIA) in the 2021 Legislative Session. As a result of NGIA, utilities can begin to invest in renewable natural gas, clean hydrogen, and carbon capture technologies, all of which give LIUNA members who work in gas distribution the chance to use their skills to implement innovative solutions and install new technologies that can reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Over 800 LIUNA members work for natural gas utilities, building and maintaining pipelines and distribution systems to provide safe, reliable service to 1.5 million Minnesotans.
Dan Olson, LIUNA International Representative and Local 1091 Business Manager from the Duluth-Superior area, emceed the program and said, “We hope that if you return to the Laborers Training Center in five or ten years, LIUNA apprentices will be helping install digesters and equip landfills for methane capture, or learning the difference between hydrogen and CO2 lines.”
Due to scheduling conflicts, Senator Weber accepted his award virtually. In a video message, he emphasized Minnesota’s diverse energy landscape and said, “We have to make sure we can get energy to the areas of Minnesota where it is needed. The efforts LIUNA members made over the years to construct our distribution system have been vital to all of us in Minnesota.”
On October 14, 2020, the House passed the bill. The next day, the Senate followed. One week later, Governor Walz signed a $1.9 billion bonding bill, the largest construction jobs bill in Minnesota history.
Combined with federal infrastructure investments, Laborers are able to look forward to years, if not a decade, of good careers with strong wages, that contribute to Laborers’ health and welfare funds that serve 29,000 members and participants.