Nobody wakes up hoping to spend their day explaining payroll mistakes to a Department of Labor investigator. But in prevailing wage work, small errors have a nasty habit of turning into expensive ones.
The Davis-Bacon Act requires contractors and subcontractors on covered federal or federally assisted construction projects over $2,000 to pay prevailing wages and maintain accurate certified payroll records. Even experienced payroll teams can get tripped up by the details.
Here are three real-world scenarios that show how fast payroll errors can snowball — and what payroll managers can do to avoid them.
A Pennsylvania contractor ended up on the hook for more than $85,000 after investigators found workers were improperly classified and underpaid on multiple federal projects.
The company classified several employees as general laborers even though they were performing higher-paid skilled trade work, including carpentry and pipefitting duties.
Investigators also found:
The violations occurred on federal projects involving the U.S. General Services Administration and U.S. Coast Guard.
This case is an example of one of the most common Davis-Bacon violations: Worker misclassification.
Under prevailing wage laws, classifications are tied to duties, not job titles. If an employee performs pipefitter work, they must generally be paid the pipefitter prevailing wage rate. Same goes for carpenters, operators, electricians, and other classifications.
The contractor also failed to pay proper overtime rates under the Contract Work Hours and Safety Standards Act (CWHSSA).
A “temporary” classification shortcut turned into a six-figure compliance problem:
On a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers project, a subcontractor improperly classified apprentices as laborers while performing specialized pipefitting work.
Investigators found the company failed to pay employees the correct prevailing wage rates and proper fringe benefits. They also violated overtime requirements and misclassified skilled workers.
The result was nearly $45,000 in back wages owed to 12 employees.
Apprentices can be paid reduced prevailing wage rates only when:
Otherwise, workers generally must be paid full prevailing wage rates for the classification of work performed.
A federally funded housing project in Massachusetts turned into a compliance disaster after investigators found prevailing wage violations and falsified payroll records involving multiple subcontractors.
According to the investigation:
The Department of Labor recovered more than $77,000 in back wages for affected employees, and both subcontractors were barred from working on federally funded construction projects for three years.
Submitting inaccurate or falsified payroll records can trigger:
General contractors can also be held liable because they are responsible for ensuring subcontractor compliance with Davis-Bacon contract clauses.
In this case, the general contractor was ultimately responsible for the back wage recovery tied to subcontractor violations. Under Davis-Bacon, the general or prime contractor is obligated to ensure subcontractor compliance.
The three scenarios above involve different projects, different contractors, and different states. But they all speak to the same underlying problems:
The problem is that prevailing wage compliance compounds. One classification error affects wages, fringes, overtime calculations, and certified payroll reports simultaneously. What might've started as an honest mistake can spiral into multiple violations and one expensive judgement from the Department of Labor. That's why maintaining clean, compliant, and comprehensive certified payroll records is so important.
The best way to survive a DOL audit is to avoid creating audit problems in the first place. The Department of Labor expects contractors to maintain accurate payroll records and comply with prevailing wage obligations on every project covered. “Mostly accurate” isn't good enough.
Certified payroll compliance isn't just paperwork. It's risk management.
Accurate worker classifications, fringe calculations, and certified payroll reporting protect contractors from back wages, penalties, withheld payments, and project delays. More importantly, they protect profitability.
eBacon helps contractors simplify prevailing wage compliance, automate certified payroll reporting, and reduce costly payroll errors before they become audit findings.
Because losing thousands over a preventable payroll mistake is painful, and losing a future government contract over one is worse.
Worker misclassification is one of the most common violations. This happens when employees perform higher-paid skilled work but are paid under lower wage classifications.
Yes. Prime or general contractors have responsibility for ensuring subcontractor compliance on prevailing wage projects and can face financial consequences for violations.
Contractors may face investigations, back wage liability, withheld contract funds, or even debarment in serious cases.
Yes. Contractors must comply with overtime requirements under laws like the Contract Work Hours and Safety Standards Act (CWHSSA).
The Department of Labor may require contractors to pay restitution for unpaid wages and fringe benefits, sometimes going back months or years.
eBacon helps contractors simplify certified payroll reporting, manage prevailing wage compliance, and catch payroll mistakes before they become back wages, withheld funds, or a three-year debarment story nobody wants attached to their company name.