About the United Brotherhood of Carpenters
The UBC represents carpenters, drywall installers, floor coverers, framers, millwrights, pile drivers, and many other construction trades. Members work on residential, commercial, industrial, and infrastructure construction projects across the U.S. and Canada.
How UBC Locals Are Organized
The UBC is organized into about 250 local unions plus regional councils. Locals dispatch members to job sites within their geographic jurisdiction. The UBC's apprenticeship program is one of the largest in North America and a major member benefit.
Why a DMP Usually Fits UBC Members
Construction members face project-based income variability. For UBC members with consistent dispatch and full work years, a DMP fits well. For members with significant unemployment gaps, a counselor can structure payments around realistic annual income or recommend budget counseling first.
The general case for nonprofit credit counseling and debt management plans is even stronger for union households than for the general population. Union contracts produce predictable income, scheduled raises, and clear seniority protections. A DMP requires consistent monthly payments for 36 to 60 months, which is exactly what a union pay scale supports. Borrowers with unstable income often default out of DMPs; union members almost never do.
Through a DMP, your existing credit card balances stay with their original creditors, but the interest rates drop dramatically. Where you might be paying 22% to 28% on a credit card today, the post-negotiation rate through an NFCC member agency typically lands between 6% and 8%. On a $30,000 balance, that interest reduction alone saves roughly $7,000 over a 5-year payoff and shaves years off the timeline compared to making minimum payments.
Compare that to a consolidation loan, which adds new debt on top of (or in place of) your existing cards. A DMP keeps no new debt on your record, locks the enrolled cards so balances cannot grow again, and uses the same monthly payment math without the new lender on top. For a deeper comparison, see our guide on why you don't need another loan to consolidate debt.
Member Benefits to Check First
UBC members have access to Union Plus benefits and the Carpenters International Training Fund. Several regional councils have credit union partnerships and member assistance programs.
Whatever specific benefits your union or local offers, the order to follow is the same: check the union's official member benefits portal first, then ask your local hall about any additional partnerships or hardship resources, and only then contact an outside debt-relief provider. The same DMP services that cost $600 to $1,800 over the life of a plan from a commercial provider often cost $0 to $300 through a union partnership. The interest rate concessions are typically identical because both routes use the same NFCC creditor agreements.
Beyond union-specific programs, virtually all AFL-CIO affiliated unions participate in Union Plus, which includes free credit counseling and a range of consumer protection benefits.
Next Steps for UBC Members
If you have credit card debt and are a UBC member, here is the cleanest sequence to follow:
- Log in to your union's member benefits portal and look for credit counseling, financial wellness, or partner DMP programs.
- Contact your local hall to ask about any additional financial counseling partnerships or member assistance programs (MAPs) that include hardship support.
- Schedule a free counseling session with a partner agency, or with any NFCC member if your union has no specific partnership. See our debt management reviews for the largest nonprofit agencies.
- Bring your union member ID and a recent pay stub to the session so any partner discounts apply automatically and the counselor can build the plan around your actual income.
- Compare the proposed DMP terms against any consolidation loan offer you have received. For nearly all union households, the DMP wins on cost and structure.
If your situation is too complex for a DMP (typically because income has dropped or balances have grown beyond what a 3 to 5 year plan can handle), the same nonprofit counselor will tell you directly and refer you to settlement or bankruptcy resources. Honest counseling on this point is one of the main reasons to start with a nonprofit rather than a commercial firm.