Showing posts with label Military Construction; Appropriations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Military Construction; Appropriations. Show all posts

Saturday, March 17, 2012

Obama Administration Pursues Uniform Infrastructure Sustainability Rating System


The Obama administration gathered construction industry and federal agency managers at a four hour closed door White House meeting March 9, 2012, to hash over ways to push some uniform sustainibility measurement standards into federal infrastructure procurement in the transportation, housing, federal office building, defense and urban development sectors. Jointly sponsored by the White House Council on Environmental Quality and the Zofnass Program for Sustainable Infrastructure, the private session was attended by federal bureaucrats from HUD, DOT, DOD, GSA, and OMB. DHS was not represented at the meeting.

Urging development of a uniform infrastructure sustainability standard siimilar to LEED for buildings, the Obama administration is pushing the Zofnass Program,  and the Institute for Sustainable Infrastructure, together with industry groups including the American Society of Civil Engineers, the American Public Works Association and the American Council of Engineering Companies to come up with standardized criteria the federal government could incorporate into infrastructure bid documents and requests for proposals on infrastructure projects.  According to Paul J. Zofnass, president of New York City based environmental consutaing firm EFCG, Inc., “We either learn to make infrastructure sustainable, or we’re toast.”

Some industry attendees at the meeting complained that federal agencies resist sustainability in procurement bidding because considering it is too difficult within the confines of a “lowest responsible bidder” statutory procurement  framework.  Michael W. Creed, CEO of North Carolina based engineering firm McKim & Creed, remarked, “Should we add ‘depletion’ costs for non-renewable resources consumed during construction projects and use that as part of a sustainability scorecard?”  Currently there are at least two competing sustainability rating systems: “Envision,” developed through the Zofnass Program and Harvard University, and the ISI’s system, developed with input from various engineering professiona societies. Leaders of development of the “Envision” system expect to publicly release a pre-planning sustainability checklist and a project sustainability economic assessment tool later this year.

While the White House effort is a laudable one, it stands little chance of adoption any time soon. In the current Congressional enviornment of cost cutting and tax reform, anything involving evaulation of sustainability soft costs in the procurement process is likely to meet political put downs as “funny math” or “another bridge to nowhere.”

Friday, November 6, 2009

Military Construction Appropriation Coming Soon To Your Senate Floor

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said he hopes the Senate will pass the military construction appropriations bill early next week, in time for the Veterans’ Day holiday. The bill appropriates a total of $133.9 billion for military and veterans’ affairs, including a total of $23.2 billion for military construction projects not funded in the stimulus package.

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Full Committee Approves $133.9 Billion Military And VA Appropriation

The Senate Appropriations Committee has voted 21-0 to approve and send to the Senate floor a $133.9 billion spending measure, including $23.6 billion for military and veterans' administration construction. The Senate version of the bill is slightly bigger than the parallel House appropriation, and includes $5.7 billion for construction at military hospitals and dispensaries, $1.9 billion for construction at VA hospitals and clinics, $12.6 billion for construction at active military bases and reserve centers, $2 billion for construction of military family housing, and $1.4 billion for military construction in Afghanistan. The bill was approved by a subcommittee just yesterday.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Senate Panel Unanimously Approves $23.6 Billion Military Construction Spending

Yesterday the Senate Military Construction and Veterans Affairs Appropriations Committee approved a fiscal 2010 $134 billion spending measure, including $23.6 billion for military and veterans construction. The Senate version of the bill is slightly bigger than the parallel House appropriation, and includes $5.7 billion for construction at military hospitals and dispensaries, $1.9 billion for construction at VA hospitals and clinics, $12.6 billion for construction at active military bases and reserve centers, $2 billion for construction of military family housing, and $1.4 billion for military construction in Afghanistan.