The Biden Administration’s proposed infrastructure spending plan is a rare chance for most school districts to make their buildings greener and cheaper to operate.
This is a ‘once in a lifetime opportunity’ to make major upgrades to public school facilities, according to an engineer specializing in green buildings. For example, an estimated 36,000 schools have ventilation systems in need of upgrades. Many of these systems use technology invented and designed in the 1970s, and they are far less than ideal from health and wellness perspectives. They also do not support aggressive carbon reduction and energy-efficiency goals.
The COVID-19 pandemic prompted a closer look at the physical condition of America’s classrooms. It may prompt the federal government to address the shortcomings.
The U.S. House of Representatives is considering the Reopen and Rebuild America’s Schools Act, which would make $130 billion in federal money available to schools in need of repair over the next decade. The lead sponsor says funding is badly needed because without it, school districts would be largely on their own to build and renovate buildings.
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Local hiring requirement a tough challenge for new Detroit arena project
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| Jul 16, 2014
Local hiring requirement a tough challenge for new Detroit arena project
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| Jul 16, 2014
Massive $6.5 billion Silicon Valley development gets key city approval
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| Jul 11, 2014
California Supreme Court rules that architects can be sued by condo association
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| Jul 10, 2014
Latest construction accident fatality statistics reverse trend of declining deaths
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| Jul 10, 2014
EPA seeking public comments on site contamination rules
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| Jul 10, 2014
Southern California city considers new water fee for developers
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| Jul 1, 2014
$1 billion master planned development in California clears key hurdle
Plans for a new section of the proposed $1 billion La Entrada master-planned community in Coachella, Calif., moved ahead after the developer and city council agreed that the plan would include 500 affordable housing units.