Following months of political debate over the nationâs infrastructure spending needs, with multiple bills in play, the Senate took a major step forward in August, passing the $1 trillion bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.
The billâwhich faces scrutiny by House members before it is sent to President Biden for signingâincludes $550 billion in new spending over five years for a range of initiatives related to bridges, roads, railways, even broadband Internet. Allocations include $110 billion for roads, bridges, and major projects; $66 billion for passenger and freight rail projects; $65 billion to expand high-speed Internet access; $25 billion for airports; $17 billion for port infrastructure; and $7.5 billion each for electric vehicles and zero- and low-emission buses and ferries.
When it comes to buildings-related investments, the bill is noticeably light on earmarks for initiatives in the commercial, institutional, and multifamily building sectors. It would set aside $500 million for energy upgrades in schools, but thatâs about it.
âThere is much more that Congress can do to improve our nationâs building stock,â wrote former House Rep. (DâMo.) Russell Carnahan in a recent editorial in the SmartCitiesDive newsletter. Carnahan, Co-founder of BuildingAction, a non-profit group that advocates for policies and investments aimed at improving the nationâs buildings, opined that infrastructure upgrades and building investments should go hand in hand. Buildings, he wrote, âserve the national interestâ and âimpact our quality of life in many of the same ways as other infrastructureâ does. And investment in building upgrades and new construction projectsâespecially energy-efficient buildingsâtends to outperform investment in other sectors when it comes to creating jobs, according to BuildingAction analysis.
In late May, a collective of 21 AEC industry organizations, including ABC, ACEC, AIA, ASHRAE, BOMA, and USGBC, co-signed a letter to Congress pushing for funding in the infrastructure bill aimed at enhancing the resilience of the nationâs buildings. Citing nearly 4,000 deaths and some $550 billion in damage from weather- and climate-related events between 2014 and 2019, the group claims that âwith new investments to support forward-thinking planning, design, and construction, the building industry can be a leader in saving lives and reducing costs.â
Regardless, unless the Senateâs infrastructure bill sees a major shake-up in the House, or a second heftier spending bill makes its way through Congress, the AEC industry will have to wait for the next major infrastructure spending initiative to state its "buildings as infrastructure" case.
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