GSA Sounds Alarm on Maintenance of Federal Facilities

Maintenance liabilities in federal facilities are growing by $2.6 billion per year, says commissioner of GSA’ Public Buildings Service.   July 6, 2022


By Dan Hounsell, Senior Editor


Stop me if you’ve heard this one before: A large group of facilities faces a looming crisis unless it receives an influx of new funding to perform a growing backlog of critical repairs and maintenance. 

K-12 schools, higher education facilities and state and local government buildings have regularly faced such circumstances in the last few decades. In the latest case, federal facilities are sounding the alarm. 

The commissioner of the U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) Public Buildings Service (PBS) recently underscored the importance of properly maintaining federal facilities for: the safety of the public and federal employees; the financial risks to the government by not addressing mounting deferred maintenance; and the savings to taxpayers by proactively addressing these issues. 

Nina Albert, the PBS commissioner, made the statements in testimony to the House Transportation and Infrastructure Subcommittee on Economic Development, Public Buildings, and Emergency Management. 

"The opportunity is here to work together to achieve better outcomes while saving taxpayers money," Albert says. "By providing full access to the Federal Buildings Fund, GSA can consolidate agencies into federally-owned facilities where possible to avoid lease costs, reduce facility vulnerabilities due to extreme weather events, and modernize our spaces to meet the evolving needs of agencies and visitors alike." 

Albert says without full access to the Federal Buildings Fund, public buildings will continue to suffer from the consequences of deferred maintenance. Liabilities are growing by $2.6 billion per year, and this is likely to compound further the longer GSA is not able to address critical repairs. 

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