Related Links: House GOP Taking Immigration Bill 'Step by Step' (enr.com 7/16/2013) [subscription] Immigration Bill Focus Shifts to House After Senate Vote (ENR 7/8/2013 issue) [subscription] Construction contractor groups welcomed House Republicans' newly unveiled principles for developing immigration legislation—an important issue for construction companies and workers—but organized labor sharply criticized the GOP outline.The set of six principles, released on Jan. 30 at a House Republican retreat in Cambridge, Md., would allow children of illegal immigrants “an opportunity for legal residence and citizenship,” but make clear that the party would not include a “path to citizenship” for those who entered the
White House photo by Amanda Lucidon In his speech before a joint session of Congress, Obama also said he would issue a directive hiking minimum wage for federal construction contractors' workers. Related Links: Video of Obama State of the Union address (via White House) Federal Construction Minimum Wage Hike Impact May Be Small (enr.com blog 1/28/2014) House Chairman Shuster's statement/reaction In his State of the Union address, President Obama called on Congress to move rapidly this year on major infrastructure legislation and pledged to issue a directive to raise the minimum wage for employees of federal contractors in construction and
Related Links: Link to Cities' energy survey Information on President's State, Tribal and Local Leaders Task Force on Climate Change and Resilience City leaders who gathered in Washington, D.C., for the U.S. Conference of Mayors' annual winter meeting were decidedly upbeat about the economy and their ability to have a voice in shaping federal policies, including those dealing with energy, water infrastructure and climate change.Speaking to reporters on Jan. 22 at the opening of the three-day meeting, Mesa, Ariz., Mayor Scott Smith (R) said, “The tone of this conference is much different than the funeral wake we've experienced in the
Related Links: Dept. of Justice press release The Dept. of Justice has filed a lawsuit against Kellogg, Brown & Root Services and two Kuwait-based companies, charging that they filed false claims and engaged in kickbacks related to a U.S. Army contract in Iraq a decade ago.DOJ announced on Jan. 23 that it filed the complaint in U.S. District Court in Rock Island, Ill. The government alleged that in 2003 and 2004, Kellogg, Brown & Root (KBR) workers took kickbacks related to subcontracts that company had awarded to the two Kuwaiti firms—La Nouvelle General Trading & Contracting Co. and First Kuwaiti
Related Links: Judge Blocks California High Speed Rail Bond Sale (enr.com 12/3/2013) [subscription] California High-Speed Rail Moves Forward, Slowly (ENR 5/6/2013 issue) [subscription] A key financial deadline is looming for California's $68-billion high-speed-rail project. The California High-Speed Rail Authority is due to make a $63-million matching payment on April 1. But a 2013 Superior Court ruling has blocked the state, at least for now, from using its preferred source: selling bonds that voters approved in 2008's Proposition 1A. The state and federal government are sharing the project's cost.On Capitol Hill, House railroads subcommittee Chairman Jeff Denham (R-Calif.) introduced a bill
Related Links: Pew Charitable Trusts study Proposals Sought for Largest Ever Army Renewables Program A new study says the Dept. of Defense is well on its way to meeting its goal of an electric grid that uses more renewable and energy-efficient components.The report, which the Washington, D.C.-based Pew Charitable Trusts released on Jan. 15, found that DOD energy-efficiency projects more than doubled, to 1,339 in FY 2012 from 630 in FY 2010. Renewable-energy projects jumped 54%, to 700, in that same period.By the end of 2018, renewable-energy capacity on U.S. military bases could rise more than fivefold, to 2.1 GW,
Related Links: Text of spending bill and explanatory report, as introduced Bill summary from Senate Appropriations Committee A $1-trillion compromise spending package to fund federal agencies through Sept. 30 provides welcome increases over enacted 2013 levels for some construction programs but cuts others.The bill, which the appropriations committees' chairs—Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.) and Rep. Harold Rogers (R-Ky.)—released late on Jan. 13, won final congressional approval on Jan. 16 when the Senate passed it with a strong 72-26 vote. The House has approved the measure one day earlier, 359-67. The bill next goes to the White House for President Obama's expected
Related Links: No Deal Yet on New WRDA Bill (ENR 12/20/13 issue) [subscription] Congressional Budget Office testimony on Highway Trust Fund status (7/23/2013) A new highway-transit reauthorization bill and the first water-resources measure since 2007 lead the list of unfinished construction legislation as the 113th Congress begins its new session.By far, construction's top 2014 legislative priority is a successor to the 2012 Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act, or MAP-21, the current surface-transportation law. The statute expires on Sept. 30, putting public-works committees under severe time pressure to produce a new bill.House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Chairman
Googlemaps Three towns, Saluda (B), Tryon (A) and Columbus (C), are unhappy with water pressure in their multi-community system in the hills of North Carolina. Three small towns in the mountain country of North Carolina, not far from Asheville, say they are suffering from poor water pressure and they are blaming the engineering firm that designed the water delivery lines connecting the towns. The towns of Columbus and Tryon and the city of Saluda are suing Asheville, N.C.-based engineer Joel E. Wood and Associates, LLC.A judge recently transferred the lawsuit from state superior court in Polk, N.C. to federal court
Related Links: Jan. 13 oral argument transcript High Court to Hear Arguements in NLRB Appointments Case The U.S. Supreme Court Justices seemed to be skeptical of the Obama administration’s position during Jan. 13 oral arguments in a case centering on the president’s ability to make recess appointments to the National Labor Relations Board, courts, and other government offices.The case, NLRB v. Noel Canning, is significant for construction because it involves two appointments to the NLRB, the body that adjudicates labor cases important to construction firms and unions, that were invalidated as unconstitutional by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the