Related Links: Energy and Commerce Committee press release on Natural Gas Pipeline Permitting Act House Energy Committee Fact Sheet on the Legislation The House has passed legislation to accelerate federal approval of permits for natural-gas pipeline projects. However, the Senate is unlikely to clear the measure.The bill, approved 252-165 on Nov. 21, would give the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission 12 months to approve or deny projects.Although 26 House Democrats voted for the measure, it appears to be dead on arrival in the Senate. Further, President Obama has threatened a veto.The bill's supporters, including its chief sponsor, Rep. Mike Pompeo (R-Kan.),
Photo Courtesy of U.S. Senate Photo Studio Boxer (center) is the lead Senate WRDA negotiator; Shuster (left) heads the House's negotiations. Related Links: Water-Resources Bill Heads for House-Senate Conference Webcast of Nov. 20 meeting of House and Senate conferees Negotiations to work out a new Water Resources Development Act have formally begun, with an upbeat first meeting of a House-Senate conference committee on Nov. 20. Now, the work moves behind the scenes as lawmakers and aides try to resolve differences between the bills each chamber passed by wide margins earlier this year. At stake are $8 billion or more in
Related Links: Sen. Reid's remarks on changing the Senate Rules The Democrat-controlled Senate voted 52-48 on Nov. 21 to cut the number of votes needed to confirm presidential nominees to agencies and judgeships to 51 from 60; the vote alters a long-standing rule.Senate Democrats said the change will ease the gridlock that has stalled nominees. But Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.) says, if the GOP gains the Senate majority in the future, the move may backfire on Democrats.
Related Links: OBO Director Lydia Muniz statement State Dept. Embassy Program Moves Design Excellence Program Into New Phase (enr.com 4/24/2011) The State Dept. closed out fiscal year 2013 with a flurry of large embassy construction contract awards in September—the fiscal year’s last month—including new construction and major renovations totaling $618.3 million in Europe, Africa, South America and New Zealand.For all of FY 2013, which ended on Sept. 30, the department’s Bureau of Overseas Buildings Operations (OBO) awarded $646 million in construction and renovation contracts, plus another $102.8 million in task orders.In September, Caddell Construction Co., Montgomery, Ala., won three embassy
Map by Shem Oirer/ENR Art Department Tanzania's planned 480-kilometer highway project includes a 53-km section cutting through Serengeti National Park. Related Links: Tanzania Drives On With Planned Road Through Serengeti Park Serengeti Road Project Halted for Wildlife Study A recent court ruling clearing the way for a legal challenge to Tanzania's delayed plans for a 53-kilometer road across the world-famous Serengeti National Park has endangered the proposed project's construction.The regional East Africa Court of Justice (EACJ) ruled, in August, that because the Serengeti National Park is located within both Tanzania and Kenya, the court has the jurisdiction to hear the
Related Links: Transcript of oral arguments in Unite Here Local 355 v. Mulhall Link to briefs in case During oral arguments on Nov. 14 in one of the most important labor cases before the U.S. Supreme Court this term, the justices seemed skeptical about the claim that employers' “neutrality” agreements with unions violate federal labor law.The case, Unite Here Local 355 v. Mulhall, centers on whether an employer's agreement to remain neutral during a union organizing campaign is legal under the Labor Management Relations Act (LMRA). Neutrality agreements are widely used in the service and hospitality industries and sometimes in
Related Links: ACEEE analysis of Shaheen-Portman bill's impact Senators Optimistic About Prospects for Energy-Effiency Bill Construction officials were optimistic this spring, when a Senate committee approved an energy-efficiency bill with features deemed favorable to the industry. However, the measure may not make it to the Senate floor for a full vote by the end of the calendar year, observers say.For one thing, time is limited. The Senate is scheduled to be in session for only about a dozen days before the end of December. "I think it will fall into next year," says Steven Nadel, executive director of the American
Related Links: ICCB settlement agreement with Justice Dept. US DOJ press release on settlement (11/7/2013) Ex-Corps Engineer Sentenced for Iraq Contract Bribe Plan (enr.com 3/13/13) In the latest development in a lengthy federal contracting probe, an Iraqi construction company has paid the U.S. government $2.7 million to resolve allegations that it bribed a former Army Corps of Engineers official to win U.S. contracts in Iraq, the Dept. of Justice has said.DOJ announced on Nov. 7 that Iraqi Consultants and Construction Bureau (ICCB), headquartered in Baghdad, had reached the settlement of alleged violations of the False Claims Act.The department also noted
Related Links: Nov. 1 Executive Order on Climate Change Panel Climate Change Plan Offers Opportunities for Innovation President Obama has issued a directive that establishes a task force comprising state, local and tribal leaders to recommend ways to address the impact of climate change. One goal is to make infrastructure more resilient.In a Nov. 1 executive order, Obama said the 26-member panel, whose members include California Gov. Jerry Brown (D) and Carmel, Ind., Mayor James Brainard (R), would advise the administration on reducing barriers to fund resilient infrastructure, modernizing federal grants to support local efforts and developing data and other
Related Links: U.S. District Judge Reggie Walton's Oct. 29 Memorandum American Coal Ash Association's Coal Ash Facts A federal judge has given the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency 60 days to set a date for finalizing a coal-ash regulation. In an Oct. 29 memorandum, Reggie Walton, a district judge for the District of Columbia, said EPA must submit a proposal to the court for setting a release date for the controversial rule. The EPA proposed the regulation in 2010.Environmental groups have argued that coal ash should be designated a hazardous waste under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA). But construction