Roundtable Weekly
Congress, Agencies Focus on Infrastructure and Federal Assets
May 22, 2026

Federal infrastructure policy was active on multiple fronts this week, as House policymakers advanced a major transportation package and the General Services Administration (GSA) led a multi-agency appeal for stronger funding authority to maintain the federal real estate portfolio.

Infrastructure

  • The House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee this week advanced the $580 billion BUILD America 250 Act by a 62-2 vote, marking an early step in the surface transportation reauthorization process ahead of the current law’s Sept. 30 expiration. (PoliticoPro, May 22)
  • The Senate is working on its own transportation bill, and Congress may need to extend current transportation programs beyond Sept. 30. (PoliticoPro, May 22)
  • House Natural Resources Chair Bruce Westerman (R-AR) praised the bill’s permitting provisions and said he hopes they will complement a broader permitting reform package he is negotiating with Democrats. (PoliticoPro, May 22)

Federal Real Estate Portfolio

  • GSA and 22 Cabinet departments and federal agencies urged congressional leaders this week to provide full access to the Federal Buildings Fund to support the preservation, repair, and management of the federal real estate portfolio. (GSA Press Release, May 21)
  • The agency also requested authority to raise its funding threshold from $3.96 million to $75 million, which it said would help strengthen its ability to manage federal real estate assets. (Letter, May 21)
  • GSA Administrator Edward C. Forst called the request “an overwhelming show of support” for giving the agency the resources needed to deliver results. (GSA Press Release, May 21)

Last week, President and CEO Jeffrey D. DeBoer joined Administrator Forst and JBG SMITH Chairman and CEO Matt Kelly in a Washington Times op-ed urging Congress to address the chronic underinvestment in the federal government’s real estate portfolio as the nation approaches its 250th anniversary. (Washington Times, May 13 | Roundtable Weekly, May 15)