
Real Estate Roundtable (RER) President and CEO Jeffrey D. DeBoer joined General Services (GSA) Administrator Edward C. Forst and JBG SMITH Chairman and CEO Matt Kelly in a Washington Times op-ed this week, urging Congress to address chronic underinvestment in the federal government’s real estate portfolio as the nation approaches its 250th anniversary. (Washington Times, May 13)
Federal Building Backlog
- The op-ed warns that the federal government is “depriving one of its largest real estate portfolios of investment,” eroding asset value and driving up long-term costs for taxpayers. (Washington Times, May 13)
- The authors note that federally owned buildings are deteriorating because GSA lacks timely access to resources for basic upkeep, even as agencies pay rent into the Federal Buildings Fund. (Washington Times, May 13)
- Administrator Forst reinforced that message during a May 13 Senate Appropriations hearing on GSA’s FY2027 budget request, urging Congress to give GSA full annual access to the fund, stop redirecting it to non-GSA programs, and raise the prospectus threshold for routine repairs. (Senate Appropriations Subcommittee Hearing, May 13)
- Administrator Forst testified that Congress has diverted $15.6 billion from the Federal Buildings Fund since 2011, while GSA’s repair backlog has increased by 408% to roughly $50 billion, leaving nearly half of its inventory in “fair” or “poor” condition. (Forst Testimony, May 13 | Legis1, May 7)
Why It Matters

- The op-ed contrasts private-sector real estate management with a federal process that can take more than 400 days just to approve routine repairs—nearly as long as it took to build the Empire State Building. (Washington Times, May 13)
- “Delayed spending is value destruction,” the authors write. “In the federal system, delays are built into the process.” (Washington Times, May 13)
The op-ed urges Congress to align resources, incentives, and execution authority so GSA can preserve asset value, support federal workers, and protect historic public buildings.