construction funding Archives - 鶹 /tag/construction-funding/ Design - Construction - Operations Mon, 02 Mar 2026 16:38:08 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/uploads/2026/01/cropped-SCN_favicon-32x32.png construction funding Archives - 鶹 /tag/construction-funding/ 32 32 Maine Commission Calls for School Construction Reforms as Districts Face Rising Costs, Yearslong Waits /2026/03/02/maine-commission-calls-for-school-construction-reforms-as-districts-face-rising-costs-yearslong-waits/ /2026/03/02/maine-commission-calls-for-school-construction-reforms-as-districts-face-rising-costs-yearslong-waits/#respond Mon, 02 Mar 2026 16:38:08 +0000 /?p=54754 Maine’s Governor’s Commission on School Construction is calling for a broad overhaul of the state’s school construction pipeline, arguing that the current approach cannot keep pace with aging buildings, rising costs and long waitlists for state support.

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Gov. Janet Mills signed an Executive Order in October 2024 establishing a commission to conduct a comprehensive review of school construction and renovation financing in Maine. | Photo Credit: Maine Office of the Governor

What You Need to Know

  • Maine’s Governor’s Commission on School Construction is urging changes to how projects are planned, prioritized and funded, citing rising costs and a growing backlog.
  • The commission estimates the state may needroughly$11 billionover 20 yearsto repair or replace aging school buildings; Maine hasnearly600public schoolswith an average building age of54 years.
  • Recommendations include addressing deferred maintenance earlier, using prototype designs, building a statewide facilities master plan and reducing red tape that can extend project timelines.
  • The report also recommends creating a quasi-independentIntergovernmental Office of School Infrastructureand calls for a short-term working group to draft legislation andimplementationdetails.

Learn More

AUGUSTA, Maine — Maine’s Governor’s Commission on School Construction is calling for a broad overhaul of the state’s school construction pipeline, arguing that the current approach cannot keep pace with aging buildings, rising costs and long waitlists for state support.

The commission’s final report lays out a long-term roadmap for planning,fundingand delivering capital projects statewide — while local districts such as RSU 23 in Old Orchard Beach point to immediate building-system and accessibility issues as they wait for upgrades.

According to reporting by WGME/CBS13’s I-Team and a follow-up summary by Construction Owners Club, the commission estimates Maine could needroughly$11 billionover the next 20 years to repair or replace hundreds of aging school buildings. The sources note Maine hasnearly 600public schools and an average building age of 54 years.

The impact is visible in districts already queued for stateassistance. RSU 23 is seeking to replace Loranger Memorial School, described as a 90-year-old facility whose infrastructure and learning spaces no longer meet modern expectations. The district is currently at the front of the line for state funding, but Loranger’s placement on the priority list underscores how demand is outpacing available bond capacity.

Commission Chair Valerie Landry said the scale of need requires a shift in strategy, with the report organizing its recommendations around four goals: reducing construction costs, maximizing existing resources, diversifying and increasing funding, and using data more strategically.

The commission recommends addressing deferred maintenance earlier to avoid costlier replacements later, encouraging school consolidation where it makes sense, developing prototype or model school designs to reduce upfront design costs, and creating a statewide facilities master plan to guide long-term investment.

Process reform is also a central theme. The report calls for reducing the layers of requirements districts must navigate after a project is approved—such as permitting, engineering studies, designrequirementsand acquisitions—because those steps can stretch schedules for years and delay when students and staff see a new or renovated building.

Even if the state streamlines the process, the commission cautions that financingremainsthe key constraint. The report discusses options such as raising the bond cap, capturing unused debt-service capacity for maintenance projects, exploring dedicated revenuestreamsand examining public-private partnership models used in other states.

One of the commission’s most significant recommendations is creating a small, quasi-independent Intergovernmental Office of School Infrastructure to coordinate planning, dataanalysisand funding strategies across state and local government. The commission notesestablishingthe office would require legislative approval andurgesstate leaders to form a short-term working group to draft legislation andimplementationdetails.

This article is based on reporting originally published by WGME/CBS13 I-Team on Feb. 26, 2026, and a related summary published by Construction Owners Club on March 2, 2026.

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Bicameral Bill Would Direct $130 Billion to K-12 Facility Upgrades, Revive Key Bond Programs /2026/02/09/bicameral-bill-would-direct-130-billion-to-k-12-facility-upgrades-revive-key-bond-programs/ /2026/02/09/bicameral-bill-would-direct-130-billion-to-k-12-facility-upgrades-revive-key-bond-programs/#respond Mon, 09 Feb 2026 15:29:12 +0000 /?p=54678 A bicameral proposal would send$130 billionin federal support to help school districts address long-deferred facility upgrades, combining state formula grants with revived bond authority intended to expand access to capital in lower-income communities.

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The Rebuild America’s Schools Act has been introduced four times since 2019, but has not advanced to final passage. | Photo Credit: Courtesy of McCarthy

What You Need to Know

  • Lawmakers reintroduced the Rebuild America’s Schools Act, proposing $130 billion for K-12 facility upgrades.
  • $100 billion would flow through state formula grants, with 95% passed through to districts based on need-related criteria.
  • $30 billion would restore qualified school infrastructure bonds and qualified zone academy bonds, with allocations planned from 2027–2029.
  • The bill would also require states to build publicly searchable databases tracking school facility conditions.

LearnMore

A bicameral proposal would send$130 billionin federal support to help school districts address long-deferred facility upgrades, combining state formula grants with revived bond authority intended to expand access to capital in lower-income communities.

The Rebuild America’s Schools Act has been introduced four times since 2019, but has not advanced to final passage, according to.

Under the latest version, $100 billion would be distributed through formula grants to states. Of that amount, 95% would be directed to districts using criteria that include local child poverty levels, fiscal limitations on raising funds and the severity of facility needs.

Anadditional$30 billionwould be provided as bond authority for two programs — qualified school infrastructure bonds and qualified zone academy bonds — which were eliminated under the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. The bill would spread the bond authority in$10 billionincrements each year from 2027 through 2029.

Supporters argue restoring qualified zone academy bonds could be particularly significant for communities with limited tax bases, where bond referenda can be harder to pass. The bill would reduce matching requirements and add flexibilityoneligible uses, according to the article.

Facilities funding disparities have also triggered constitutional challenges in multiple states. Facilities Dive noted lawsuits filed last year in California and Arizona alleging that reliance on local district funding for building upkeep and modernization creates inequities; Arizona’s system was ruled unconstitutional, while California’s caseremainspending.

To improve visibility into facility conditions, the measure would require each state to develop a database documenting school infrastructure. “An online, publicly searchable database [should provide] an inventory of the infrastructure of allpublic schoolfacilities in the state,” according to an article from.

Even with broad coalition support, near-term prospects for the bill appear uncertain. The article said Congress had just passed its FY 2026consolidatedappropriations package,leavingno immediate legislative vehicle, and noted the Trump administration is unlikely to back the proposal.

Advocates say the investment would address a major backlog. “We are hopeful that the federal government recognizes that this investment would provide a much-needed solution to a glaring problem,” according to an article from.

This article is based on reporting originally published byon Feb. 6, 2026.

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