Washington – Government Scraps Search For New FBI Headquarters

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    Exposed holes in the exterior concrete, from a time when the building was apparently to be clad in granite, at the J. Edgar Hoover Building, headquarters of the Federal Bureau Of Investigation (FBI), in Washington, DC, USA, 11 July 2017. After years of trying, federal officials are canceling plans to relocate FBI headquarters to the DC suburbs due to lack of federal funding, media reported.  EPA/JIM LO SCALZOWashington – The nation’s top law enforcement agency will continue operating out of its deteriorating downtown Washington headquarters for the foreseeable future after the federal government announced Tuesday it had scrapped a decade-long plan to look for a new building in Maryland or Virginia.

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    The General Services Administration, which oversees federal office space, said it does not have enough money to move forward on a new location. The Obama administration had sought $1.4 billion for the project, but Congress left it underfunded by about $882 million.

    “Moving forward without full funding puts the government at risk for cost escalations” and could reduce the value of the existing building, the GSA said in a statement. “The cancellation of the project does not lessen the need for a new FBI headquarters. GSA and FBI will continue to work together to address the space requirements of the FBI.”

    The hulking J. Edgar Hoover building overlooking Pennsylvania Avenue has long been the government building everyone loves to hate. The FBI has complained that the blocky, concrete behemoth — named for the agency’s first and longest-serving director — is obsolete, inefficient and no longer meets the needs of an organization that has grown dramatically in the last 40 years. Those concerns were confirmed by a 2011 Government Accountability Office report that agreed the building didn’t meet the agency’s long-term security needs.

    Despite the Hoover building’s unquestionable sentimental value, the FBI had been pushing to move thousands of employees spread among leased annexes in the region into a secure consolidated headquarters that would fit with an agency whose focus has evolved to intelligence and counterterrorism.

    Three finalist sites in Maryland and Virginia were announced in 2014, but the General Services Administration delayed its choice multiple times.

    Local and federal officials in Maryland, Virginia and Washington, D.C. had been intensely jockeying for the new facility, which would have been a massive economic development project with the potential to bring thousands of jobs, expand the tax base and boost area retail and service industries.

    Democratic lawmakers from Maryland decried the decision to scrap the move.

    “The Hoover Building is crumbling around the FBI,” Sens. Ben Cardin, Chris Van Hollen, and Reps. Steny Hoyer, and Antony Brown said in a statement. “Our national security mandates that we move forward with building a secure, fully consolidated FBI headquarters.”

    Emmett Jordan, mayor in Greenbelt, Maryland, the location of one of the possible sites, was holding out hope that the government would reconsider.

    “All these delays, all these years really have had a chilling effect,” he said. Jordan said Greenbelt could have moved on to other options had the city known sooner. “How’s local government supposed to function when the federal government can’t follow through on its commitment?” he said.

    But District of Columbia Councilmember Jack Evans said the proposed plans to relocate the headquarters have been unworkable for years.

    “I applaud the fact that somebody pulled the plug,” Evans said in a telephone conversation Monday evening.

    Evans said he sees no reason to send the headquarters outside of the city, which has other locations that could work.

    “I see no reason to ship it out to the outer regions,” Evans said of plans to move to Virginia or Maryland. “Nobody wants to go out there” he said of the proposed sites in those states.

    Hardly praised as architecture, the iconic Hoover building has become part of American culture, serving as the backdrop for news broadcasts, novels, television dramas and movies. Agents moved into it in 1974, from cramped quarters in the Justice Department across the street.

     

     


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    3 Comments
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    6 years ago

    I can empathize. When I worked in government, our department had no way to fit my division of ~200 people in one place, so we were divided ‘temporarily’ (ie. permanently) among five buildings, three in DC and two in a VA location with no mass transit option. People were always needing to travel from office to office, and wasted so much time.

    shimonyehuda
    shimonyehuda
    6 years ago

    the government needs the money to build the wall

    PaulinSaudi
    PaulinSaudi
    6 years ago

    It is a remarkably ugly building.