House Panel Grills Capitol Architect Over $2.6 Billion Backlog as Rayburn Faces Failure Risk
Updated
Updated · legis1.com · Jun 3
House Panel Grills Capitol Architect Over $2.6 Billion Backlog as Rayburn Faces Failure Risk
3 articles · Updated · legis1.com · Jun 3
Summary
$2.6 billion in deferred maintenance and warnings of possible “catastrophic system failure” in the Rayburn House Office Building are driving Wednesday’s House Administration Committee hearing with Architect Thomas Austin.
Austin is seeking about $1.6 billion for fiscal 2027—up 105% from enacted fiscal 2026 levels—with more than $600 million earmarked for line-item construction projects across the Capitol complex.
Rayburn, the largest House office building, houses hundreds of congressional offices and hearing rooms, making its aging mechanical, electrical and structural systems an immediate operational risk for the chamber.
The hearing also tests reforms after former Architect J. Brett Blanton was ousted; GAO found the agency violated the Antideficiency Act in vehicle purchases and use for his personal benefit.
Senate appropriators already signaled resistance to Austin’s long-term funding push, setting up a broader fight over how Congress justifies years of catch-up investment in its own deteriorating buildings.