Rising prices, labor shortages threaten infrastructure law implementation: DOT report
The U.S. Department of Transportation needs to recruit, develop and retain an expanded staff to […]
The U.S. Department of Transportation needs to recruit, develop and retain an expanded staff to oversee the implementation of $660 billion in funding for programs authorized under the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, while dealing with supply chain issues, rising prices and a shortage of the skilled labor required to build the many capital projects the IIJA will enable, according to the DOT’s inspector general, Eric Soskin, who issued this warning in a report to Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg on Oct. 5.
The transportation department is actively hiring to meet the demands of the infrastructure law, with a goal of adding 1,700 employees over the next five years. But state and local governments, which apply for and receive IIJA funds, “are facing historic shortages of workers with expertise in important areas, such as auditing, procurement, and acquisitions,” the report says.
Labor shortages extend to the construction industry, particularly in skilled trades. That could affect the ability of grant recipients to complete projects on time and on budget. A 2021 report issued by the National Infrastructure Advisory Council found that “the workforce development system in the United States lacks the coordination, data, and strategic human capital management necessary to ensure a skilled workforce for critical infrastructure.”
Inflation often results in changes to construction contracts to account for increasing costs, which can also affect the project schedule, the Office of the Inspector General’s report states. It concludes that “rising prices of critical construction materials will likely blunt the impact of IIJA investments.”
The report calls out the Federal Highway Administration and Federal Transit Administration as needing to review additions and revisions to statewide transportation improvement programs and local transportation improvement programs.
“As the Department is aware, the volume of IIJA funds, coupled with the creation of new programs and priorities, present a number of significant implementation and oversight challenges,” Soskin wrote in his memo to Buttigieg.
Chief among those challenges, the report says, is mitigating increased risks of fraud and waste. The IIJA requires that at least 10% of funds the DOT spends on surface transportation, transit and highway safety research and development go to disadvantaged business enterprises, which have sometimes been used as fronts for non-DBE businesses and pass-through schemes.
On a positive note, the OIG credits the DOT with acknowledging the risks and challenges its report identifies and for taking steps to meet the demands placed on it by the IIJA.
The report urges the DOT to strengthen its risk management, be creative and adaptable in dealing with stakeholders and maintain focus on continuous improvement of its processes.