Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 152— - ENERGY INDEPENDENCE AND SECURITY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - ENERGY SAVINGS IN BUILDINGS AND INDUSTRY › Part Part C— - High-Performance Federal Buildings › § 17092
Create an Office of Federal High-Performance Green Buildings inside the General Services Administration within 60 days after December 19, 2007, and hire a Federal Director in a Senior Executive Service job. The Director’s pay cannot be higher than the SES top rate. The Director must run the office and do the tasks in this law. The Director must work with the Commercial High-Performance Green Buildings office and with many agencies, including the Environmental Protection Agency, the Office of the Federal Environmental Executive, the Office of Federal Procurement Policy, the Department of Energy, the Department of Health and Human Services, the Department of Defense, the Department of Transportation, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, and the Office of Science and Technology Policy. The Director must set up a senior Advisory Committee, pick and update green building rating standards every 5 years, share research, make federal green building standards and lifecycle green practices, find ways to test new green technologies, and study budget and contracting barriers to life-cycle costing. Within 90 days after December 19, 2007, the Director must identify incentives like awards and ways for agencies to keep savings for future green projects. Within 2 years after December 19, 2007, and every two years after that, the Director must report to Congress on compliance, funding, rules that affect certification, legal inconsistencies, recommended uniform buying standards, budget changes to account for full energy and environmental costs, savings from green buildings (including health and productivity), emergency-ready green technologies, and state and local green building actions, and must include recommendations and plans the Office will carry out. The Director must also pick a green building certification system and base that choice on a five-year comparison, availability of auditors, public input, consensus-based rulemaking, industry recognition, and criteria that reward water and energy efficiency, renewables, better indoor environmental quality, and reduced transportation impacts.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 17092
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73