WASHINGTON—Today, the Subcommittee on Delivering on Government Efficiency (DOGE) held a field hearing on “Federal Foreclosure: Reducing the Federal Real Estate Portfolio.” During the hearing, which took place at an underutilized federal building in Washington, D.C., subcommittee members exposed how the federal government is spending billions annually to furnish, operate, and maintain outdated and underutilized office buildings. Federal real property management has been on the Government Accountability Office (GAO) High-Risk List since 2003, since recent administrations have been unable or unwilling to unload unneeded federal real estate. Subcommittee members applauded the Trump Administration for bucking that trend by taking swift action to right-size the real estate footprint. Members pledged to work with the administration to ensure this momentum is sustained.
Key Takeaways:
The U.S. federal government has been an irresponsible landlord for decades, squandering tens of billions of taxpayer dollars on its real estate portfolio. Even when federal office space sat empty and unused during the Biden Administration, agencies spent billions on new office furniture.
President Trump and his administration are taking decisive action to end this egregious waste of taxpayer dollars and right-size the federal government’s real estate portfolio. The DOGE Subcommittee will work with this administration to ensure the federal government acts as a responsible steward of taxpayer-funded real estate.
Member Highlights:
DOGE Subcommittee Chairwoman Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) discussed with GAO’s expert witness how previous administrations failed to take action to dispose of underutilized federal real estate, and how President Trump and his administration are moving quickly to save taxpayer dollars.
Rep. Greene: “President Trump and DOGE ended almost 700 leases in just a few months. That’s unbelievable. Has any other administration acted so quickly to reduce the federal footprint?”
Mr. Marroni: “Not that I’m aware of.”
Rep. Greene also pointed out how the Biden Administration wasted billions on office furnishings during the COVID pandemic when federal offices sat empty.
Rep. Greene: “In 2021, the CDC spent almost a quarter million dollars on solar powered picnic tables. The CDC, at the time, was telling people to socially distance with masks and basically forcing a vaccine that many Americans didn’t want. So, what use would its employees have for this new picnic table that has quite the price tag?”
Mr. Hart: “It’s quite expensive, and the social distancing guidelines at the time suggest that they shouldn’t be seated at that table […] They’re quite close. There’s a close proximity of the seats.”
Rep. Greene: “Is $238,000 spent on solar powered picnic tables at the CDC appropriate? I think the American people think that’s disgusting.”
Rep. Pat Fallon (R-Texas) criticized the Biden Administration for lavish spending on new office furniture and asked the Democrats’ witness whether such expenditures were a good use of taxpayer dollars.
Rep. Fallon: “The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, as that Madam Chair pointed out, spent $230,000 on solar picnic tables. Is that a good use of government funds Mr. Kendall?”
Mr. Kendall: “I have no opinion. I don’t know.”
Rep. Brian Jack (R-Ga.) spoke with GAO’s expert witness about the underutilization of federal buildings and how the federal government could save money by reducing underutilized property.
Rep. Jack: “Could you walk us through GAO’s survey where 24 agencies were surveyed, and just how much underutilization is there?”
Mr. Marroni: “Well, in 2023 when we did that, there was significant underutilization of headquarters buildings. None of the agencies were using more than half of their office space in the D.C. area for headquarters, and about 17 to 24 were using less than quarter.”
Rep. Jack: “And in your assessment, how much taxpayer money could have been saved had the federal government begun right-sizing its property portfolio shortly after the pandemic shifts to telework became apparent?”
Mr. Marroni: “So certainly you get substantial savings. It’s about $8 billion a year on owned and leased office space.”
CLICK HERE to watch the hearing.