2 Minute Read
May 31, 2024
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Now that project funding is being doled out from 2021's Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, with bipartisan announcements of more investments taking place Wednesday in Kentucky, contractors across the country are beginning to see how the $1.2 trillion in funding will affect their local communities. The bill, commonly referred to as the Bipartisan Infrastucture Bill, allocated funding to more than 100 different programs directed by more than a dozen federal bodies.
Early in 2022, the White House released guidance for state and local governments to apply for infrastructure funding. (About half of the money will be released to the states with the other half granted by the federal government). Essentially, the plan is for project funding to be made available through state Implementation Coordinators, who will organize and support projects in their communities. Contractors will then have a period of time to apply for and bid on those projects.
White House guidance has showcased the full funding available for each project category (transportation, energy, broadband, etc.) and released 25 applications for state and local governments through the Department of Transportation, Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), Department of Energy, and other agencies. Most of these applications opened in the first or second quarter of 2022, and make up $65 billion in funding.
This year will mark the start of a years-long process in America's largest infrastructure investment in decades. Here are three considerations for contractors looking to enter the fray.
Now is the time for contractors seeking to bid on state, local, and federal infrastructure projects to take another look at their internal processes and the technology they utilize.
Despite a bevy of stringent government rules, regulations and demands attached to federal infrastructure and construction work, competition for these projects is expected to be fierce, as the ultimate profit opportunities tend to be well worth the squeeze.
But what does this mean for contractors seeking to win these bids? It means shoring up their own internal infrastructure through a digitized, connected construction management strategy, real-time, data-driven workflows, and ensuring the right data and cybersecurity protections are in place.
There will also be a need for on-demand reporting on job costs and work progress, prevailing wages and payroll, and health and safety tracking. Contractors also need to show commitments to the promotion of diversity, equity and inclusion across organizations and project teams, sustainable building practices, collective bargaining and more.
For instance, in order to reap the monetary benefits of the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, here are a few must-haves for contractors:
The biggest winners of these infrastructure projects are likely to be the contractors that have moved their construction management operations to the cloud and are using connected construction management software to achieve a single-source of real-time data and respective workflows. The benefit of modernizing operations, however, is not just limited to meeting government contract demands and requirements. Project owners across all construction disciplines are demanding more project insight, efficiencies and on-demand reporting and financial status updates.
Connected, cloud-based construction solutions are providing today’s contractors with faster access to this data—and the built-in analytic tools and seamless workflows necessary to make informed, real-time decisions. These solutions allow contractors to:
As technologies continue to advance, there will be more and more opportunities to utilize data to scale operations, allowing contractors to become agile and responsive to a constantly changing landscape. This means more productive, less expensive and more profitable projects.
To learn more about how your company can benefit from being more data-driven, connect with Trimble Viewpoint today!
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