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In reversal, senators advance FBI's planned move to Reagan building
In reversal, senators advance FBI's planned move to Reagan building

Washington Post

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Washington Post

In reversal, senators advance FBI's planned move to Reagan building

The FBI notched a victory Thursday in its quest for a new headquarters in downtown D.C., as a key Senate committee advanced the agency's request to pay for its relocation with cash set aside to build a suburban campus in Maryland. The proposal to move the FBI into the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center still has a long way to go, but Thursday's party-line vote in the Senate Appropriations Committee tore down a roadblock Democrats designed to stop it.

F.B.I. Moving Into Building That Housed U.S.A.I.D.
F.B.I. Moving Into Building That Housed U.S.A.I.D.

New York Times

time01-07-2025

  • Business
  • New York Times

F.B.I. Moving Into Building That Housed U.S.A.I.D.

The F.B.I. said on Monday that it would leave its crumbling headquarters and move into a nearby building vacated by the U.S. Agency for International Development, keeping the bureau in downtown Washington. The decision to decamp to the Ronald Reagan Building potentially ends years of jockeying by legislators to relocate the country's premier law enforcement agency — and possibly thousands of federal employees — to a suburban location in either Maryland or Virginia. The F.B.I. director, Kash Patel, hailed the cost savings of moving his agency's headquarters down the street after the White House proposed cutting the bureau's budget by about half a billion dollars, putting it on a spending level last seen in 2011. The announcement was short on details, including when the move would begin and the overall cost. 'We are ushering F.B.I. headquarters into a new era and providing our agents of justice a safer place to work,' Mr. Patel said in a statement. 'Moving to the Ronald Reagan Building is the most cost-effective and resource-efficient way to carry out our mission to protect the American people and uphold the Constitution.' Michael Peters, the public buildings service commissioner at the General Services Administration, which oversees federal real estate, said the repurposing of the U.S.A.I.D. headquarters would save billions of dollars on new construction and more than $300 million in deferred maintenance costs at the old F.B.I. building. As part of President Trump's efforts to overhaul the federal government, the global aid agency was gutted and its headquarters emptied earlier this year in a tumultuous series of events that dismantled an institution established more than a half century ago as a linchpin of U.S. foreign policy. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

FBI says it plans to move headquarters to different location in Washington
FBI says it plans to move headquarters to different location in Washington

Yahoo

time01-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

FBI says it plans to move headquarters to different location in Washington

WASHINGTON (AP) — The FBI announced Tuesday that it planned to move its Washington headquarters several blocks away from its current five-decade-old home. The bureau and the General Services Administration said the Ronald Reagan Building complex had been selected as the new location, the latest development in a yearslong back-and-forth over where the nation's premier federal law enforcement agency should have its headquarters. It was not immediately clear when such a move might take place or what sort of logistical hurdles might need to be cleared in order to accomplish it. FBI Director Kash Patel, who in his first months on the job has presided over a dramatic restructuring of the bureau that has included moving to relocate significant numbers of employees from Washington to Alabama, called the announcement 'a historic moment for the FBI." The decision represents a turnabout from plans announced during the Biden administration to move the FBI to a site in Greenbelt, Maryland. The suburban Washington location was selected over nearby Virginia following a sharp competition between the two states. The FBI's current Pennsylvania Avenue headquarters, the J. Edgar Hoover Building, was dedicated in 1975. Proponents of moving the headquarters have said the Brutalist-style building, where nets surround the facility to protect pedestrians from falling debris, has fallen into disrepair. Discussions have been underway for years to relocate it. The FBI and GSA said in a joint statement that moving the headquarters just a few blocks away to an existing property would avert the need to construct a brand-new building in suburban Washington, which they said would have taken years and been costly for taxpayers. 'FBI's existing headquarters at the Hoover building is a great example of a government building that has accumulated years of deferred maintenance, suffering from an aging water system to concrete falling off the structure,' GSA Acting Administrator Stephen Ehikian said in a statement. The Reagan Building houses, among other tenants, U.S. Customs and Border Protection. It also had been home to the U.S. Agency for International Development, which on Monday marked its last day as an independent agency.

FBI to Keep Headquarters in Washington as Lawmakers Protest
FBI to Keep Headquarters in Washington as Lawmakers Protest

Bloomberg

time01-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Bloomberg

FBI to Keep Headquarters in Washington as Lawmakers Protest

The Federal Bureau of Investigation plans to move its headquarters to the Ronald Reagan Building complex in Washington, scuttling Biden administration plans approved by Congress to move the agency to the Maryland suburbs. The new location for the headquarters is about three blocks from the agency's current location, keeping FBI leaders and key personnel near the Justice Department, White House and other federal agencies.

FBI announces move to new D.C. headquarters
FBI announces move to new D.C. headquarters

CBS News

time01-07-2025

  • Politics
  • CBS News

FBI announces move to new D.C. headquarters

The Federal Bureau of Investigation has selected a new headquarters building in Washington, D.C., after nearly two decades of failed attempts to find a permanent new space, the Bureau announced on Tuesday. The FBI has been headquartered in downtown D.C. at the J. Edgar Hoover building since 1975 but structural problems have plagued the building for the last 20 years, leading to redevelopment and relocation projects that until Thursday had not successfully been resolved. "This is a historic moment for the FBI," FBI Director Kash Patel said in a statement, adding he is "ushering FBI Headquarters into a new era and providing our agents of justice a safer place to work." The Bureau and the U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) selected the Ronald Reagan Building, blocks away from the Hoover building, as the new location. It was home to the U.S. Agency for International Development until this year, when the Trump administration consolidated USAID into the State Department and allowed Customs and Border Protection to take over the building's lease. "Moving to the Ronald Reagan Building is the most cost effective and resource efficient way to carry out our mission to protect the American people and uphold the Constitution," Patel continued. It is unclear when the FBI will begin its transition out of the Hoover building. In a March speech at the Justice Department, President Trump said his administration is "going to build another big FBI building right where it is, which would have been the right place, because the FBI and the DOJ have to be near each other." "They were going to build an FBI headquarters three hours away in Maryland, a liberal state," Mr. Trump said, adding that the state's political leadership had "no bearing" on his decision to cancel a previous Biden administration plan to move the headquarters to Maryland. During his first term, Mr. Trump abandoned a plan to move the FBI to one of three locations in Maryland or Virginia, instead proposing a smaller headquarters in Washington to replace the Hoover building. Under the Biden administration in 2023, the U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) chose a site in Greenbelt, Maryland, to serve as the new location for the FBI headquarters. The decision came after a 15-year debate on whether the headquarters should be relocated to Maryland or Virginia. In May, Patel told Congress his goal is to move about 10% of the Bureau's Washington workforce — about 1,500 people — away from the D.C. area and redeploy them across the country, including a sizable number of personnel at the FBI's facility in Huntsville, Alabama. In an interview with Fox News the same month, Patel called the Hoover building "unsafe for our workforce."

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