EO 12893 - Principles for Federal Infrastructure Investments

eo12893.pdf

National Survey on Recreation and the Environment

EO 12893 - Principles for Federal Infrastructure Investments

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Presidential Documents

Federal Register
Vol. 59, No. 20
Monday, January 31, 1994

Title 3—

Executive Order 12893 of January 26, 1994

The President

Principles for Federal Infrastructure Investments
A well-functioning infrastructure is vital to sustained economic growth,
to the quality of life in our communities, and to the protection of our
environment and natural resources. To develop and maintain its infrastructure facilities, our Nation relies heavily on investments by the Federal Government.
Our Nation will achieve the greatest benefits from its infrastructure facilities
if it invests wisely and continually improves the quality and performance
of its infrastructure programs. Therefore, by the authority vested in me
as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America,
it is hereby ordered as follows:
Section 1. Scope. The principles and plans referred to in this order shall
apply to Federal spending for infrastructure programs. For the purposes
of this order, Federal spending for infrastructure programs shall include
direct spending and grants for transportation, water resources, energy, and
environmental protection.
Sec. 2. Principles of Federal Infrastructure Investment.
Each executive department and agency with infrastructure responsibilities
(hereinafter referred to collectively as ‘‘agencies’’) shall develop and implement plans for infrastructure investment and management consistent with
the following principles:
(a) Systematic Analysis of Expected Benefits and Costs. Infrastructure investments shall be based on systematic analysis of expected benefits and
costs, including both quantitative and qualitative measures, in accordance
with the following:
(1) Benefits and costs should be quantified and monetized to the maximum extent practicable. All types of benefits and costs, both market and
nonmarket, should be considered. To the extent that environmental and
other nonmarket benefits and costs can be quantified, they shall be given
the same weight as quantifiable market benefits and costs.
(2) Benefits and costs should be measured and appropriately discounted
over the full life cycle of each project. Such analysis will enable informed
tradeoffs among capital outlays, operating and maintenance costs, and nonmonetary costs borne by the public.
(3) When the amount and timing of important benefits and costs are
uncertain, analyses shall recognize the uncertainty and address it through
appropriate quantitative and qualitative assessments.
(4) Analyses shall compare a comprehensive set of options that include,
among other things, managing demand, repairing facilities, and expanding
facilities.
(5) Analyses should consider not only quantifiable measures of benefits
and costs, but also qualitative measures reflecting values that are not readily
quantified.
(b) Efficient Management. Infrastructure shall be managed efficiently in
accordance with the following:
(1) The efficient use of infrastructure depends not only on physical
design features, but also on operational practices. To improve these practices,

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Federal Register / Vol. 59, No. 20 / Monday, January 31, 1994 / Presidential Documents
agencies should conduct periodic reviews of the operation and maintenance
of existing facilities.
(2) Agencies should use these reviews to consider a variety of management practices that can improve the return from infrastructure investments.
Examples include contracting practices that reward quality and innovation,
and design standards that incorporate new technologies and construction
techniques.
(3) Agencies also should use these reviews to identify the demand
for different levels of infrastructure services. Since efficient levels of service
can often best be achieved by properly pricing infrastructure, the Federal
Government—through its direct investments, grants, and regulations—should
promote consideration of market-based mechanisms for managing infrastructure.
(c) Private Sector Participation. Agencies shall seek private sector participation in infrastructure investment and management. Innovative public-private
initiatives can bring about greater private sector participation in the ownership, financing, construction, and operation of the infrastructure programs
referred to in section 1 of this order. Consistent with the public interest,
agencies should work with State and local entities to minimize legal and
regulatory barriers to private sector participation in the provision of infrastructure facilities and services.
(d) Encouragement of More Effective State and Local Programs. To promote
the efficient use of Federal infrastructure funds, agencies should encourage
the State and local recipients of Federal grants to implement planning and
information management systems that support the principles set forth in
section 2(a) through (c) of this order. In turn, the Federal Government
should use the information from the State and local recipients’ management
systems to conduct the system-level reviews of the Federal Government’s
infrastructure programs that are required by this order.
Sec. 3. Submission of Plans. Agencies shall submit initial plans to implement
these principles to the Director of the Office of Management and Budget
(‘‘OMB’’) by March 15, 1994. Agency plans shall list the actions that will
be taken to provide the data and analysis necessary for supporting infrastructure-related proposals in future budget submissions. Agency implementation
plans should be consistent with OMB Circular A–94 that outlines the analytical methods required under the principles set forth in section 2 of this
order.
Sec. 4. Application to Budget Submissions. Beginning with the fiscal year
1996 budget submission to OMB, each agency should use these principles
to justify major infrastructure investment and grant programs. Major programs
are defined as those programs with annual budgetary resources in excess
of $50 million.
Sec. 5. Application to Legislative Proposals. Beginning March 15, 1994,
agencies shall employ the principles set forth in section 2 of this order
and, at the request of OMB, shall provide supporting analyses when requesting OMB clearance for legislative proposals that would authorize or reauthorize infrastructure programs.
Sec. 6. Guidance. The Office of Management and Budget shall provide
guidance to the agencies on the implementation of this order.
Sec. 7. Judicial Review. This order is intended only to improve the internal
management of the executive branch and does not create any right or benefit,
substantive or procedural, enforceable by a party against the United States,

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Federal Register / Vol. 59, No. 20 / Monday, January 31, 1994 / Presidential Documents
its agencies or instrumentalities, its officers or employees, or any other
person.

œ–
THE WHITE HOUSE,
January 26, 1994.
[FR Citation 59 FR 4233]

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