HR-762-116
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 208.
What it does
This bill would direct the Department of Energy's Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy to create and operate a clearinghouse — essentially a centralized information hub — that schools can use to find available programs, funding sources, and financing options for energy efficiency upgrades, on-site power generation, and building retrofits. The bill does not appropriate new funding for school energy projects themselves; it only establishes the information-sharing function.
Who benefits
K-12 public and private schools, particularly those in smaller or lower-resource districts that lack dedicated staff to research available energy programs. School administrators and facilities managers who would gain a single point of access to program information. State and local education agencies seeking to reduce operating costs. Energy efficiency contractors and distributed generation companies that may see increased demand as schools become more aware of available financing options.
Who is hurt
The bill imposes a new administrative function on the Department of Energy, which would bear staffing and operational costs to build and maintain the clearinghouse — potentially diverting resources from other existing programs. Competing private-sector information services or consulting firms that currently help schools navigate energy financing options could see reduced demand for their services.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that thousands of schools across the country waste significant money on energy costs simply because administrators do not know what federal, state, and utility programs are available to help fund efficiency upgrades. A centralized clearinghouse removes that information barrier at low cost to taxpayers, since it creates no new spending programs — it only organizes and distributes information that already exists. Lower energy bills would free up school budget dollars that could be redirected to instruction and student services. Supporters also contend that helping schools reduce energy consumption advances broader national goals around energy security and reduced emissions without mandating any specific technology or approach.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the federal government is not the appropriate entity to serve as an information broker for local school energy decisions, which are traditionally managed at the state and local level under the Tenth Amendment's reservation of education policy to the states. They contend that private-sector resources, state energy offices, and utility companies already provide this type of guidance, making a new federal clearinghouse duplicative and an unnecessary expansion of the Department of Energy's administrative footprint. Critics may also raise concerns that, while the bill does not directly fund energy projects, it could serve as a precursor to broader federal involvement in local school infrastructure decisions, and that the ongoing operational costs of maintaining an up-to-date clearinghouse are not clearly defined or capped.