The American Institute of Architects (AIA) and more than 400 of its architect members attended meetings recently with their Members of Congress. As professionals and constituents, AIA members are advocating for two bipartisan pieces of legislation that benefit communities and their inhabitants.
Architects met with legislators to discuss the Democracy In Design Act (S.366), to ensure that communities across the country maintain a voice in the design of federal buildings consistent with their preferences, culture, topographies, and design traditions. Architects are also advocating for the Resilient AMERICA Act, which would make significant changes to the federal governmentโs ability to prepare communities for future natural disasters. The bill accomplishes this by increasing federal funding for pre-disaster mitigation through FEMAโs Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities (BRIC) program.
โImproving building and community resilience to future climate-related natural disasters is a key component of AIAโs goal,โ said AIA 2023 President Emily Grandstaff-Rice, FAIA. โAdditionally, it remains critically important that our country retain the flexibility to choose between a variety of design styles in our public buildings, not have those decisions dictated at the outset.
AIA Lobby Day (on February 15th) was one component of this yearโs AIA Leadership Summit. AIAโs Lobby Day provides architects with a platform to directly advocate in support of legislation impacting the profession.
Grandstaff-Rice added, โAs trained problem-solvers and natural facilitators, architects have the skills to help legislators develop policies that create more resilient, sustainable, and equitable communities.โ
Visit AIAโs website at www.aia.org to learn more.
Source: American Institute of Architects

