Record-High Funding for Preservation in Omnibus Bill

Congress is on the verge of passing the Fiscal Year 2022 omnibus appropriations bill, which contains record-high funding levels for historic preservation programs. For the first time ever, the money allocated to the Historic Preservation Fund (HPF) will exceed its $150 million authorized level.

The omnibus includes $173.072 million for the HPF. Within the HPF total, the bill provides:

  • $57.675 million for State Historic Preservation Officers
  • $16 million for Tribal Historic Preservation Officers
  • $26.5 for Save America’s Treasures
  • $21.75 million to preserve sites associated with African American civil rights movement
  • $15.272 in Congressionally-directed spending to specific preservation projects
  • $10 million for preservation work at Historically Black Colleges and Universities
  • $10 million for the United States Semiquincentennial Grants
  • $10 million for competitive grants for the restoration of properties of national, state, and local significance
  • $1.25 million for sites associated with the history of the equal rights movement.

The U.S. House of Representatives approved the legislation on Wednesday night. Federal funding was set to expire on Friday, so the House also passed a temporary measure to fund the government until Tuesday. That temporary solution provides enough time for the U.S. Senate to vote on the omnibus bill without risking a government shutdown this weekend. After the Senate passes the bill, it will go to the president for his signature.