Building of new courthouse to start by Labor Day
$130 million Niagara Square facility is expected to be completed in 2010
By JERRY ZREMSKI
News Washington Bureau Chief
3/1/2007
Construction of Buffalo's new $130 million federal courthouse will begin by Labor Day and be completed in 2010, Rep. Brian Higgins said Wednesday.
Higgins, D-Buffalo, said officials of the General Services Administration which builds federal facilities informed the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee of the agency's plans.
"This is great for Buffalo, and it's been a long time coming," said Higgins, a member of the committee.
The ultramodern courthouse, to be built on Niagara Square, will be the largest construction project in the heart of downtown Buffalo in several years.
U.S. District Judge William M. Skretny, who had been leading the judiciary's effort to get the new courthouse built, termed the news about the construction "absolutely fabulous."
"We really could not have hoped for anything more," Skretny added.
Higgins' announcement came a day before the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee is scheduled to give the project its last required rubber stamp.
The committee will direct the GSA to spend $120 million on the project. More than $10 million has already been spent to clear the site and design the new facility.
Planning for the new courthouse began in 1996. The courthouse has been the federal judiciary's top priority project for four years, but construction had been delayed because of a rent dispute between the judiciary and the GSA.
That dispute dissipated in recent months, and Skretny and his colleagues started seeing positive signs about the courthouse construction.
First, earlier this year, Congress approved a spending measure for the rest of fiscal 2007 that included $280.87 million in courthouse construction money.
The GSA refused to say, however, whether all or part of that money would be used on the Buffalo project.
Then President Bush, who left the courthouse out of his original budget proposal for 2007, included more than $40 million for the project in his spending plan for 2008.
Nevertheless, both Skretny and local members of Congress had said one key question remained unanswered: whether courthouse construction would begin this year or next.
Higgins said he got the answer to that question from GSA staffers, who spoke to committee staffers about the matter Wednesday.
He said the construction would begin no later than Labor Day and take 33 months to complete.
When the building is done, downtown Buffalo will have a courthouse that's designed to be an architectural marvel.
More importantly, Higgins said, the facility will be an economic development tool for the city.
"To the nation, this is just another courthouse," he said. "But for Buffalo, it creates a state-of-the-art building on a very important site that should stimulate investment around that site."
Meanwhile, Rep. Thomas M. Reynolds, R-Clarence, said: "We are finally getting closer to getting the funding we need for a courthouse thanks to hard work of the entire delegation. Soon GSA will issue a final ruling, and that judgment will mean a new courthouse and source of pride for our great city."
Skretny agreed that the entire congressional delegation, including Rep. Louise M. Slaughter, D-Fairport, and Sens. Charles E. Schumer and Hillary Rodham Clinton, deserved credit for the courthouse funding.
"I'm really grateful to everyone who's stayed with this project as long as they have," Skretny said. "If ever there was a team effort, this was it."
Local federal judges have long contended that they needed a new courthouse that provides more space and security. The city's current federal courthouse will continue to be used for judicial offices.
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