U.S. President Joe Biden held an outdoor ceremony at the White House on Monday to sign the hard-won Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, otherwise known as infrastructure bill, joined by legislators and politicians from all over the United States who helped craft and promote the legislation.

Nathan Diament, executive director of Orthodox Union Advocacy Center, was there celebrating the inclusion of another part of the bill—a $50-million pilot program for nonprofit organizations to apply for a grant to reduce energy consumption and increase efficiency in their buildings.

What’s known as the Nonprofit Energy Efficiency Act would allow entities such as places of worship, day schools, museums and community centers, including the YMCA, to apply for up to $200,000 to upgrade their HVAC systems.

“According to the [Environmental Protection Agency], nonresidential buildings in the United States consume more than $200 billion annually in energy costs. Among those many buildings are this country’s 2,700 YMCAs, 2,900 nonprofit hospitals, 17,000 museums and more than 370,000 houses of worship,” Diament wrote in a column in Roll Call. “Looking just at the houses of worship–the EPA, based on its ‘Green Congregations’ project, estimates that these entities could cut their energy use–and costs–by one-third through energy efficiency improvements. If America’s houses of worship cut their energy use by just 10 percent, the EPA estimates that would save 1.8 billion kWh of electricity and 1.3 million tons of greenhouse gas emissions, equivalent to the emissions of 240,000 cars.”... Read More: JNS