Clear, evidence-based examinations of how major public projects are planned, funded, and delivered.
GovLegis analyses examine how public projects are planned, funded, and delivered, and whether results match stated commitments. Findings are based on publicly available records and presented without advocacy or political framing.
What you’ll find here
GovLegis publishes two types of analysis examining major public projects using primary source documents and consistent evaluation methods.
Foundational analyses explain how public projects are typically planned, funded, approved, and delivered. These pieces clarify how common terms are used, what public records usually reveal, and where uncertainty often remains. They are intended to provide context for interpreting public announcements and disclosures.
Applied analyses examine specific projects, announcements, or developments as they occur. These analyses assess what has been formally approved, what assumptions are embedded in public statements, and how available records align with stated commitments at that point in time.
Across both types of work, GovLegis focuses on what is documented and verifiable. Where information is incomplete, unresolved, or uncertain, those limits are stated explicitly.
GovLegis does not advocate for policy outcomes or project positions. Its analyses are intended to support informed public understanding through transparent, nonpartisan examination.
Featured analyses
Selected analyses that illustrate GovLegis’ approach and methodology.