Clean Water Advocacy - News Releases - March 20, 2007
For Immediate Release: March 20, 2007
Contact:
Susan Bruninga, Director of Public Affairs, (202) 833-3280
NACWA to Shed Light on Limits of Market-Based Approaches To Closing Clean Water Funding Gap
Ken Kirk, executive director of the National Association of Clean Water Agencies
(NACWA), will provide the views of municipal clean water agencies Friday, March
23, as part of a conference hosted by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) in Atlanta called Paying for Sustainable Water Infrastructure:
Innovations for the 21st Century. The conference will explore “creative
methods to pay for sustainable water infrastructure,” including EPA’s proposal
to raise the cap on private activity bonds to spur private investment in the
nation’s utilities. NACWA supports finding innovative ways to ensure clean water
for all Americans, and its members lead the way in these efforts every day. But
EPA’s privatization plans along with its promotion of innovation, new
technologies, and efficiency will not solve the single biggest crisis facing
America’s waterways — the infrastructure funding gap that EPA estimates at $300
- $500 billion. NACWA agrees with EPA’s overarching goal of sustainability, but
believes the proposals the Agency has developed to close the gap fall far short.
While cities welcome a diversity of tools to finance their infrastructure needs, EPA’s proposal to raise the state cap on private activity bonds is incapable of narrowing the gap in any meaningful way. The current cap on private activity bonds is not being met today in 49 out of 50 states. Furthermore, municipalities have experimented with privatization in the past and it generally hasn’t worked.
Economists note that an efficient public utility can outperform an efficient private utility because it does not need to produce profits and need not pay taxes on revenue generated. NACWA believes that a utility’s decision about whether to engage in a public-private partnership must be made locally and, perhaps more importantly, without federal pressure.
In short, the nation’s environment and public health are well-served through a public trust, as exemplified by 35 years of water quality progress enjoyed under the Clean Water Act.
So why has the Administration ramped up its focus on privatization? Because it no longer wants to fund these costly programs. The Administration continues to call for steep cuts in the clean water state revolving fund (CWSRF) and even threatened to veto recent legislation passed by the U.S. House of Representatives that would significantly boost funding for this popular and effective program. In a self-fulfilling prophecy, it may be that by cutting federal funding, cities will be under greater pressure to consider privatization as an option.
The federal government has taken a different approach for other key infrastructure sectors, such as highways and airports, where they have set up dedicated funding mechanisms to support them. If it’s good enough for them, why not for clean water?
NACWA represents the interests of the nation’s publicly owned wastewater treatment works, serving the majority of the sewered population in the United States, collectively treating and reclaiming over 18 billion gallons of wastewater every day.
1816 Jefferson Place, Washington, DC 20036-2505 202.833.2672 202.833.4657 FAX • www.nacwa.org