Clean Water Advocacy - Newsroom - AMSA in the News
Water World
(c) 2004 Gale Group. All rights reserved.
Tuesday, June 1, 2004
ISSN: 1083-0723; Volume 20; Issue 6
GAO Offers EPA Advice on Water Asset
Management
(Washington Update)
Lorenzetti, Maureen
The General Accounting Office last month recommended that when it comes to
water infrastructure asset management, the US Environmental Protection Agency
needs to better coordinate its own activities so timely and relevant information
is available to utilities. GAO, an independent watchdog arm of Congress, called
on EPA to establish a web site that focused on asset management issues. EPA
generally agreed with GAO's recommendations.
EPA currently encourages water utilities to use established management
techniques to manage plant equipment and related property through the use of
educational materials, technical assistance, and research. GAO called EPA's
efforts a good first step but more coordination is needed, they said. EPA now
has no central repository to encourage information sharing within and across its
drinking water and wastewater program, for example. Water industry officials
meanwhile see a role for EPA in promoting asset management as a tool to help
utilities meet infrastructure-related regulatory requirements; they also noted
that establishing an EPA web site would be useful for disseminating asset
management information to utilities.
The US Congress is also considering legislation that would require water
utilities to develop detailed asset management plans.
House Subcommittee Considers Aging Infrastructure
The House Water Resources Subcommittee held a hearing April 28 on aging water
infrastructure. Groups such as the Association of Metropolitan Sewerage Agencies
(AMSA) called on lawmakers to provide increased wastewater funding to avoid a
future crisis. Lawmakers are now considering the possibility of more funding
through a 2005 budget resolution, but the measure has been slow moving; House
and Senate negotiators are now participating in a conference committee to
resolve differences between the two chambers. Utilities want Congress to support
a Senate resolution that would provide increased funding for the Clean Water
State Revolving Fund (SRF) and the Drinking Water SRF.
AMSA said that a broad-based coalition, that includes municipal, state,
environmental, labor and industry groups, wants conferees to authorize increased
funding for the Clean Water SRF to $3.2 billion and the Drinking Water SRF to $2
billion--a total increase of $3 billion over FY '04 levels.
"The $5.2 billion allocation for the SRFs is essential as it would help local
communities meet water quality standards, repair and replace aging plants and
decaying pipelines, protect public health, and ensure continued progress in
restoring the health of America's waterbodies," AMSA said.
The coalition maintains that the Senate's proposal will help close looming
infrastructure spending gaps, protect the environment and public health, and
create nearly 250,000 jobs--"more than triple" the House version, AMSA said.
At the same hearing, American Water Works Association officials told lawmakers
that increased federal investment and higher consumer rates will be required to
meet $250-300 billion in drinking water infrastructure needs during the next
three decades. AWWA Water Utility Council Chairman Howard Neukrug said America
needs "a new partnership for reinvesting in drinking water infrastructures."
He added: "AWWA remains committed to the principle of full cost recovery through
rates. However, AWWA does believe that due to concurrent needs for investment in
water and wastewater infrastructure, security projects, replacement of treatment
plants, new drinking water standards, and demographic changes, many utilities
will be very hard pressed to meet their capital needs without some form of
federal assistance."