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Greenwire
© 2004 E&E Publishing, LLC. All Rights Reserved
Friday, September 17, 2004
Air, Water & Climate
CLEAN WATER;
Broad Coalition Presses for More Infrastructure Funding
Marty Coyne, Greenwire senior reporter
Each state in the nation will lose millions of dollars for critical water
infrastructure projects unless the Senate next week rejects President Bush's
proposal to cut $500 million from the U.S. EPA's clean water loan program, which
finances wastewater treatment plant upgrades, according to a new report by
states, local governments, unions, environmentalists and engineers. The report
was released this week in anticipation of a Senate Appropriations Committee vote
next week on EPA's fiscal year 2005 spending bill. It follows a letter from 31
Republican and Democratic governors telling Senate leaders that the president's
proposed cuts to the loan program, known as the "state revolving fund" (SRF),
were unacceptable.
"Ultimately the success of the Clean Water Act demands that America maintain a
long-term, sustainable source of federal funding to meet the water
infrastructure needs of future generations," the report states. "However, if
Congress approves the administration's proposed cuts to the Clean Water SRF,
then future prospects for funding will likely wash away."
The report notes that the House Appropriations Committee "for the first time
ever" approved an SRF cut in July by passing Bush's proposal to reduce funding
for the program from $1.34 billion in fiscal year 2004 to $850 million in fiscal
year 2005.
With 45 percent of the nation's assessed waters not meeting EPA standards and
sewer overflows numbering between 23,000 and 75,000 a year, the needs for water
infrastructure upgrades are immense, according to the report. According to EPA
estimates, more than $388 billion will be needed over the next 15 years to
address the nation's clean water infrastructure problems. The Congressional
Budget Office, meanwhile, has estimated that $17 billion will be required in
each of the next 20 years for investment in water system upgrades.
The report notes that the SRF has accounted for $47 billion in low-interest
loans to wastewater treatment projects between 1998 and 2003, with a return on
investment estimated at $2.11 for every SRF dollar spent.
Essential wastewater projects in the SRF pipeline are detailed in the report,
which concludes that more than $100 million and thousands of jobs would be lost
in politically important states for the Senate under the Bush budget.
For example, Alaska, the home state of Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman
Ted Stevens (R), would lose $3.5 million and create 165 fewer jobs, according to
the report. Alaska has a total of 46 clean water SRF projects awaiting $52.2
million on the state's 2004 priority list for the program. West Virginia, home
of Sen. Robert Byrd (D), the top Democrat of the Appropriations Committee, would
lose $9.9 million and create 440 fewer jobs. The state has 80 projects,
including those Charleston and eight other cities, worth $368.5 million in the
SRF pipeline.
Senate VA-HUD Appropriations Subcommittee Chairman Kit Bond (R-Mo.), who has
urged the Senate leaders to restore the SRF to fiscal year 2004 levels, would
see his state lose up to $47.3 million and create 2,245 fewer jobs. Missouri has
46 SRF projects awaiting $240.3 million on its 2004 priority list, according to
the report. Meanwhile, Maryland -- the home state to Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D),
the top Democrat on Bond's subcommittee -- would lose as much as $18.2 million
and create 685 fewer jobs, the report claims. The state has 106 SRF projects
totaling $243.4 million on the state's 2004 priority list.
Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle's home state of South Dakota, which has 43
high priority SRF projects awaiting $33.3 million, would lose up to $3 million
and create 145 fewer jobs, according to the report. And Tennessee -- home to
Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R) and House Water Resources and Environment
Subcommittee Chairman John Duncan (R) -- would lose $8.5 million and create
about 400 fewer jobs in a state with 122 projects needing $455.7 million on the
SRF priority list.
Groups that produced the report include the Association of Metropolitan Sewerage
Agencies, the Association of State and Interstate Water Pollution Control
Administrators, the AFL-CIO, Service Employees International Union, the Sierra
Club and the Natural Resources Defense Council.
Meantime, the governors told Frist, Daschle, Stevens and Byrd in their letter
that the SRF program is "one of the most successful public works program in the
nation's history." Given the contribution that the program has made to cutting
pollution from sewers as well as urban and agricultural runoff, "now is not the
time to be cutting funding for this critical infrastructure program," the
governors wrote.
The chief executives called for a minimum SRF funding level of $1.35 billion and
urged more to avoid "putting many local clean water projects at serious risk."
Indiana Gov. Joseph Kernan (D) spearheaded the governors' lobbying effort, which
included prominent Republicans Arnold Schwarzenegger of California, George
Pataki of New York, Dirk Kempthorne of Idaho and Judy Martz of Montana.
The SRF lobbying effort by governors and various interest groups follows similar
efforts in June by a bipartisan group of 50 senators (E&E Daily, June 3).
A Bush-Cheney '04 campaign official said this week that although the president
has proposed an SRF cut for next year, he has articulated a longer commitment to
the program than members of Congress (Greenwire, Sept. 15).
The Senate Appropriations Committee is expected to vote on the EPA spending bill
Tuesday. While Stevens is considering funding the SRF above Bush's request, it
was unclear at press time whether all of the $500 million would be restored.
"We'll know next week," Bond said.