|
WIN News Release
 |
News
Release |
For Immediate Release:
February 4, 2002 |
Contact: Michael Arceneaux
202-331-2820 |
Water Infrastructure Budget Falls Short, Says
WIN
Washington, DC - The Water Infrastructure Network today
expressed serious concern about the Administration's fiscal year
2003 budget for drinking water and wastewater infrastructure
funding. For the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund, the
Administration proposed the same amount as last year - only $850
million. For the Clean Water State Revolving Fund, only $1.25
billion was proposed, which is $100 million less than fiscal year
2002. The drinking water SRF has yet to be budgeted at its
authorized level of $1 billion per year, and funding for the clean
water SRF has remained flat for several years.
According to the Water Infrastructure Network (WIN) - consisting
of nearly 40 organizations representing drinking water and
wastewater agencies, local elected officials, labor,
environmentalists and engineering and construction firms, the budget
proposal falls far short of infrastructure needs. Hearings last year
before the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works
documented a shortfall of up to $1 trillion in the needed level of
investment for meeting federal requirements and the repair and
replacement of aging infrastructure over the next twenty years.
Local governments and utility ratepayers currently shoulder over
90 percent of all spending on drinking water and wastewater
infrastructure. However, says WIN, they cannot fund all that is
needed in the next five years without significant federal
assistance.
Replacing aging treatment plants and pipes and meeting federal
requirements without federal assistance often requires diverting
scarce funds from other important local priorities, such as police
and fire protection. If the nation is committed to safe drinking
water and clean lakes and rivers, there must be a significant
financial commitment to assist local governments in meeting the
costs of clean and safe water.
WIN is asking Congress to commit $57 billion over the next five
years for investment in drinking water and wastewater
infrastructure. This is half the amount of the spending shortfall
documented by WIN over that period, and if fully funded, still
leaves the federal share of drinking water and wastewater funding at
less than 20 percent of total spending.
# # #
To see the nearly 40 organization that make up WIN, go to
www.win-water.org.
WIN is a broad-based coalition of local elected officials,
drinking water and wastewater service providers, state environmental
and health program administrators, labor, engineers and
environmentalists dedicated to preserving and protecting the health,
environmental and economic gains that America's drinking water and
wastewater infrastructure provides.
WATER INFRASTRUCTURE NETWORK
1816 Jefferson Place, Washington, DC 20036-2505
www.win-water.org -
202/833-2672 - 202/833-4657 FAX
|