September-October 2009

It's Raining Money

Recover-Act funding rules may signal a longer-range policy to underwrite water efficiency.

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By David Engle

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”Shovel-ready” water projects, numbering in the hundreds, are getting underway all at once, thanks to Congress and a newly arrived Obama administration eager to shovel fiat money their way.

Upon being signed into law last February, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) began pumping billions into clean and drinking water infrastructure improvements: $4 billion via the longstanding Clean Water State Revolving Fund (CWSRF) program, and $2 billion for the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund (DWSRF) complement. Together, they pay for water, wastewater treatment, watershed estuary, and nonpoint source pollution cleanup control, and now—besides serving these worthy purposes—they’ve been ramped up and prioritized to help get people back to work and jumpstart a sagging economy.

To put this year’s $6 billion in perspective: In 2008, the CWSRF programs funded more than $5.8 billion in loans; and, over for the previous 20 years, C/D WSRF totaled $68 billion. Comparing ARRA to the multi-trillion-plus that was funneled into financial bailouts, $6 billion is a trickle—but it’s still a lot of money to spend on water, and in a hurry.

Within weeks of the ARRA’s passage, EPA was already calculating the magnitude of money to be made available state-by-state; as of late May, a total of 30 states had submitted applications, and EPA had obligated itself to over $1.4 billion of the total, a statement from EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson reported.

A few examples—and these are just the first wave: Vermont, $194,000; Delaware $19.5 million; Nevada, $38.9 million; Arizona, $82 million; Kansas City, MO, $28.7 million; Massachusetts, $1.34 million; New Hampshire, $395,000; Indiana $120 million; Kansas, $19.5 million; and Iowa, $53 million.

Not to be left out, several other federal agencies also opened the money spigots for water this year:

  • In March, the Army Corps of Engineers began publishing lists of new lake, dam, river, channel, creek, and flood control projects to be funded. Corps engineers maintain that “Recovery Act projects will create or maintain approximately 26,000 direct and indirect jobs per billion spent,” notes a prepared statement.
  • In late May, the US Department of the Interior announced the availability of a $1-billion fund.
  • EPA announced $39 million for Water Quality Management Planning (WQMP) grants to support standard-setting, water quality monitoring, river pollution cleanup plans, and clean water protection plans.
  • In late spring, the US Department of Agriculture Rural Development Water and Waste Disposal loan and grant program earmarked $3.7 billion for rural water and wastewater infrastructure for communities of 10,000 or less.
  • In April, the Bureau of Reclamation issued a new funding opportunity for cost-shared water projects in the western states.
Photo: George Kunkel
Although 20% of any ARRA-funded project must have a “green” focus, basic infrastructure improvements will also benefit from additional funding.

Besides the scale and urgency, what’s unprecedented in this funding wave, notes EPA’s Eric Byous, of the Region Nine office in San Francisco, CA, is that much of this money is free. In prior years, State Revolving Funds (SRFs) came as repayable loans, “but the big change with the Recovery Act,” he says, “is that 50% is being given in the form of a subsidy of some sort—[essentially] a grant that does not require repayment,” called a “forgivable loan”—and the balance is typically repaid at zero or very low interest.

Byous—manager of the regional infrastructure office in the water division—is involved in reviewing applications that will be chasing $600 million—about one-tenth of the EPA C/D SRF total—allocated to four western states. Although the sums and terms are extraordinary, is there ever really enough?

At his office, “Definitely, many more applications are being received than could be funded,” he says.

What’s in It for “WE”?
Besides being free or low-interest, another major difference gives a tantalizing hint at what may be a paradigm-shift in federal funding earmarked specifically for water efficiency.

As a key criterion for selecting projects, comes the stipulation that 20% (i.e. $1.2 billion) should not simply go to the usual water pipes or treatment plants, but rather, must be invested in what the Act calls high-priority “green infrastructure improvements” for water and/or energy efficiency, “and other environmental innovations and wet weather management,” says Byous.

EPA Administrator Jackson called this “one of the most exciting aspects” of the Recovery Act’s funding, noting that the set-aside will promote desirable practices like water harvesting, water reuse, riparian restoration, floodplains, and wetlands, with “long-term benefits” beyond those of traditional infrastructure projects, a prepared statement notes.

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Moreover, certain specific kinds of projects, listed as “Green Project Reserve,” are deemed so desirable that funding requests are pre-approved for rubber-stamping, without the requirement of detailed review. In a guidance issued by EPA, dozens of examples are listed under three headings, but the agency, pointedly, “…anticipates that ‘water or energy efficiency’ projects will likely be the principal focus of the Green Project Reserve under the DWSRF” (emphasis added). EPA defines water efficiency as “the use of improved technologies and practices to deliver equal or better services with less water.”

At the head of the list of these examples is the installation of water meters, followed by retrofit or replacement of water using fixtures, fittings, equipment, or appliances; efficient landscape or irrigation equipment; systems to recycle graywater; reclamation, recycling, and reuse of existing rainwater, condensate, degraded water, stormwater, and/or wastewater streams; and collection-system leak detection equipment. Next Page >

What Do You Think?

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Baine

November 25th, 2009 8:47 AM PT

Free indeed - I wonder if journalists will ever learn to report the real story - the shell game is a great analogy except that pea is misspelled and the rain comes from our own reservoir - I'm just hopeful my kids will have enough shelter left before the solids come and the smoke is seen for what it really is....wonder if they will still call this higher education

Timothy&Rachel

November 18th, 2009 8:32 AM PT

Isn't it "magical" that "FREE" money is raining down on us all over the country? Hurrah for the current Administration! NOT!!! Hopefully, there still exists some common sense among the American Public. I direct your attention to EPA's Eric Byous' comment "what's unprecedented in this funding wave is that much of this money is free." What planet is Eric on? Maybe he's talking pre-tax hike? Maybe, just maybe (but don't count on it) you'll die before the bill comes due, but the bill WILL come due. Brace yourself. The "free" money is not free. Nothing is free but death and taxes. We, the taxpayer, and our children and grand children and great grand children. . .will pay the bill. You've heard the old axiom that "you can't get nothing for free." It's true, and it won't be long. Wait until the current Administration is done with their shell game and see how much you have left of your hard earned money, assuming you're still employed.

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