Home\Advocacy\House Appropriations Bill Includes First-Time Funding for Nationwide Water Reuse Program

House Appropriations Bill Includes First-Time Funding for Nationwide Water Reuse Program

Date: July 14, 2023

Late on Wednesday, the House Interior-Environment Appropriations Subcommittee released its draft spending bill for FY 2024 which includes funding for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the programs that it administers. The WateReuse Association is pleased to report that the proposed bill includes first-time funding of $3 million for the Pilot Program for Alternative Water Source Grants, which WateReuse has been advocating for as a top funding priority in FY 2024.

If funded, the Alternative Water Source Grants Pilot Program would become the first nationwide program dedicated to advancing water reuse. Competitive grants would be available to state, interstate, and intrastate water resource development agencies to engineer, design, construct, and test alternative water source systems, including water reuse systems. WateReuse worked closely with Appropriations Committee staff and our congressional champions to secure this funding, and we thank our members for doing the same with their congressional delegations over the past five months.

In addition to funding the Alternative Water Source Grants Pilot Program, the bill leaves funding largely intact for the Water Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act (WIFIA) Program, which is also an important financing mechanism for water recycling projects across the country.

Unfortunately, while the bill includes funding for Alternative Water Source Grants and WIFIA, it makes a deep cut of 39 percent to EPA and its programs. Within that cut, the bill reduces funding for the Clean Water and Drinking Water State Revolving Fund Loan Programs by 67 percent and 59 percent, respectively. Of the remaining funds, the bill leaves only 10 percent for state capitalization grants. The other 90 percent would go to earmarked projects. The proposed package does not reduce funds provided for the SRF programs by the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021 (also known as the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law), which for FY 2024 provide an additional $2.63 billion (including $225 million for projects that address emerging contaminants) for the Clean Water SRF and $3.2 billion (including $800 million for projects that address emerging contaminants and per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances) for the Drinking Water SRF.

While the numbers contained in the House bill for the Clean Water and Drinking Water SRF Programs are concerning, this is only the first step in the process. We must now ensure that the Senate includes robust funding for each of these programs in its own version of the appropriations bill, which it has not yet released. Stay tuned for more information about how you can help in the coming days.

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