The Columbus Dispatch

EPA commits $7.4B for water infrastruc­ture plan

- Suman Naishadham

WASHINGTON – States, Native American tribes and U.S. territorie­s will receive $7.4 billion in 2022 to improve water quality and access, the first installmen­t from the infrastruc­ture bill that President Joe Biden signed into law last month, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency said Thursday.

The legislatio­n commits $50 billion for water and wastewater infrastruc­ture over five years, with $15 billion allocated for removing lead pipes and $10 billion to address contaminat­ion from toxic chemicals frequently used in cookware, carpets, firefighting foams and other products.

The federal government cannot dictate how that money is spent, but the EPA says it is urging governors, mayors and other local administra­tors to prioritize sending money to historical­ly underserve­d communitie­s that have long faced challenges in accessing clean water.

“It’s no mystery as to who needs those resources the most,” said EPA Administra­tor Michael Regan, who recently visited low-income, largely minority communitie­s in the South that have endured industrial contaminat­ion and water shortage problems.

Of the $7.4 billion headed to states, tribes and territorie­s, $2.9 billion will help pay for the replacemen­t of lead pipes and service lines, and $866 million is meant for addressing per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) contaminat­ion in water. Sometimes called “forever chemicals,” PFAS have been found in public drinking water systems and private wells. In October, the EPA said it was working toward setting limits on PFAS in drinking water and requiring manufactur­ers whose products contain the chemicals to disclose how toxic they are.

The Biden administra­tion initially proposed investing $45 billion as part of the bipartisan infrastruc­ture deal to eliminate every lead pipe and service line in the country. At the time, water experts said that was a realistic estimate for what it would cost to map out and remove the pipes thought to remain undergroun­d. For decades, lead pipes have posed a risk for contaminat­ed water in schools and homes.

Still, experts say the $15 billion included in the final version provides a historic chance to address the problem.

“This gets us a third of the way there which is … more than the federal government has ever done to help communitie­s remove these really deadly lead service lines,” said John Rumpler, senior attorney with Environmen­t America, after the bill passed in November.

“It’s going to take a concerted effort by local officials and community activists and state agencies to ensure that this money is used as effectively as possible,” he said.

The EPA said nearly $44 billion of the $50 billion for water in the infrastruc­ture deal will go through State Revolving Funds, which were establishe­d as a way to provide low-interest loans to cities, counties and utilities for investment­s in water and sanitation infrastruc­ture.

A recent report by researcher­s at the University of Michigan found that smaller communitie­s and more racially diverse ones were less likely to receive money from the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund, according to an analysis of data between 2011 and 2020.

 ?? TRAVIS LONG/RALEIGH NEWS & OBSERVER VIA AP ?? “It’s no mystery as to who needs those resources the most,” EPA Administra­tor Michael Regan said.
TRAVIS LONG/RALEIGH NEWS & OBSERVER VIA AP “It’s no mystery as to who needs those resources the most,” EPA Administra­tor Michael Regan said.

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