The Macomb Daily

Managrees to pay for boatdamage

- By Mark Cavitt mcavitt@medianewsg­roup.com @MarkCavitt on Twitter

A $500 million investment to rebuild Michigan’ s critical drinking water and wastewater infrastruc­ture has been announced by Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

The MI Clean Water initiative will provide $207 million to improve drinking water quality and $293 million to improve the state’s wa stew ater infrastruc­ture while providing direct investment­s for communitie­s to address critical water infrastruc­ture upgrades and supporting over 7,500 Michigan jobs, according to the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA).

Gov. Whitmer said the historic investment marks a significan­t step toward her goal of ensuring Michigande­rs have access to clean and affordable water.

She’s also urging the Legislatur­e to take “bold actions” to invest in Michigan’s infrastruc­ture to protect the state’s water systems from toxic contaminat­ion, such as Per- and Polyfluoro­alkyl Substances (PFAS). She added that investment­s will be done without raising taxes.

“I’m calling on the legislatur­e to authorize the Michigan Department of Environmen­t, Great Lakes, and Energy (EGLE) to use the remainder of the voterappro­ved 2002 Great Lakes Water Quality bond during this legislativ­e session,” said Governor Whitmer. “Michigande­rs are tired of waiting for action, the time is now. We must all work together to improve the quality of the waters of our State.”

According to the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), Michigan’s 2018 infrastruc­ture report card included a “D” for drinking water infrastruc­ture, a “D-” for stormwater infrastruc­ture, and a “C” for wastewater infrastruc­ture with an overall infrastruc­ture grade of “D+.”

Mike Nystrom, Executive Vice President of Michigan Infrastruc­ture and Transporta­tion Associatio­n, said the investment is a significan­t and positive next step toward solving the decades- old problem of woefully under-funded infrastruc­ture in Michigan that also help improve and protect the state’s public health.

“We continue to call on Michigan voters to elect state legislator­s on Nov. 3 whowill commit to passing a comprehens­ive long-term plan to fix our state’s massive unmet infrastruc­ture needs, including our crumbling roads and bridges, our aging dams, water infrastruc­ture, and our wastewater and stormwater systems,” he said.

MI CleanWater includes a proposal combining federal dollars for lead service line replacemen­t in low-income communitie­s ($102.1 million) with bonding authority for water quality protection ($290 million), one-time General Fund appropriat­ion for drinking water infrastruc­ture and innovation ($105 million), and asset management grants ($2.9 million) to help communitie­s develop, update, and improve their plans for wastewater and stormwater systems resulting in a comprehens­ive water infrastruc­ture investment of $500 million in Michigan’s water systems.

Drinking water investment­s

• Lead Service Line Replacemen­t in Disadvanta­ged Communitie­s Program - $102 million

• Lead and Copper – Drinking Water Asset Management Grants - $37.5million

• PFAS and Emerging Contaminan­ts - Contaminat­ion and Consolidat­ion Grants - $25 million

• Non- Lead Drinking Water Infrastruc­ture Grants - $35 million

• Affordabil­ity and Planning Grants - $7.5 million

Wastewater protection investment­s

• Clean Water Infrastruc­ture Grants (eliminatin­g sanitary sewer overflows; correcting combined sewer overflows; increasing green infrastruc­ture) - $235 million

• Substantia­l Public Health Risk Grants (removing direct and continuous discharges of raw sewage from surface or groundwate­r) - $20 million

• Failing Septic System Eliminatio­n Program- $35 million

• Stormwater, Asset Management, and Wastewater Grants - $3 million

According to the report card, it’s estimated that Michigan drinking water system owners are underfundi­ng system improvemen­ts for Safe Drinking Water Act Compliance at between $284 million and $563 million every year. When it comes to wastewater infrastruc­ture, the EPA estimates $690 million is needed for secondary treatment and $702 million is needed for conveyance system repair and improvemen­t needs.

Currently, Michigan lacks a systematic approach to inventoryi­ng, operating and maintainin­g its stormwater infrastruc­ture, according to ASCE, who added that unless a funding source is dedicated, Michigan’s stormwater infrastruc­ture will continue to decline.

EGLE Director Liesl

Clark calls the MI Clean Water initiative an “exciting package of water protection­s that pulls together a wealth of resources to help ensure clean water for all Michigande­rs.”

“Now is the perfect time to invest state and federal dollars in a coordinate­d way to encourage job growth in water infrastruc­ture jobs,” she said. “His work will ripple throughout both the economy and the systems that protect public health, strengthen­ing both.”

Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha, MSU College of Human Medicine pediatrici­an and professor, said Michigan is leading the nation to rebuild the critical infrastruc­ture necessary to keep Michigande­rs healthy and safe.

“It is proactive investment­s like this that will prevent future public health crises, reduce inequities, and ensure the promise of generation­s of Michigande­rs to come,” she said.

Jim Nash, Oakland County Water Resources Commission­er, said this is a much needed initiative for communitie­s large and small, adding “the governor and legislativ­e supporters deserve credit for recognizin­g the need.”

“For too long budget cuts at the state and federal level have left local communitie­s responsibl­e for costs that many can’t afford,” he said. “This needs to be a first step because studies show we have a multi-billion dollar investment deficit that has to be made up if we want to have efficient and effective infrastruc­ture for the future”

In November 2002, Michigan voters overwhelmi­ngly approved the Great LakesWater Quality Bond Proposal, which authorized the sale of $1 billion in bonds to improve the state’s water infrastruc­ture.

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