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Published byClaire Riley Modified over 8 years ago
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Financing Water Infrastructure: The State and Federal Outlook Sarah Pillsbury, Administrator Drinking Water Ground Bureau NH Department of Environmental Services
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The Old vs. New “Normal” Sources of Funding Conditions of Funding Changes in the DWSRF and CWSRF Overview
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The Old Normal Increasing or at least stable funding levels Conditions known to all and did not vary year to year Relatively minimal reporting Asset renewal optional
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Level or reduced funding Annual federal funding…and conditions – e.g. SRF forgiveness, wage rates, Buy American Increased reporting and oversight – e.g. Davis Bacon Asset and financial management expected The New Normal
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Waste Water: N and P pollution Stormwater: Improved treatment Drinking Water: DBPs and Source Climate Ready Utilities Regulatory Drivers
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State Aid Grant (law prohibits new projects) Municipal Bond Bank Community Development Block Grant – Varies, water competes with other project types Sources of State and Federal Funds
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Rural Development – Estimated @ $9M loans, $3M grants State Revolving Loan Funds – Estimated @ $8M DWSRF, $14M CWSRF Federal – Estimated @ $1.769M DWSRF, $?M CWSRF State – DW Grants Direct Appropriation (i.e. earmark) Sources of State and Federal Funds
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Sustainable Asset Management Practices Institutional Capacity Responsible Financial Management Practices Cost-effective/Priority Projects General Expectation for Funding (from SB60 Report)
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Funder’s Specific Expectations Vary… is the goal
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Water Resource Reform and Development Act of 2014 (CWSRF and WIFIA) New State Administrative Rules – Env-DW 1100 and Env- WQ 500 – Funding for Asset Management Programs – Up to 30 year loans CWSRF and DWSRF Updates
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Loan Forgiveness – Energy Audits (20K) – Asset Management (30K) – Nonpoint Source Projects (20%) – Sustainability and Affordability (5% +) CWSRF Updates Continued
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CWSRF Grant Allocation Formula Review Water Infrastructure Finance and Infrastructure Act (unfunded) – $50M/year, 5 year Pilot (currently unfunded) – $20M min. project, Up to 35 year loan – Funding conditions apply Other WRDDA Changes
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Critical need for water infrastructure renewal Level and diminishing state and federal funding Are sustainable practices the “silver lining”? Summary
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