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WASHINGTON — The National Association of Water Companies supports
today’s introduction of the bipartisan Sustainable Water Infrastructure
Investment Act of 2010 (S.3262) by Senator Robert Menendez (D-NJ) and
cosponsors Senator Kit Bond (R-MO), Senator Mike Crapo (R-ID) and
Senator John Kerry (D-MA). The bill will remove state volume caps on
private activity bonds (PABs) for water and wastewater projects, freeing
up billions of private capital dollars for investment in the nation’s
water infrastructure. A similar bill introduced in the U.S. House of
Representatives last year by Congressman Bill Pascrell (D-NJ) was passed
by the House as part of the Small Business and Infrastructure Tax Act
last month.
According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the
Government Accountability Office, there is an investment gap of more
than $500 billion for necessary infrastructure upgrades over the next 20
years to ensure safe drinking water and wastewater treatment. This bill
would create up to 57,000 jobs by converting a modest investment by the
federal government into billions of dollars of necessary economic
investment into our nation’s aging water and sewage infrastructure.
Standard and Poor’s cites approximately $180 billion in new money
available for infrastructure investment.
“The Sustainable Water Infrastructure Investment Act of 2010 provides
a rare opportunity to address two major American issues at once: an
ageing infrastructure and troubling unemployment numbers,” said Michael
Deane, executive director of the National Association of Water
Companies. “Senator Menendez and his colleagues have taken a tremendous
first step to bringing our nation’s water infrastructure in line with
other components of our critical infrastructure, and to meeting our
current and future health and safety needs as they relate to the most
critical of natural resources.”
Other major infrastructure components already exempt from existing
caps include airports, high-speed rail and solid waste disposal. PAB
issuance is one of the fastest forms of federal assistance when applied
to water and wastewater projects, with only 90–120 days needed to
complete the process, from approval to sale to get Americans to work.
Many small and local engineering and construction businesses will
benefit from project opportunities that will arise from an increased
availability of resources.
“The National Association of Water Companies strongly encourages the
Senate to consider and pass this important legislation,” said Deane.
Providing opportunities for public water providers to leverage
private sector investment in water and wastewater infrastructure, the
bill will also generate significant tax revenue for states and
communities across the country. Each $1 billion invested in water
infrastructure yields an increase of $82.4 million in state and local
tax revenue.
Contact:
Casey Clark, media@nawc.com, (202)
346-8844 |