Advocacy

Issue Brief: Clean Water State Revolving Funds

THE ISSUE

The American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA) supports legislation that increases funding and other resources for federal clean water programs, including the Clean Water State Revolving Fund (CWSRF).

Background

The Clean Water Act (CWA) of 1972 was passed to protect one of our most important and vital natural resources—water. It was specifically written as a remedy to clean the extremely polluted drinking water sources that were unusable for bathing, swimming, recreational activities, or cleaning, let alone consuming. Since 1972, the quality of America’s rivers, lakes, streams, and other bodies of water improved exponentially.

To assist states and localities in the implementation of the CWA, Congress passed an amendment in 1987 creating the Clean Water State Revolving Fund (CWSRF). This program provides states with low-cost financing to design, plan, build, or update water infrastructure. Project eligibility includes municipal wastewater facilities, nonpoint source pollution control, decentralized wastewater treatment systems, stormwater management and mitigation, green infrastructure, estuary protection, and water reuse. Under the CWSRF, states may provide various types of assistance, including loans, refinancing, purchasing, or guaranteeing local debt and purchasing bond insurance. States have the flexibility to target financial resources to their specific community and environmental needs.

It has been the policy of the Environmental Protection Agency, which administers the CWSRF, to promote and prioritize the use of green infrastructure in CWSRF projects. Established under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, the Green Project Reserve (GPR) requires a minimum of 10 percent of all CWSRF funding to be used for projects that utilize green infrastructure, water and energy efficiency, or other environmentally innovative activities. The GPR is not permanently authorized and is subject to annual actions of Congress and appropriators.

The CWSRF is one of the most-accessed federal funding sources for landscape architects to plan and design water infrastructure projects.


Bill Summary

On April 26, 2023, Representative Nikema Williams (GA) reintroduced the Water Infrastructure Sustainability and Efficiency (WISE) Act. This measure would allocate a minimum of 20 percent of all CWSRF funding to be used for GPR projects that utilize green infrastructure, water and energy efficiency, or other environmentally innovative activities.

Recent Action

On April 26, 2023, H.R. 2921 was reintroduced and referred to the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, Subcommittee on Water Resources and Environment.

On February 8, 2024, H.R. 2921 was submitted as Amendment 3 to H.R. 7023, the Creating Confidence in Clean Water Permitting Act. On March 19, 2024, the House Committee on Rules voted not to adopt Amendment 3 for a House floor vote.


Sponsors
Representative Nikema Williams (GA), and cosponsors.

Contact

Roxanne Blackwell, 
Esq., Hon. ASLA,
Director of Federal
Government Affairs
governmentaffairs@asla.org

Elizabeth Hebron,
Director of State
Government Affairs
governmentaffairs@asla.org

Join

Donate