WEF, WateReuse Testify in Affordable Water Hearing

April 11, 2016
Rudolph Chow addressed economic benefits of Drinking Water State Revolving Fund programs

Rudolph Chow, director of the Baltimore Department of Public Works, testified on behalf of the Water Environment Federation (WEF), and the WateReuse Assn. at the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee hearing, “The Federal Role in Keeping Water and Wastewater Infrastructure Affordable.”

With more than 30 years of experience in the water sector, Chow is a proponent of surface and underground infrastructure renewal and has spent his career developing and implementing new and innovative programs aimed at protecting these systems while mitigating affordability issues. Testifying before Chairman James Inhofe (R-OK), Ranking Member Barbara Boxer (D-CA), and the other Committee Members, his remarks focused on three main points:

  • Affordability – The challenges communities are having with meeting their regulatory requirements with limited funds is a national problem.
  • Federal Funding of Infrastructure – Congress should provide robust support for existing and proposed federal funding and financing programs.
  • Economic Benefits of the Clean Water and Drinking Water State Revolving Fund Programs (SRF) – at the committee’s request, WEF and WateReuse recently conducted an analysis of the estimated economic impact generated by SRF spending in four example states, including taxes that return to the federal government and the employment and output from that spending. The four states—California, Maryland, Ohio, and Oklahoma—were chosen as a good cross-section of states across the nation that were representative of geographic size, population size, cost of living, rural/urban populations and general age of infrastructure. Although WEF and WateReuse are still finalizing the analysis that will go into the committee’s official record, the preliminary results revealed that on average, for every one million of SRF dollars spent in those four states, there was a significant return to the national and local economies. Notable examples include: $160,000 to $695,000 in federal tax revenue; national and local job creation, including high-paying positions that bring in an estimated $60,000 in labor income per job; and an average of $2.25 million dollars in total output for the states’ economies.

“As the true value of water becomes increasingly apparent, it’s vitally important to help educate our nation’s leaders about the infrastructure challenges facing our communities and the ways the federal government can help mitigate these pressures and increase opportunities for economic growth,” said WEF Executive Director Eileen O’Neill. “Although we are still working on our final analysis, the initial findings confirm that federal investments in water and wastewater infrastructure through the SRF programs have meaningful benefits to the economy, U.S. Treasury, and households across the nation.”

“A safe, reliable and cost-effective supply of water is necessary to sustain a high standard of living and robust economy in communities large and small,” added WateReuse Executive Director Melissa Meeker. “It is clear that strong federal support for water and wastewater infrastructure reaps economic benefits at the local, state and national levels and enhances the quality of life for everyone.”

Source: WEF

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