[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 24 (Wednesday, February 10, 2016)]
[House]
[Pages H653-H654]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
DEDICATED WATER INFRASTRUCTURE TRUST FUND
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, I came to Congress committed to helping
the Federal Government do a better job dealing with water and
sanitation. We have had great success internationally raising the
profile and directing more money in a more effective way to deal with
water and sanitation in poor countries, making a difference in millions
of lives.
In the United States, we often take those conditions for granted. But
as has been demonstrated recently in Flint, Michigan, we do so at our
peril because we have serious problems right here in the United States.
It is not just Flint, Michigan. There are up to 10 million lead water
lines that remain where even a slight change in the water chemistry,
even from just repairing it, can damage lead pipes enough to start
contaminating people's water. What is underground and out of sight is
actually in worse condition than our crumbling roads and bridges.
America leaks more water than we drink every day.
In the aftermath of the recession, we have seen States cut drinking
water budgets and staff. The Federal Government had cut our investment
in drinking water infrastructure by more than 80 percent by 1980. This,
despite the fact that ours is a growing country with aging
infrastructure that was rated a D by the American Society of Civil
Engineers in their latest report.
Now, I am pleased that the administration in its budget would put a
little extra money to help replace lead pipes. Sadly, that is being
financed by cutting even more from the Clean Water State Revolving
Fund, essentially at the expense of keeping water clean in the first
place.
We should look at our water infrastructure as an entire system and
increased Federal investment is long overdue. We would have to increase
our funding 500 percent to reach the level of spending during Jimmy
Carter's presidency.
I have long advocated the development of a water infrastructure trust
fund. We have reintroduced a bipartisan, budget-neutral solution to
create a dedicated water infrastructure trust fund to provide
additional revenue to State and local water and sanitation projects. It
is financed by a voluntary program where businesses that rely heavily
on clean water, like the beverage industry, for example, that have a
keen interest in maintaining water infrastructure would, on a voluntary
basis, pay a miniscule fee. In exchange, they would be designated as
supporting the clean water trust fund.
It is estimated that this could generate up to $7 billion annually in
new revenue that could go to State and local governments as grants and
loans, which in turn could leverage even more money.
This legislation would also give direction and resources for the EPA
to deal with the affordability gap. We can actually finance much of the
needed water and infrastructure improvements, but we are hamstrung
because there is understandable reluctance to raise rates that fall too
much on the poorest of citizens. Thus, we are in a cycle of unpaid
water and sewer bills that leaves nobody with satisfactory
alternatives.
This legislation would give more money to State and local
governments, allowing them to leverage additional money and to focus on
ways to deal with a very substantial problem of low income for whom
access to safe drinking water and sanitation is every bit as
fundamental a human right as what we are doing to help poor people
overseas achieve.
Mr. Speaker, I celebrate Secretary Clinton and a number of our
colleagues going to Flint, Michigan, to focus on the problem. I applaud
people who are looking at where the system failed, but I would hope we
would pay as much attention to the systematic failure of Congress and
at the State level to attach priority to this fundamental building
block for a livable community.
I hope my colleagues will join me, not just in cosponsoring H.R.
4468, but enacting the trust fund and fighting for budgets that
represent the resources this crisis demands.
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