Posted on 09/30/2009 8:52:16 AM PDT by SwinneySwitch
After nearly six years in the making, Matamoros first wastewater treatment plant was inaugurated Tuesday.
The treatment facility, which will clean contaminated water and pump it into the Rio Grande, is the result of a $33 million grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) donated through the North American Development Bank (NADB), a $10 million loan from the NADB, and $33 million more in funding from the government of Mexico. Though the $76 million facility has been in operation for nearly a year, the inauguration ceremony had been put off several times.
The lineup of speakers at the ceremony demonstrated the binational effort that brought the costly project to fruition: State, local and federal officials from both sides of the border sat in a long line on stage.
"Thanks to tremendous bilateral support and cooperation between the governments of Mexico and the U.S. in addressing environmental issues along our common border, Matamoros is receiving an unprecedented level of funding for wastewater treatment infrastructure," said Jorge C. Garces, CEO of the NADB.
The NADB was set up when the North American Free Trade Agreement, or NAFTA, was ratified. The bank, which funds environmentally friendly infrastructure projects in the border region, supplies loans and serves as the liaison for grants to help governments on both sides of the border improve local conditions.
Despite the heat and humidity, more than a thousand Matamoros residents were bused in from colonias around the city to catch sight of Tamaulipas Gov. Eugenio Hernandez Flores.
Flores made a grand entrance to screaming and chanting from the crowd. He shook hands, was greeted with posters, and was handed notes from people in the crowd.
"We are convinced that the use of water is an imperative theme," Hernandez Flores said. "Here on the border were growing very rapidly. The population of Matamoros is expected to double in the next 30 years."
NADB spokesman Juan Antonio Flores said that wastewater treatment could be considered the banks flagship project. Though the public, he said, might not feel the immediate effect of treating wastewater, since it is a process that takes place after water has already been used, clean water in the Rio Grande is an issue that affects both countries and will for generations to come.
"Now about 80 percent of wastewater is treated along the border," Flores said. "When we started (giving out NADB loans) it was only about 35 percent."
Hernandez Flores pledged Tuesday that 100 percent of the wastewater along the border would soon be treated.
Flores said that whenever a wastewater treatment program is created, its easy to see the increase in the diversity of wildlife that returns to the area.
"In Matamoros we know that we will only have a harmonious future if its in balance with our environment," said Matamoros Mayor Erick Silva.
Your tax dollars at work!
Welcome to the 20th century....................
“The North American Development Bank (NADB) is a binational financial institution capitalized and governed equally by the United States and Mexico for the purpose of financing environmental projects certified by the Border Environment Cooperation Commission (BECC). The two institutions work together with communities and project sponsors in both countries to develop and finance infrastructure necessary for a clean and healthy environment for border residents.”
Something tells me that when Sam and Juan go out to eat together, Juan always finds an excuse to leave early while Sam picks up the check.
Glenn Beck addresses these matters in the last chapter of, “An Inconvenient Book.”
(Maybe they would pitch in for half the cost of a good border fence? Nahhhh.)
Ping!
If you want on, or off this S. Texas/Mexico ping list, please FReepMail me.
Hello? We are paying for, building or have built water and sewer projects for every single Mexican city on the border. Not only the federal government is allocating hundreds of millions of your tax dollars to these projects, but states such as Texas as well. Look at the projects in EPA regions 6 and 9; 72 projects at a total estimated cost of $1.5 billion. But wait. There’s more. In addition, the US-funded North American Development Bank has provided funding for 119 water infra-structure projects in the U.S.-Mexico border region to the tune of $930 million in U.S. loans and grants.
And to top it all off, WE HAVE TO BEG FOR MEXICO’S PERMISSION to do this from Conagua. YOUR TAX DOLLARS AT WORK.
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