Posted on 11/18/2008 4:58:18 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
AWWA has joined with the Association of Metropolitan Water Agencies, National Association of Water Companies and the National Rural Water Association in developing "A National Agenda for Drinking Water" to assist President-Elect Barack Obama and his incoming administration.
The report addresses topics including economic stimulus, long-term infrastructure investment, drinking water standards, source water protection, climate change, and system security.
It specifically asks for dedicated funding for water infrastructure in any economic stimulus package, dispersed in such a way as to be quickly accessed by utility managers, with a minimum of delay and red tape. It calls the $1 billion included in the earlier stimulus package a good start, but says that much more money is needed to fund the wide range of projects nationwide that have been affected by the credit crisis. It advocates equal funding for drinking water and wastewater projects.
Recommendations for longer-term infrastructure investment include low- or no-interest loans and tax incentives, as well as grants in some instances. The report asks for
* the Drinking Water State Revolving Loan Fund and USDA Rural Water Loan and Grant programs to be funded at a minimum of $1 billion annually; * federal assistance programs to help utilities become economically self-sustaining; and * new mechanisms for innovative approaches to capital, such as some form of infrastructure bank.
It flatly rejects any proposal of a federal water tax, charge, or levy against either utilities or customers.
On the standards front, the report advocates the deliberative, science-based processes of the Safe Drinking Water Act and calls for the administration to reject legislative prescriptions for decisions that should be made through the regulatory process.
Emerging contaminants are addressed in the section on source water protection, which the report recommends be addressed through more research and revisions to the Clean Water Act where necessary. It asks that USEPAs carbon-sequestration efforts be made to protect drinking water sources over the very long run, and for USDA activities to protect source water to be fully utilized.
The impact of climate change on drinking water resources should be addressed with dedicated funding for research and to help utilities adapt to the changing demands climate change may bring, the paper recommends.
Finally, the report says that water system security measures should not force water utilities to change processes in favor of what some may perceive are inherently safer technologies; that they should not enable federal officials to order water utilities to shut down; and that water utilities not be subject to regulation by multiple federal agencies. It also asks for protection of sensitive data regarding water utilities and that any new federal security mandates be accompanied by federal financial assistance.
Our agenda:
Raise taxes.
Give money to us.
Thank you for voting liberal Democrat.
Warch for nobama fascists to come around and place meters on rural wells.
This one makes perfect sense.
When money from the Government runs like water, those that control the water, want money.
Speaking of liberal dems. - did anyone catch Senator Kennedy staggering into the senate floor with cane in hand mumbling something about health care? hows about age limits for elected officials? Not that he did any good for this country when he was young and spry, as in the rest of the clowns in the senate with him.
Wait until they implement it.
Henceforth, by the decree of His Majesty, DUH 1, no one shall be permitted to urinate.
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