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NACWA Applauds EPA Commitment to Dialogue on Financial Capability

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NEWS RELEASE

For Immediate Release: January 18, 2013

Contact:  Chris Hornback
NACWA, Senior Director Regulatory Affairs
202.833.9106
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NACWA Applauds EPA Commitment to Dialogue on Financial Capability

Washington, D.C.—The National Association of Clean Water Agencies (NACWA) is encouraged by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) recent Memorandum icon-pdf committing to a dialogue with the U.S. Conference of Mayors, NACWA, and other key stakeholders on the financial capability of communities to meet their Clean Water Act (CWA) obligations.

EPA’s memorandum icon-pdf, released Jan. 18, comes at a time when communities across the United States are struggling to meet their CWA obligations due to pressing economic issues. NACWA and the Conference of Mayors have been outspoken critics of EPA’s approach to assessing financial capability and, more broadly, to the Agency’s implementation and enforcement methods. This approach is putting unprecedented costs on communities and ratepayers, sometimes without regard to other less expensive alternative approaches that may be more effective.

”EPA’s commitment to an ongoing dialogue is an important step forward,” said Ken Kirk, executive director for NACWA. “It is critical, however, that EPA use this opportunity to gather additional input and address many of the long-standing concerns that NACWA has been raising regarding affordability. NACWA recognizes the critical work of the U.S. Conference of Mayors to raise awareness of this key issue with EPA.”

EPA’s memo builds on its June 2012 Integrated Planning Framework external.link, which was intended to help communities prioritize and better sequence clean water investments to address some of these concerns. The Framework’s reliance on financial capability considerations, however, underscored the need to update and refine the outdated approaches outlined in EPA’s 1997 guidance for financial capability external.link. Many limitations of EPA’s current financial capability analysis need to be addressed.

EPA also has committed to providing further clarification on key issues, which will help to ensure consistent implementation among EPA regional offices. This guidance is expected to be finalized over the coming months based on input gathered from the ongoing dialogue.

NACWA and other key stakeholders hope that the ongoing dialogue will lead to meaningful guidance and more consistent implementation. Although EPA’s memorandum is encouraging, the effort stops short of a wholesale revision of the 1997 financial capability guidance.

NACWA will continue its legislative efforts on financial capability, including work to help reintroduce and move Sen. Sherrod Brown’s (D–Ohio) Clean Water Affordability Act.  NACWA has been an outspoken supporter of this legislation which, among other things, would require EPA to undergo a comprehensive revision of the 1997 financial capability guidance. NACWA looks forward to the dialogue with EPA on affordability and hopes this moves us forward to consensus on this key issue.

 

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NACWA represents the interests of more than 300 public agencies and organizations that have made the pursuit of scientifically based, technically sound and cost effective laws and regulations their objective. NACWA members serve the majority of the sewered population in the United States and collectively treat and reclaim more than 18 billion gallons of wastewater daily.

 

 

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