WI State Journal: $142M [peanuts] to WI for poisoned water in “infrastructure law”

[As always, the connected and wealthy puppeteers get paid first and last.  To begin to clean up the poisons spread by the military it will take hundreds of billions of dollars.]

 

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Wisconsin receives $142M to combat water challenges under bipartisan infrastructure law

Funding will target underserved communities, lead pipes and PFAS
By Danielle Kaeding
Thursday, December 2, 2021, 5:00pm 
Background

“Federal environmental regulators have announced Wisconsin will receive$142.7 millionto target removal of lead pipes, harmful forever chemicals and water challenges in underserved communities as part of the first allocation under the bipartisan infrastructure law.

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Michael Regan announced the funding Thursday as part of $7.4 billion awarded to states and tribes under the $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill signed into law by President Joe Biden on Nov. 15.

The award is part of $44 billion in state revolving loan funds that will be distributed over the next five years to help state and tribal governments make long overdue upgrades to drinking water and wastewater systems.

Around half of the funding will be made available as grants or loans to provide to rural and urban communities.

“Billions of dollars are about to start flowing to states and it is critical that EPA partners with states, Tribes, and territories to ensure the benefits of these investments are delivered in the most equitable way,” said Regan in anews release.

In aletterto Gov. Tony Evers, Regan urged prioritizing grants for disadvantaged communities.

“To further aid states, tribes, local governments and water systems, the EPA will also provide technical assistance to help disadvantaged communities overcome barriers in applying for and receiving loans and grants through the (state revolving loan funds),” wrote Regan.

State revolving loan fund programs offer low-cost financing to help communities repair or upgrade water and wastewater infrastructure.

Assistant Administrator of the EPA’s Office of Water Radhika Fox will soon issue guidance to state agencies on how they should use the funding provided under the law. In his letter, Regan urged states to correct disparities with funding, make progress on replacing lead service lines and provide relief to communities struggling with contamination from harmfulperfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances(PFAS).

“Every Wisconsin community needs access to clean drinking water and an environment free of toxic chemicals. Now we have an investment that will create jobs and help make that a reality,” said Wisconsin Democratic U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin in astatement. “This is a major federal investment to help local communities in Wisconsin replace dangerous lead service lines and address PFAS contaminants so that we provide safe and clean drinking water to people across our state.”

Wisconsin has hundreds of thousands of pipeline segments containing lead or other harmful materials,according to Wisconsin Watch. Milwaukee alone has roughly70,000 lead service linesthat could cost nearly $800 million to replace.

As for PFAS, state environmental regulators havedetected 51 sites within 25 communitiesthat have PFAS polluted groundwater. However, less than 1 percent of the state’s more than 11,000 public water supplies have been tested for the chemicals. PFAS has been found in public and private wells in communities across the state, including Peshtigo, Campbell, Marinette, La Crosse, Eau Claire, Rhinelander and Madison.

The funding under the infrastructure bill represents the single largest investment in water infrastructure in decades, but the needs are great. The American Society of Civil Engineers estimates Wisconsin water and wastewater systems need around$15 billionover the next two decades to address aging infrastructure.”