A Changing Climate Means A Changing Society. The Island Press Urban Resilience Project, Supported By The Kresge Foundation And The JPB Foundation, Is Committed To A Greener, Fairer Future.​ This Article Was Originally Published May 21, 2019 in Water Online.

Americans should feel confident that the water delivered to their homes by a public water system is safe to drink. But when residents of Martin County, Kentucky turn on their taps, the water may be discolored, smell like bleach, and make children itch after bathing. Last summer, the people of Salem, Oregon were told not to drink their tap water, which was contaminated with algae. And of course, the slow-motion lead-poisoning disaster in Flint, Michigan is sadly too familiar.

More than 27 million Americans are served by community water systems that do not fully meet health-based drinking water standards. Many community water systems draw their water from surface waters, but nearly half a million square miles of such waters fail to meet one or more standards for water quality, and the list is growing each year.

U.S. EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler says that unsafe drinking water, not climate change, is the world’s greatest environmental challenge. So it should be no surprise that EPA’s budget proclaims “clean and safe water” as a central agency goal.

What is surprising is that the EPA budget proposes jaw-dropping cuts of $1.4 billion from water protection and restoration programs.

The largest proposed cuts, $874 million, are to a pair of highly successful state revolving loan funds that support critical water and wastewater treatment infrastructure projects. According to the EPA, these funds enable states to “protect public health, protect valuable aquatic resources, and meet environmental standards benefiting hundreds of millions of people.” The budget calls for each state to receive a 26 percent cut from the drinking water fund and 34 percent from the clean water fund.

Those funds have accomplished a great deal, but more is needed.

  • Tens of thousands of homes lack access to basic sanitation and drinking water.
  • Our nation’s water infrastructure is aging and needs repair; every year communities are impacted by about 240,000 water main breaks, with billions of gallons of raw sewage discharged into local surface waters, compromising water quality.
  • A recent needs survey showed that more than $420 billion will be needed to maintain and improve the nation’s drinking water infrastructure over the next 20 years.

The budget strikes a blow to the most vulnerable communities by taking $27 million — 90 percent of current funding — from water infrastructure for poor and isolated Alaska Native and U.S.-Mexico border communities that lack access to basic sanitation and drinking water, such as toilets and indoor plumbing. 

State water protection programs face a $300 million cut. The budget slashes $260 million from water pollution grants for states to develop water quality standards, set pollution reduction goals, issue permits, confirm compliance, monitor results and restore water bodies impaired by pollution. Another $38 million would be trimmed from state drinking water protection programs. 

The budget reduces funding for EPA water pollution control programs by $48 million (19 percent), even though more than 210 million Americans — 2 in 3 — live within two miles of a polluted lake, river, stream, or coastal area. Moreover, polluted waters are being added to the list of impaired waters faster than restored waters are being removed, underscoring how hard it is to protect and restore watersheds and aquatic ecosystems. 

And, despite Administrator Wheeler’s lip service to the importance of safe drinking water, the budget actually cuts funding for EPA drinking water programs by 8 percent.

Finally, the budget siphons more than $125 million from programs to protect and restore America’s great water bodies. It completely eliminates funding for programs to help the Gulf of Mexico, Long Island Sound, and Puget Sound, and cuts $67 million — 90 percent — from funding for the Chesapeake Bay.  

In sum, the Trump/Wheeler EPA is talking out of both sides of its mouth: claiming strong support for “clean and safe water,” but drastically cutting support for water protection. Sadly, such hypocrisy has become standard fare at the Trump/Wheeler EPA. Clean water and safe drinking water are basic human needs, and access to them should be everyone’s right. America’s people and its environment deserve no less.

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