Order Code IB10125
CRS Issue Brief for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
The Environmental Protection Agency’s
FY2004 Budget
Updated August 27, 2003
Martin R. Lee
Resources, Science, and Industry Division
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

CONTENTS
SUMMARY
MOST RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
BACKGROUND AND ANALYSIS
EPA’s Budget by Appropriations Accounts
Science and Technology
Environmental Programs and Management
Office of Inspector General
Buildings and Facilities
Oil Spill Response
Superfund
Leaking Underground Storage Tanks
State and Tribal Assistance Programs
Conclusion
LEGISLATION
CONGRESSIONAL HEARINGS, REPORTS, AND DOCUMENTS
CHRONOLOGY


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The Environmental Protection Agency’s FY2004 Budget
SUMMARY
For FY2004, the President’s budget
major issue. The request sought $3.1 billion
requested $7.6 billion in budget authority for
for the State and Tribal Assistance Grants
the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA),
account, $714 million, or 19%, less than
$448 million (or 6%) less than the $8.1 billion
current funding. It included $850 million for
current funding level. The House approved
Clean Water State Revolving Funds (SRF)
$8.0 billion in H.R. 2861 (H.Rept. 108-235)
$490 million less than the current $1.34
on July 25. Senate action is anticipated in
billion. Funding for drinking water state
September.
revolving funds would also be $850 million,
approximately the current level. Also
The request consisted of $3.1 billion for
anticipated was $50 million for Mexican
EPA operating expenses, $3.1 billion for
border water projects and $40 million for
assisting state and local governments, and
Alaska projects. For state and tribal
$1.4 billion for cleaning up Superfund toxic
administrative grants, the budget sought $1.2
waste sites. Wastewater infrastructure needs
billion, $5 million more than current funding.
and the future of Superfund are prominent
It also included $210 million for the
topics.
Brownfields program, $33 million above
current levels.
While the EPA budget proposal is
presented according to 10 goals (clean air, safe
The House action reinstated some of the
food, etc.), EPA’s appropriations bills
funds for the Clean Water State Revolving
continue to be organized by traditional
Fund, and included $180 million for direct
accounts. The $731 million sought for the
water grants. It did not approve the full
Science and Technology account reflected a
increase requested for the Environmental
$16 million increase; for the Environmental
Program and Management Account, and
Programs and Management account, the
Superfund Account. It added funds for
proposed level was a $122 million, a 6%,
science and technology activities. In bill
increase compared to current funding. The
language, the House prohibited EPA from
$1.4 billion requested to clean up toxic waste
using a numerical estimate that could devalue
sites under Superfund was $125 million, or
the lives of the elderly, and continued a ban on
10%, above the current year level. There is
human testing of pesticides during FY2004.
some concern over the level of Superfund
activities under this plan, and a concern that
While considering the FY2004 budget
general revenues would now pay for the
resolution (S.Con.Res. 23), the Senate adopted
majority of the appropriation, as the industry-
a provision, later dropped by the conferees,
supported trust fund balance declines.
allowing for an increase in wastewater and
clean water funds by as much as $3 billion and
How to fund state and local wastewater
rejected provisions to restore the Superfund
and drinking water capital needs, estimated to
tax and to increase natural resource and
be as high as $300 billion, continues to be a
environment funding.
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

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08-27-03
MOST RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
On February 3, 2003, the President forwarded to Congress a $7.6 billion FY2004 budget
request for the Environmental Protection Agency. On July 21, the House Committee on
Appropriations recommended $8.0 billion (H.R. 2861, H.Rept. 108-235), which the House
approved, amended, on July 25.
Earlier, while considering the FY2004 overall budget resolution (S.Con.Res. 23), the
Senate adopted a provision allowing for an increase in wastewater and clean water funds by
as much as $3 billion. It rejected amendments seeking to increase the allocation for the
natural resource and environment function, and to reinstate the tax supporting the Superfund
Trust Fund. Conferees later dropped the wastewater/clean water provision.
BACKGROUND AND ANALYSIS
The FY2004 EPA request of $7.6 billion is $448 million, or 6%, less than the total
current level of funding, $8.0 billion, which was included in P.L. 108-7, the Consolidated
FY2003 appropriation bill (H.J.Res. 2), signed February 20, 2003. From the beginning of
FY2003 until February 20, 2003, a series of continuing resolutions funded the Agency at the
FY2002 level of $7.9 billion.
Figure 1 depicts EPA funding by major categories — operating programs, state
assistance, Superfund — since FY1983. Within these broad categories, the FY2004 EPA
request calls for $2.2 billion for program management, $731 million for science and
technology, and $1.4 billion for Superfund. When compared to current levels, funding would
decrease by $714 million in the State and Tribal Assistance Grants account, which
incorporates wastewater/drinking water state revolving funds (SRFs) monies and traditional
state program assistance and management grants. The request for this account included $850
million for wastewater SRFs, $850 million for drinking water SRFs, $50 million for Mexican
border projects, and $1.2 billion for traditional grants to states for administering their
environmental protection programs.
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Figure 1. EPA Funding, FY1983 to FY2003 Enacted and FY2004 Request
State Assistance
Operating Programs
Superfund & LUST
Thousands
10.00
8.02
8.08
7.91
8.00
7.59 7.59
7.63
7.36
6.88
6.67
6.80
6.64 6.60 6.53
6.09
6.00
5.54 5.53
5.30 5.06
4.37
4.18
4.00
3.70
3.68
2.00
0.00
1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004
FY2002 totals include $175 million supplemental funding. Prepared by CRS.
The major issue associated with the request is the discontinuance of funding for a
number of FY2003 activities totaling about $500 million. Much of this total was allocated
to 483 wastewater projects in FY2003. It is likely that reinstatement of some of these projects
or the creation of new earmarks could be pursued during the FY2004 appropriations process.
The degree to which earmarks are approved may require changes to other parts of the request
depending on the flexibility afforded the committees under their individual budget
allocations, and within the priorities set for the bill, as the needs of many other competing
national programs included in the bill such as housing, veterans affairs, disaster assistance,
and space are assessed.
The FY2004 budget presentation, now referred to as the “2004 Annual Plan,” was the
sixth presented under provisions of the 1993 Government Performance and Results Act
(GPRA), which directs that a performance plan accompany the budget. In 2000, EPA
submitted a second GPRA-mandated strategic plan spelling out its mission and 10 major
goals and associated objectives. Its FY2004 budget justification is aligned with these 10
goals:
1. Clean Air
2. Clean and Safe Water
3. Safe Food
4. Preventing Pollution and Reducing Risk in Communities, Homes, Workplaces and
Ecosystems
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5. Better Waste Management, Restoration of Contaminated Waste Sites, and
Emergency Response
6. Reduction of Global and Cross-border Environmental Risks
7. Quality Environmental Information
8. Sound Science, Improved Understanding of Environmental Risk, and Greater
Innovation to Address Environmental Problems
9. A Credible Deterrent to Pollution and Greater Compliance with the Law
(Enforcement)
10. Effective Management
EPA appropriations are a small portion of the federal budget. Each year the President
forwards his budget, which includes revenues and expenditures; Congress then develops its
own budget after evaluating revenue and spending projections. One of the functions is
Function 300, Natural Resources and Environment, and it is here that EPA activities are
placed for purposes of overall fiscal planning. While considering the FY2004 budget
resolution (S.Con.Res. 23), the Senate adopted a provision allowing for an increase in
wastewater and clean water funds of as much as $3 billion and rejected provisions to restore
the Superfund tax and to increase natural resource and environment funding. However,
conferees dropped the wastewater provisions. (For a discussion of this process, see CRS
Report RL31784, The Budget for Fiscal Year 2004.) The specifics of EPA funding are then
laid out during the congressional appropriations process, specifically in the Department of
Veterans Affairs, Housing and Urban Development, and Independent Agencies
Appropriations Bill.
This report will be updated as further legislative developments transpire.

EPA’s Budget by Appropriations Accounts
Traditionally, EPA’s budget has been presented, considered, and enacted according to
several major appropriations accounts. These accounts, including environmental programs
and management, science and technology, Office of Inspector General, buildings and
facilities, and oil spills, representing about one-third of EPA’s appropriation, are sometimes
referred to as the “operating programs” and reflect the heart of the Agency’s research,
regulatory, and enforcement efforts. Two trust fund-based accounts — about 17% of the
Agency’s FY2003 appropriation — are Superfund and the Leaking Underground Storage
Tank (LUST) Trust Fund. All state supporting activities are reflected in the State and Tribal
Assistance Grants (STAG) account. About 45% of the Agency’s FY2004 appropriation is
allotted to this account. Table 1 shows the breakdown of EPA’s funding by appropriations
accounts.
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Table 1. EPA Major Appropriations Accounts:
FY1999-FY2003 Enacted, FY2004 Request and Latest Actions
(in millions of dollars)
House-
FY2000
FY2001
FY2002
FY2003
FY2004
Passed
Account
P.L.
P.L.
PL.
P.L.
Request
H.R.
106-74
106-377
107-73
108-7
2861
Operating
Programs

Science and
Technology 645.0
709.1
698.1
715.5
731.5
767.1
Environmental
Programs and
Management
1,895.3
2,039.2
2,054.5
2,097.7
2,219.7
2,192.6
Buildings &
Facilities
62.5
28.3
25.3
42.6
42.9
42.9
Office of
Inspector
General
32.4
40.8
34.0
35.7
36.8
36.8
Oil Spill
Response
14.9
14.6
15.0
15.4
16.2
16.2
Superfund
1,400.0
1,270.0
1,311.0
1,264.6
1,389.7
1,275.0
Leaking
Underground
Storage Tank
Trust Fund

69.8
70.7
73.0
71.8
72.5
72.5
State and
Tribal
Assistance
Grants

3,581.0
3,623.3
3,733.3
3,834.9
3,121.0
3,602.0
EPA Total
All Programs

7,591.7
8,018.9
7,903.2
8,078.5
7,630.5
8,005.1
Note: This table shows only the major activities, while totals are for all EPA programs. For FY2000 and future years, the
conferees elected to fund the National Institutes of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) and the Agency for Toxic
Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) — a total of $130 million — independent of the Superfund appropriation.
FY2002 figures include $175 million in terrorism supplemental funds included in P.L. 107-117, Div. B. From October
1, 2002, the beginning of FY2003, until February 20, 2003 when a consolidated appropriations bill was signed, the Agency
was funded under a series of continuing resolutions at the FY2002 level of $7.9 billion. The FY2003 Consolidated
Appropriations Act requires a rescission of 0.65% of the amounts enacted which these figures reflect.
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Within the many EPA programs, there are numerous issues with respect to
implementing and administering the media (air, water, etc.) protection programs, wastewater
treatment funding, and Superfund.
Science and Technology
The Science and Technology (S&T) account incorporates elements of the former
research and development account (also called extramural research), as well as EPA’s in-
house research, development, and technology efforts. The FY2004 request of $731 million
for the S&T account represents a 2% increase when compared to the current funding level
of $716 million. The House Committee approved $767 million, adding $25 million for an
environmental research grant program, $2 million for competitive research, $4 million for
Water Environmental Research Foundation, $5 million for the American Water Works
Research Foundation, and $2 million each for the National Decentralized Water Resource
Capacity Development Project and Water Information Sharing and Analysis Center. The
Committee also approved a $5.5 million general reduction for this account. The House
approved the Committee’s recommendation.
EPA’s role in climate research and in the Administration’s Climate Protection Program
(CPP), formerly the Climate Change Technology Initiative (CCTI), has been an issue in past
budget presentations. EPA requested $138.1 million for its objective to “reduce Greenhouse
Gas Emissions” (research and programmatic activities) in FY2004, about the same as current
year funding. About $39 million, or 28%, of the request is under the S&T account; the rest
is under the Environmental Program and Management request.
There is no funding change planned for the $21.5 million research program in climate
change. Most categories of the Climate Protection Program would remain at about current
year levels. This includes some research and incentive programs related to buildings, carbon
removal, international capacity building, and state/local programs. (For a discussion of
climate change issues, see CRS Issue Brief IB89005, Global Climate Change.)
The budget request sought a significant increase of $6.3 million in S&T funds for the
air program to support the Clear Skies Initiative. According to the budget justification, it
would help the Agency “analyze pollutant contributions from different sectors and provide
assistance to states regarding regional and local reductions.” (For additional discussion of
this program, see CRS Issue Brief IB10107, Clean Air Act Issues in the 108th Congress.)
Environmental Programs and Management
The Environmental Programs and Management (EPM) account — representing about
30% of the Agency’s resources — reflects the heart of the Agency’s regulatory, standard-
setting, and enforcement efforts for various media programs such as water quality, air quality,
and hazardous waste management. The President’s FY2004 budget sought $2.2 billion,
$122 million, or 6%, more than the current level. Many complex or contentious regulatory /
standard setting issues can be associated with this account. (CRS Issue Brief IB10115,
Environmental Protection Issues in the 108th Congress, discusses some of them.) The House
Committee approved $2.2 billion, about $95 million more than current year funds and $27
million less than requested. While approving a $22.2 million general reduction for this
account, the Committee included several increases above the budget request. Among these
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are $25 million for an environmental grant program, $18.2 million more for rural water
technical assistance, and $4 million for state water quality ambient monitoring grants. On
the floor, the House adopted an amendment increasing this account by $550,000, to augment
funding for EPA’s environmental justice programs, according to the sponsor.

EPM allocations for clean air, safe food, pollution prevention, global activities,
information, enforcement, and effective management goals would all increase under the
proposal. The House approved a $5.4 million increase for implementing drinking water
requirements, a $15 million for sediment cleanup in the Great Lakes, a $8.6 million increase
for e-gov initiatives, and $30.6 million more for improvements to the information technology
infrastructure.
The EPM account funds most of EPA’s enforcement effort. For EPA’s enforcement
goal the budget sought $430.6 million. A key requested increase sought $14.0 million more
for FY2004, which translates into an additional 100 FTEs. The House action supports the
Agency’s plan to increase enforcement FTEs by 100. Another increase — $8.5 million —
would modernize the Agency’s permit compliance system. On the floor, the House adopted
two enforcement-related amendments. One increases enforcement funding, and decreases
media relations funding, by $1 million to enforce bilateral agreements, specifically enforcing
a 1992 U.S.-Canada waste agreement; the other redirects funding by $5.4 million, and staff
by 54 FTEs, for the Office of Compliance and Enforcement for civil enforcement.
In addition, the House adopted an amendment that struck committee-approved language
related to drinking water health effects studies, language dealing with contaminants, and
language on purchasing American-made goods and services. According to the Chairman of
the VA-HUD Subcommittee, these provisions were legislative in nature.
The House also adopted amendments prohibiting EPA from using a numerical estimate
that places a lower statistical value on the lives of older individuals than on the lives of
others, and another that continues the ban on human testing of pesticides. An OMB May 30
memo directed federal agencies to use a method that could value the lives of the elderly less
than others when calculating the benefits of regulations.
On June 3, a federal court reinstated an earlier approach for EPA to use when evaluating
third-party human studies of chemicals, pending further rulemaking at the agency (CropLife
America v. EPA
, D.C. Cir., No. 02-1057, 6/3/03). The court reinstated EPA’s earlier
practice of considering the tests on a case-by-case basis. EPA had relied on the third-party
human tests of pesticides for decades until 1998.
Office of Inspector General
The President’s FY2004 budget sought, and the House Committee approved, $37.0
million for the Office of Inspector General, $1.1 million more than current year funding.
Buildings and Facilities
The FY2004 request of $43 million for the Buildings and Facilities account is about
the same as current funding. The House approved this amount. An amendment adopted by
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the House decreased this account by $550,000 and increased the Environment and Program
Management account by the same amount.
Oil Spill Response
For EPA’s oil spill response activities, the President’s FY2004 budget sought, and the
House Committee approved, $16 million, $1 million more than current funding.
Superfund
The FY2004 EPA request sought $1.4 billion for the Superfund account. This is $125
million, or 10%, more than current year funding. Taxing authority to support the Superfund
Trust Fund expired on December 31, 1995, and the fund balance has been declining since
then. It is anticipated that trust monies will only be available in significant amounts through
FY2003. The House approved $1.275 billion, $10.4 million above the current level and
$114.7 million less than requested. On the floor, the House rejected an amendment that
would have increased Superfund by $114 million and similarly reduced NASA’s Prometheus
Program.
Also part of the President’s FY2004 budget is a $210 million request for cleaning up
certain urban sites, called Brownfields, that have developmental potential. This is not funded
under the Superfund account. The $180.5 million for grants is included in the State and
Tribal Assistance Grants account, and $30.3 million for EPA’s Brownfields administrative
expenses is contained in the EPM account.
While the Superfund program has completed cleanup construction at 851 sites as of
June 30, there are significant identified needs. Two major studies have concluded that the
nation’s toxic cleanup program has major challenges, requiring large funding levels for the
next few years. GAO estimates that 85% of non-federal National Priority List sites will be
cleaned up by 2008 (GAO/RCED-00-25, Superfund: Information on the Program’s Funding
and Status
). This will necessitate appropriations averaging at least $875 million annually
through FY2008, according to GAO. This report calculates costs of $8.2 to $11.7 billion for
studies, design, and remedial work to address all remaining sites. In 2001, Resources for the
Future (RFF) released its EPA-funded report requested by the appropriations committees.
Superfund’s Future: What Will It Cost? estimates that for fiscal years 2000 through 2009,
EPA will have to spend $14 billion to $16.4 billion on the Superfund program and that
appropriations will have to be maintained at current levels through these years. RFF
anticipated in its base case scenario that “EPA’s need for Superfund monies will not decrease
appreciably below FY1999 expenditures of $1.54 billion until 2006.” (For further discussion
of the Superfund program, see CRS Issue Brief IB10114, Brownfields and Superfund Issues
in the 108th Congress
.)
The FY2004 budget assumes about 40 construction completions per year, about average
for the program over its history, but about half of the number at the height of the program a
few years ago, according to EPA. The proposed $125 million increase would be devoted to
beginning cleanup at 10 to 15 new sites. In addition, the budget asks for $6.8 million more
for a National Decontamination Team (Decon Team) and $7 million more for specialized
field supplies and laboratory support.
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Derived from industry taxes which expired in 1995, the trust fund has paid for the
majority, often over 80%, of Superfund program activities for several past years. In the
current year, the fund supports about 50% of the program costs, while the proposal for
FY2004 anticipates the trust fund paying for about 21% of program costs, with the general
fund paying the balance. In future years, general appropriations may have to pay the majority
of, if not all, program costs. So the contribution of general revenues to the annual
appropriation has increased in recent years, from $250 million annually in FY1993 to
FY1998, to about $600 to $700 million in FY2000 to FY2003 and $1.1 billion in FY2004.
Some have criticized this fundamental change in policy, maintaining that it diminishes the
responsibility of polluters, under the principle that the “polluter pays,” and instead spreads
pollution costs across the economy, by funding them as costs to the general Treasury. Others
dispute this, claiming that responsible parties continue to pay through negotiated cleanup
settlements. (For further discussion of the trust fund, see CARS Report RL31410, Superfund
Taxes or General Revenues: Future Funding Options for the Superfund Program
.)
During March 25th consideration of the FY2004 Budget Resolution (S.Con.Res. 23),
the Senate tabled an amendment to reinstate the taxes supporting Superfund. It would have
increased the total federal revenues by at least $15 billion over 10 years and reduced the
deficit accordingly, according to its sponsor, Senator Frank Lautenberg.

The level of appropriations for FY2004 and the role of general revenues will be a matter
for the appropriators to consider. Whether the Superfund tax is reinstated is likely to be a
point of contention. Superfund tax issues have generally been addressed by the revenue
committees.
Leaking Underground Storage Tanks
The President’s FY2004 budget sought, and the House Subcommittee recommended,
$73 million, equal to current year funding, for the Leaking Underground Storage Tank
(LUST) program, which assists states in addressing substandard underground petroleum
storage tanks. On the floor, the House adopted an amendment that increases this funding by
$7.3 million, an amount transferred from the Science and Technology Account.
The status of state LUST programs is a significant issue. Many states are finding it
difficult to finance their programs. At the same time, the fact that the balance of the LUST
Trust Fund has passed the $2.2 billion threshold, and the likelihood it will grow even larger
if not drawn upon significantly, has led some to call for allowing greater use of the fund
balance by states. (For further discussion, refer to CARS Report 97-471 ENR, Leaking
Underground Storage Tank Cleanup Issues
.)
State and Tribal Assistance Programs
For the State and Tribal Assistance Grants Account (STAG), the account that supports
state and local government activities including administering programs and capital
construction, the FY2004 request has been again particularly controversial. The President
requested $3.12 billion, which is $714 million (or 19%) less than the current funding level
of $3.83 billion. Reductions in funding for the Clean Water State Revolving fund and
targeted grants are responsible this planned decrease. The chief elements of the STAG
request include:
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! $850 million, as compared to the current level of $1.34 billion, for State
Revolving Funds (Clean Water);
! $850 million for State Revolving Funds (Drinking Water), slightly more
than the current $844 million;
! $50 million for Mexican Border infrastructure projects, currently funded at
$50 million;
! $40 million for Alaska Native Village water infrastructure projects, current
year funding for which is $43 million; $3 million requested for remediating
above-ground storage tanks in Alaska;
! $8 million for one targeted drinking water project in Puerto Rico; $314
million for 483 individually earmarked grants was provided in FY2003;
! $1.2 billion, as compared to the current $1.15 million, for traditional grants
to states for their administration of various environmental programs; and,
! $180 million for the Brownfields program grants, including $120 million
for assessment grants and to capitalize revolving loan funds; total grant
funding for the current year is $140.5 million.
In making its recommendations, the House Committee added $350 million to the Clean
Water State Revolving Loan Funds, for a total of $1.2 billion. In addition, the Committee
has included $180 million for a targeted program “making grants to communities for
construction of drinking water, wastewater, stormwater infrastructure and for water quality
protection.”
The major capital needs that communities face for funding drinking water and
wastewater facility construction remain the chief issue associated with the STAG account.
By statutory design, the federal contribution to meeting most of these needs has been through
capitalizing state revolving funds from which states loan monies to communities. Since most
localities are now borrowing their funding, any remaining direct grants listed above for
special projects have become controversial. The total national needs remain great. EPA’s
1996 needs survey for clean water SRF monies estimated remaining needs at $139.5 billion
to $200 billion through the year 2016, while sewerage agencies estimate funding needs may
be as high as $330 billion. A September 2002 EPA “Gap Analysis” estimates that $390
billion will be needed over the next 20 years to replace and build wastewater facilities. The
needs of small communities remain a special component of this problem. A November 2002
Congressional Budget Office report, Future Investment in Drinking Water and Wastewater
Infrastructure
, included two sets of projections of 20-year costs for wastewater systems. A
low-cost case included an estimate for average annual investment costs of $13.0 billion for
wastewater, compared to an estimate of $20.9 billion under the high-cost case.
One estimate has spotlighted the FY2004 water SRF request even further. A
stakeholder group, the Water Infrastructure Network (WIN), in Clean and Safe Water for the
21st Century
, estimates total wastewater and drinking water capital needs at around $1 trillion
over the next 20 years, even more if operation and maintenance needs are added in (they
currently are not eligible for federal assistance). WIN estimates that 20-year capital funding
needs for wastewater are about $460 billion and for drinking water about $480 billion. WIN
foresees a $23 billion per year funding gap: $12 billion for wastewater and $11 billion for
drinking water capital needs.
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Recognizing a shortfall, the FY2004 budget presentation states that the proposed $850
million annual level for the Clean Water SRF will be sustained at this annual level until 2011
for a total of $4.4 billion, which is expected to reduce the $21 billion gap between current
capital funding and future EPA-estimated needs. According to EPA budget justifications,
“This continuing investment in the CWSRF is expected to increase the long-term target
revolving level of the CWSRF from $2 billion per year to $2.8 billion per year, a 40 percent
increase.”
While much attention is devoted to the role of federal appropriations in current
wastewater infrastructure funding, many believe that legislative modifications are necessary.
Reauthorization bills have been introduced. (See CARS Issue Brief IB10108, Clean Water
Issues in the 108th
Congress, for discussion).
In February 2001, EPA issued the second drinking water needs survey, which projected
that public drinking water systems need to invest $151 billion over 20 years. Part of the
increase is attributable to new regulations and about half is due to installation and
rehabilitation of transmission and distribution systems.
For state administrative grants, the President’s FY2004 budget sought $1.20 billion,
$128 million, or 12%, more than current level of $1.15 billion. These grants fund state
programs that administer various environmental protection programs. The FY2002 and
FY2003 budget requests contained proposals for new enforcement grants to the states which
the appropriators did not approve. The FY2004 presentation does not contain a similar
proposal.
During consideration of the FY2004 Budget Resolution (S.Con.Res. 23), the Senate
adopted a non-binding amendment opting to increase funding for clean water and drinking
water revolving funds by as much as $3 billion. However, this provision was not included
in the final resolution.
Conclusion
In seeking lower funding for EPA and for water infrastructure in particular, the FY2004
request for EPA was similar to proposals of the last several years. In each case, the
Administration sought to greatly reduce popular direct grants for wastewater infrastructure.
Congress responded by reinstating most of these funds during these years. As for Superfund,
another popular program, the proposal sought slightly higher funding, but not as high as
recommended by Resources for the Future and others. Unaddressed is the condition of the
Superfund Trust Fund itself, whose funding source ceased in 1995 and whose balance is
disappearing. In the absence of a renewal of the supporting tax, the Superfund program is
now almost fully funded by the general treasury.
The proposal would advance several Administration initiatives and reflect current
policy. For instance, it asked for $210 million for the Brownfields program to implement
recent congressionally mandated provisions. Funding is requested to advance the Clear Skies
initiative and more funds are requested for state programs. To understand climate change,
the Administration sought about the same level as current funding.

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LEGISLATION
S.Con.Res. 23 (Nickles)
Congressional Budget Resolution for FY2004. Passed Senate March 26, 2003, amended,
including EPA amendments. The Senate vitiated previous S.Con.Res. 23 passage after
incorporating S.Con.Res. 23 in H.Con.Res. 95. Conferees did not include EPA amendments
in conference version.
H.R. 2861 (Walsh)
VA-HUD-Independent Agencies Appropriations for FY2003. Reported from the Committee
on Appropriations, July 21, 2003 (H.Rept. 108- 235). Passed House July 25.
CONGRESSIONAL HEARINGS, REPORTS, AND DOCUMENTS
U.S. Senate. Committee on Appropriations. Subcommittee on VA-HUD-Independent
Agencies. Environmental Protection Agency FY2004 Budget. March 20, 2003.
Washington, GPO. (To be published)
U.S. House of Representatives. Committee on Appropriations. Subcommittee on VA-HUD-
Independent Agencies. Environmental Protection Agency FY2004 Budget. April 2,
2003. Washington, GPO. (To be published)
CHRONOLOGY
02-03-03 — President submits FY2004 budget, including $7.7 billion for EPA.
03-20-03 — Senate Committee on Appropriations, Subcommittee on VA-HUD-Independent
Agencies, conducts hearings on EPA’s FY2004 budget proposal.
04-02-03 — House Committee on Appropriations, Subcommittee on VA-HUD-Independent
Agencies, conducts hearings on EPA’s FY2004 budget proposal.
07-15-03 — House Committee on Appropriations, Subcommittee on VA-HUD-Independent
Agencies, recommends $8.0 billion for EPA.
07-21-03 — House Committee on Appropriations approves $8.0 billion for EPA.
07-25-03 — House passes H.R. 2861, including $8.0 billion for EPA.
CRS-11