Order Code 97-677 ENR
Updated May 10, 2004
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Safe Drinking Water Act:
State Revolving Fund Program
Mary Tiemann
Specialist in Environmental Policy
Resources, Science, and Industry Division
Summary
In the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) Amendments of 1996 (P.L. 104-182),
Congress authorized a drinking water state revolving loan fund (DWSRF) program to
help public water systems finance infrastructure projects needed to comply with federal
drinking water regulations and to protect public health. Under this program, states
receive capitalization grants to make loans for drinking water projects and to support
certain other SDWA activities. The DWSRF program was authorized at $1 billion
annually through FY2003. Since the program was first funded in FY1997, Congress has
provided $6.94 billion, including $844.9 million for FY2004. Through June 2003, the
DWSRF program had provided $6.37 billion in assistance and supported 5,333 projects.
For FY2005, the Administration has requested $850 million for this program.
The Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA’s) 2001 survey of capital
improvement needs for public water systems indicated that communities need to invest
$150.9 billion on drinking water infrastructure improvements over the next 20 years.
Interest in addressing infrastructure funding needs and related issues continues in the
108th Congress. Key issues include the gap between estimated needs and funding,
SDWA compliance and cost issues, particularly for small systems, and the availability
of funds for security improvements. Bills have been introduced to increase DWSRF
funding levels and to provide grants to small systems. This report will be updated.
Drinking Water SRF Program
The 104th Congress substantially revised the Safe Drinking Water Act with the 1996
SDWA Amendments. A key new provision, Section 1452, authorized a drinking water
state revolving loan fund (DWSRF) program to help public water systems finance
improvements needed to comply with federal drinking water regulations and to address
the most serious risks to human health. The law authorizes EPA to make grants to states
to capitalize drinking water DWSRFs. States must match 20% of the federal grant and
develop intended use plans that indicate how allotted funds will be used. States may use
the DWSRF to provide loans and other assistance to eligible public water systems for
expenditures that EPA has determined will facilitate SDWA compliance or significantly
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

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further the Act’s health protection objectives. Eligible projects include installation and
replacement of failing treatment facilities, distribution systems, and certain storage
facilities. Projects to replace aging infrastructure are eligible if they are needed to
maintain compliance or to further public health protection goals. Projects to consolidate
water supplies also may be eligible. This program is patterned after the 1987 Clean Water
Act SRF (CWSRF) program for financing municipal wastewater treatment projects.
Public water systems eligible to receive DWSRF assistance include community
water systems (whether publicly or privately owned) and not-for-profit noncommunity
water systems.1 States generally may not provide DWSRF assistance to systems that lack
the capacity to ensure compliance with the Act or that are in significant noncompliance
with SDWA requirements unless these systems meet certain conditions to return to
compliance. Systems owned by federal agencies are not eligible. Also, some states have
laws or policies that preclude privately owned utilities from receiving DWSRF assistance.
The 1996 law authorized appropriations for the DWSRF program of $599 million
for FY1994 and $1 billion for each of FY1995 through FY2003. Congress has provided
roughly $6.94 billion to date, including $1.275 billion for FY1997 (the first year for which
DWSRF authority was in place), $725 million for FY1998, $775 million for FY1999,
$820 million for FY2000, $825 million for FY2001, and $850 million for FY2002, $850
million for FY2003 ($844.5 million after applying the mandatory across-the-board 0.65%
reduction to accounts funded in P.L. 108-7), and $850 million for FY2004 ($844.9 million
when adjusted for the mandatory 0.59% reduction under P.L. 108-199, the Consolidated
Appropriations Act for FY2004). The President has requested $850 million for FY2005.
Through June 2003, EPA had awarded more than $5 billion in capitalization grants
that, when combined with the state match, bond proceeds, interest payments and other
funds, amounted to $8.04 billion in DWSRF funds available for loans and other
assistance. Also through that period, more than 3,100 loans had been made, and 5,333
discrete projects had received assistance. Total assistance provided by the program
reached $6.37 billion.
DWSRF Allotments and Set-Asides
EPA is required to allot DWSRF funds among the states based on the results of the
most recent quadrennial needs survey (discussed below). Each state and the District of
Columbia must receive at least 1% of available funds, and as much as 0.33% must be
made available for grants to the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern
Mariana Islands, American Samoa, and Guam. Before distributing funds among the states,
EPA sets aside from the annual DWSRF appropriation $2 million to pay for monitoring
of unregulated contaminants in small and medium water systems and 1.5% for grants to
Indian Tribes and Alaska Native Villages (roughly $12.6 million for FY2003). EPA is
also authorized to reserve annually up to $30 million to reimburse states for operator
training and certification costs if separate funding is not provided under Section 1419;
EPA reserved the full amount for FY2001 and FY2002, and $29.4 million for FY2003.
1 A community water system is a system that serves at least 15 service connections used by year-
round residents, or that regularly serves at least 25 year-round residents. Other public water
systems are noncommunity water systems, e.g., schools and workplaces with their own wells.

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Finally, EPA may reserve up to 2%, with a $15 million cap, to provide technical
assistance to small systems; however, funding for this activity is provided under Section
1442, and EPA has not set-aside SRF funds for this purpose. (For state allotments and set-
asides for FY2002 and FY2003, see [http://www.epa.gov/safewater/dwsrf/allot02.html].)
The law also includes several set-asides and directives that apply to states. These
provisions offer states flexibility in tailoring their individual DWSRF programs to address
state priorities. They also demonstrate the emphasis that the 1996 Amendments place on
enhancing compliance, especially among smaller systems. The Act requires states to
make available at least 15% of their annual allotment for loan assistance to systems that
serve 10,000 or fewer persons, to the extent the funds can be obligated to eligible projects.
The Act also allows states to use up to 30% of their DWSRF grant to provide additional
assistance, such as forgiveness of loan principal or negative interest rate loans, to help
economically disadvantaged communities (as determined by the state).
Among other optional set-aside provisions, states may reserve as much as 4% of their
DWSRF allotment to cover the costs of administering the DWSRF program and an
additional portion to help pay the costs of other mandates added by the 1996 law.
Specifically, states may set aside as much as 10% for a combination of the following:
public water system supervision programs, technical assistance through source water
protection programs, state capacity development strategies, and operator certification
programs. To use DWSRF funds for these purposes, states must match these expenditures
with an equal amount of state funds. States may use an additional 2% of funds to provide
technical assistance to systems that serve 10,000 or fewer persons. States also have the
option of using as much as 15% for a combination of the following: loans for the
acquisition of land or conservation easements, loans to implement voluntary source water
protection measures; technical and financial assistance to systems as part of a capacity
development strategy; and development and implementation of ground water protection
programs. Expenditures may not exceed 10% for any one of these activities. (In addition
to these set-asides, other SDWA provisions include specific authorizations of
appropriations for several of these programs and activities.)
To further enhance public water system compliance with drinking water regulations,
the 1996 Amendments added new capacity development and operator certification
requirements. The law requires EPA to withhold part of the DWSRF grant from states that
do not meet these mandates. Section 1420 requires states to establish capacity
development programs that include 1) legal authority or other means to ensure that new
systems have the technical, financial, and managerial capacity to meet SDWA
requirements; and 2) a strategy to assist existing systems that are experiencing difficulties
in coming into compliance. If a state has not met these requirements, EPA must withhold
the state’s grant as follows: 20%, for FY1999 and beyond, for failure to obtain authority
to ensure that new systems have compliance capacity; and 10% in FY2001, 15% in
FY2002, and 20% in FY2003 for failure to adopt capacity development strategies. The
total amount withheld in any year for these purposes may not exceed 20%. In addition,
states were required to adopt programs for training and certifying operators of community
and non-transient non-community water systems, and since 2001, EPA must withhold
20% of a state’s allotment if the state does not met these requirements. Any funds
withheld under each program would be reallotted among states that have met the
requirements for either capacity development or operator certification.

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Congress designed the DWSRF program to give states implementation flexibility.
Congress also gave states flexibility to set priorities between the SDWA and Clean Water
Act SRF programs to accommodate the divergent drinking water and wastewater needs
and priorities among the states. The law authorized states to transfer as much as 33% of
the annual DWSRF allotment to the CWSRF or an equivalent amount from the CWSRF
to the DWSRF. The statute authorized these transfers through FY2001. In October 2000,
EPA recommended that Congress continue to authorize transfers between the SRF
programs to give states flexibility to address their most pressing water infrastructure
needs.2 Subsequently, the conference reports for EPA’s appropriations have authorized
states to continue transferring funds for between these programs.
Drinking Water Infrastructure Needs
The Act requires EPA to assess the capital improvement needs of eligible public
water systems and to report to Congress in 1997 and every four years thereafter.
Concurrently and in consultation with the Indian Health Service and Indian Tribes, EPA
must assess needs for drinking water treatment facilities to serve Indian Tribes. EPA is
required to distribute the DWSRF funds to the states based on the results of the latest
needs survey. Eligible systems include approximately 55,000 community water systems
and 21,400 not-for profit noncommunity water systems.
In February 2001, EPA issued the second needs survey which found that eligible
water systems need to invest $150.9 billion over 20 years (from 1999 through 2018).3 Of
this amount, $102.5 billion (68%) is currently needed to ensure the provision of safe
drinking water. EPA notes that a “current need” typically involves installing, upgrading,
or replacing infrastructure to allow a system to continue to deliver safe drinking water and
that systems with current needs are usually not in violation of a drinking water standard.
Of the total 20-year need, EPA further estimates that $31.2 billion is needed to comply
with existing SDWA regulations. Treatment for microbiological contaminants alone
accounts for $22.4 billion (72%) of the total regulatory need.
The survey also presented the 20-year needs estimates by category: transmission and
distribution, treatment, source, storage, and other. The largest needs category, installation
and rehabilitation of transmission and distribution systems, accounts for $83.2 billion
(more than half) of total 20-year needs. Water treatment needs constituted the next largest
category, accounting for $38.0 billion of total needs, while water storage accounts for
$18.4 billion, and source (projects needed to obtain safe water supplies including
rehabilitation and installation of wells) accounts for $9.6 billion of total 20-year needs.
For further perspective, the needs survey breaks down the 20-year needs estimates
according to system size and ownership. Large systems (serving more than 50,000 people)
account for $61.8 billion (41%) of total 20-year need; medium systems (serving from
3,301 to 50,000 people) account for $43.3 billion; and small systems (serving 3,300 or
2 Environmental Protection Agency. Implementation of Transfers in the Clean Water and
Drinking Water State Revolving Fund Programs. Report to Congress
. October 2000. 41p.
Available at [http://www.epa.gov/safewater/dwsrf.html#Facts].
3 Environmental Protection Agency. Drinking Water Infrastructure Needs Survey: Second Report
to Congress.
February 2001. Available at [http://www.epa.gov/safewater/needs.html].

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fewer people) account for $31.2 billion. Noncommunity water systems have estimated
needs of $3.1 billion. The survey indicates that American Indian and Alaska Native
Village water systems have estimated 20-year needs totaling $2.2 billion, of which $2.0
billion is needed currently to ensure the provision of safe drinking water. Estimates of
per-household need vary widely depending on system category and size. EPA estimates
that the 20-year need per household served by a large system averages $790. The 20-year
need rises to $1,250 for households served by medium systems, $3,000 for households
served by small systems, $6,500 for households served by American Indian systems, and
$51,500 for households served by Alaska Native systems.
EPA notes that the total need estimate is conservative for several reasons: 1) systems
were required to meet stringent documentation criteria when identifying needs; 2) many
systems could not identify all of their needs for the entire 20-year period (capital
improvement plans often cover only 1 to 5 years); and 3) the survey is limited to
estimating eligible needs, thus excluding capital projects related solely to dams, raw water
reservoirs, fire protection, and future growth.
Other needs assessments have also been prepared. In 2000, the Water Infrastructure
Network (WIN) (a coalition of state and local officials, water and wastewater service
providers, health and environmental groups and others) issued a report concluding that,
over the next 20 years, water and wastewater systems need to invest $23 billion annually
more than current investments to meet SDWA and CWA health and environmental
priorities and to replace aging infrastructure. In 2000, WIN and other groups presented
proposals for a multi-billion dollar investment program in water infrastructure. (For more
details, see CRS Report RL31116, Water Infrastructure Funding: Review and Analysis
of Current Issues
.) In 2002, EPA issued The Clean Water And Drinking Water
Infrastructure Gap Analysis
which identified potential funding gaps between projected
needs and spending from 2000 through 2019. This analysis estimated a potential 20-year
funding gap for drinking water capital and operations and maintenance ranging from $45
billion to $263 billion, depending on spending levels.4
Program Issues
With the authorization of the DWSRF program, Congress acted to help public water
systems finance the costs of infrastructure needed to achieve or maintain compliance with
SDWA requirements. While this federal/state program provides an important means for
addressing drinking water needs, a substantial gap remains between financing needs and
available funds. The most recent needs survey identified $150.9 billion in drinking water
infrastructure needs over 20 years, while the DWSRF program was authorized at $9.6
billion over seven years. The lower appropriated amounts, augmented by the state match,
leveraging, repayments, and interest earnings, have created significant financing capacity
among the state DWSRFs. However, many expect a funding gap to persist, and new
SDWA requirements are expected to drive up future estimates of needs.
Other drinking water mandates eligible for DWSRF funding heighten competition
for these resources. The DWSRF program embraces competing objectives, and thus, this
competition is perhaps unavoidable. On the one hand, the fundamental purpose of the
4 EPA’s Clean Water and Drinking Water Infrastructure Gap Analysis Report (EPA 816-R-02-
020) is available at [http://www.epa.gov/safewater/dwsrf.html#Facts].

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program is to capitalize revolving funds in the states in order to generate a perpetual
source of funding for drinking water projects. On the other hand, Congress authorized
multiple set-asides to fund other drinking water program priorities and requirements, such
as system compliance capacity assurance, operator certification, and small system
technical assistance. Overall, states may use as much as 31% of their grant for the set-
asides and 30% to provide loan subsidies to economically disadvantaged communities.
While these options give states flexibility to tailor their programs to meet individual
needs, using funds for these activities could significantly erode the corpus of state funds
and slow the rate at which they become capitalized. A concern for states is that, to the
degree that Congress relies on the DWSRF to fund other SDWA requirements instead of
providing separate appropriations, the potential of the DWSRF program is diminished.
A separate issue is the need for communities to address drinking water infrastructure
needs that are outside the scope of the DWSRF program. Community water systems
typically must address several categories of infrastructure requirements unrelated to
SDWA compliance and, thus, generally ineligible for DWSRF assistance. These
categories include future growth, ongoing rehabilitation, and operation and maintenance
of systems. EPA has reported that outdated and deteriorated drinking water infrastructure
poses a fundamental long-term threat to drinking water safety, and that in many
communities, basic infrastructure costs could far exceed SDWA compliance costs.
Although the DWSRF program does not address certain categories of needs and excludes
many noncommunity water systems from coverage, with this program Congress has added
a valuable tool to the mix of federal, state, and local initiatives intended to help
communities ensure the safety of their drinking water.
In the 107th Congress, several committees held hearings on the SRF programs,
infrastructure needs, and funding issues. The Senate Environment and Public Works
Committee reported S. 1961 to increase funding authority for the CWSRF and DWSRF
programs and to create a small system grant program. Congress also addressed security
issues facing the nation’s water infrastructure. The Bioterrorism Preparedness Act (P.L.
107-188) authorized funding for drinking water utilities to conduct vulnerability
assessments, prepare emergency response plans, and make basic security enhancements.
Additionally, EPA identified security measures that may be funded through DWSRFs.
(For more information, see CRS Report RL31294, Safeguarding the Nation’s Drinking
Water: EPA and Congressional Actions
.)
Issues continuing in the 108th Congress include the gap between drinking water
infrastructure funding and estimated needs, small community funding and affordability
issues, and the availability of DWSRF and other funds for security measures. Congress
may continue previous efforts to enact legislation to expand financial assistance to public
water systems for drinking water infrastructure projects. However, in the current
budgetary environment, questions concerning the federal role in water infrastructure
funding could receive greater attention. Congressional committees also might explore
alternative approaches to helping communities improve their capacity to finance
infrastructure projects needed to comply with SDWA requirements and to meet other
needs. (For more information on congressional action, see CRS Issue Brief IB10118, Safe
Drinking Water Act: Implementation and Issues
.)