Wednesday, February 09, 2005

EPA funding for FY 2006

: "...Most of the EPA [6%] cut proposed for 2006 is from a reduction in funding for a revolving fund that states use to upgrade sewage and septic systems, and storm-water run-off projects. Funding for the fund fell $361 million, or 33 percent, in the Bush administration budget proposal.

Environmental groups say cities need the loans and grants to replace and upgrade aging sewage systems, some of which are over a century old.

'This year's cuts are really bad for clean water,' said Rob Perks at the Natural Resources Defense Council.

But the lower request actually offsets higher funds appropriated by Congress in 2004 and 2005, which will maintain the total commitment to the program of $6.8 billion through 2011, an EPA spokeswoman said. 'Federal funding of this program was never intended to be permanent,' she said.

The decision to cut the state water program was 'one of savings and making some tough choices,' Johnson said.

The administration's budget plan would hold steady a separate $850 million state fund for clean drinking water.

The EPA budget also would increase by $47 million funding to clean up 600 toxic 'brownfield' sites and add $28 million to remove toxic sediments from the Great Lakes.

Money for Superfund -- an industry program to clean up toxic waste sites -- would rise slightly to $1.28 billion."

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