EPA Invites 39 Metropolitan Districts to Apply for Water Infrastructure Loans

LENEXA, KAN. — The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced that 39 municipalities are being invited to apply for a Water Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act (WIFIA) loans.

In total, EPA invited 39 new projects to apply for WIFIA loans, and four projects are being added to a waiting list. The Agency anticipates that, as funds become available, $6.7 billion in WIFIA loans will help finance over $15 billion in water infrastructure projects to protect public health and water quality across 24 states.

“Far too many communities still face significant water challenges, making these transformative investments in water infrastructure so crucial,” said EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan. “The WIFIA-invited projects will deliver major benefits like the creation of good-paying jobs and the safeguarding of public health, especially in underserved and under-resourced communities.”

EPA’s WIFIA program will provide selected borrowers with innovative financing tools to address pressing public health and environmental challenges in their communities. Consistent with its announced priorities, the WIFIA program is making $1.2 billion in loans available to support infrastructure needs in historically underserved communities. Additionally, 14 projects will help protect infrastructure from the impacts of extreme weather events and the climate crisis. New and innovative approaches, including cybersecurity, green infrastructure, and water reuse, are included in 24 projects.

By diversifying its geographic reach and the types of selected borrowers, the WIFIA program will also expand the types of projects it supports. For the first time, entities in Connecticut, Delaware and Hawaii are invited to apply. Three small communities, with populations of 25,000 or less, are selected for WIFIA loans totaling nearly $62 million. In addition, seven projects submitted by private borrowers and public-private partnerships totaling over $1.5 billion in WIFIA financing are included.

EPA is also inviting state agencies in Indiana and New Jersey to apply for a total of $472 million in WIFIA loans through EPA’s state infrastructure financing authority WIFIA (SWIFIA) program. EPA’s SWIFIA loans are available exclusively to state infrastructure financing authority borrowers, commonly known as State Revolving Fund (SRF) programs, and will allow these programs to finance more infrastructure projects in their states. These programs will combine state resources, annual capitalization grants, and the low-cost, flexible SWIFIA loans to accelerate investment in drinking water and wastewater infrastructure to modernize aging systems and tackle new contaminants.

WIFIA-Invited Projects:

  • Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District (MSD): $278 million for MSD Project Clear - Deer Creek Watershed/Lemay Service Area System Improvements.
  • City of Wichita (Kansas): $181 million for the Wastewater Reclamation Facilities Biological Nutrient Removal Improvements Project.
  • Baltimore City Department of Public Works: $36 million for the Water Infrastructure Advancement 2021 Project.
  • Charlotte Water (North Carolina): $169 million for the Mallard Creek Sewer Basin Wastewater Collection and Treatment Improvements Program.
  • City of Ashland (Oregon): $36 million for a 7.0 Million Gallons per Day Water Treatment Plant.
  • City of Bellingham (Washington): $136 million for the Post Point Resource Recovery Plant Biosolids Project.
  • City of Boise (Idaho): $272 million for Water Renewal Services Capital Investments Projects.
  • City of Chattanooga (Tennessee): $186 million for Wastewater Compliance and Sustainability Projects.
  • City of Cortland (New York): $12 million for the Homer Avenue Gateway Project.
  • City of Memphis (Tennessee): $44 million for Stormwater Upgrades.
  • City of Oregon City (Oregon): $12 million for Water Rehabilitation, Resiliency and Improvement Projects.
  • City of Philadelphia: $260 million for the Water Department 2021 Project.
  • City of Port Washington (Wisconsin): $12 million for the Water Treatment Plant Improvement Project.
  • City of Santa Cruz (California): $164 million for the Santa Cruz Water Program.
  • City of Westminster (Colorado): $130 million for the Water2025 Project.
  • County of Hawaii (Hawaii): $24 million for Hawaii Wastewater Treatment Upgrades.
  • EPCOR Foothills Water Project Inc. (Oregon): $76 million for the Lake Oswego Wastewater Treatment Replacement Project.
  • Fishers Island Water Works Corporation (New York): $14 million for Water System Improvements.
  • Gainesville Regional Utilities (Florida): $14 million for the Sanitary Sewer Replacement and Improvement Project.
  • Helix Water District (California): $16 million for the Drinking Water Reliability Project.
  • King County (Washington): $287 million Master Agreement.
  • Marin Municipal Water District (California): $11 million for Marin Water.
  • Metro Water Services (Tennessee): $186 million for Process Advancements at the Omohundro and K.R. Harrington Water Treatment Plants Project.
  • Narragansett Bay Commission (Rhode Island): $28 million for Field's Point Resiliency Improvements.
  • New Castle County (Delaware): $32 million for the Christina River Force Main Rehabilitation Project.
  • Project 7 Water Authority (Colorado): $39 million for the Ridgway Water Treatment Plant.
  • Rialto Water Service LLC (California): $68 million for Microgrid and System Improvements.
  • San Francisco Public Utilities Commission: $618 million for Wastewater Capital Plan Resilience Projects.
  • Santa Clara Valley Water District (California): $575 million for the Pacheco Reservoir Expansion Project.
  • Santa Clara Valley Water District (California): $80 million for the Safe, Clean Water and Natural Flood Protection Program.
  • Santa Margarita Water District (California): $22 million for Recycled Water Conversion.
  • Sharyland Water Supply Corporation (Texas): $14 million for Sharyland Water Supply Corporation Water System Infrastructure Improvements.
  • South Central Connecticut Regional Water Authority (Connecticut): $20 million for Lake Whitney Dam and Spillway Improvements.
  • Tualatin Valley Water District (Oregon): $16 million for the Water System Upgrades Program.
  • United Water Conservation District (California): $52 million for the Santa Felicia Safety Improvement Project.
  • Upper Santa Ana River Watershed Infrastructure Financing Authority (California): $177 million for the Watershed Connect Project.
  • Village of New Lenox (Illinois): $70 million for Phase 1 Improvements Projects.

Waiting List Projects:

  • American Infrastructure Holdings (South Dakota): $20 million for the Sioux City Biosolids to Fertilizer Project.
  • Lake Restoration Solutions LLC (Utah): $893 million for the Utah Lake Restoration Project.
  • Northern Water (Colorado): $464 million for the Northern Integrated Supply Project - Glade Reservoir Complex.
  • Southland Water Agency (Illinois): $479 million for the Southland Water Agency Infrastructure System.

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