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United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

Testimony: 

Before the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, House of 
Representatives: 

For Release on Delivery: 
Expected at 10:00 a.m. EDT:
Wednesday, May 4, 2011: 

Recovery Act: 

Preliminary Observations on the Use of Funds for Clean and Drinking 
Water Projects: 

Statement of David C. Trimble, Acting Director:
Natural Resources and Environment: 

GAO-11-642T: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-GAO-11-642T, testimony before the Committee on 
Transportation and Infrastructure, House of Representatives. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Recovery Act) 
included $4 billion for the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) 
Clean Water State Revolving Fund (SRF) and $2 billion for the agency’s 
Drinking Water SRF. 

This testimony is based on GAO’s ongoing review of clean and drinking 
water projects. It provides preliminary observations on (1) the status 
and use of Recovery Act SRF program funds nationwide and in nine 
selected states, (2) jobs funded by the Recovery Act SRF programs and 
federal and state efforts to oversee the programs, and (3) challenges, 
if any, that states have faced in implementing Recovery Act 
requirements. 

For this ongoing work, GAO is, among other things, obtaining and 
analyzing EPA nationwide data on the status of Recovery Act clean and 
drinking water funds and projects, as well as information from a 
nonprobability sample of nine states that it had not reviewed in 
previous bimonthly reports. These states represent all but one of 
EPA’s 10 regions. GAO is also interviewing EPA and state officials 
about their experiences with the Recovery Act clean and drinking water 
funds. 

What GAO Found: 

Nationwide, the 50 states have awarded and obligated the almost $6 
billion in Clean Water and Drinking Water SRF program funds provided 
under the Recovery Act and reported using the majority of these funds 
for sewage treatment infrastructure and drinking water treatment and 
distribution systems, according to EPA data. These funds supported 
more than 3,000 water quality infrastructure projects nationwide. 
Since the Recovery Act was passed, states have drawn down $3.1 billion 
(79 percent) of the Clean Water SRF program funds and $1.7 billion (83 
percent) of the Drinking Water SRF program funds provided under the 
Recovery Act. States also met the act’s requirements that at least (1) 
20 percent of the funds provided be used to support “green” projects, 
such as those that promote energy or water efficiency, and (2) 50 
percent of the funds provide additional subsidies in the form of loans 
for which the principal is forgiven, loans for which the repayment is 
less than the principal (negative interest loans), or grants. In the 
nine states GAO reviewed, Recovery Act funds have paid for 419 
infrastructure projects that help to address major water quality 
problems, although state officials said that in some cases, Recovery 
Act requirements changed their priorities for ranking projects or the 
projects selected. For example, because some projects could not meet 
the act’s requirement to have funds under contract by February 17, 
2010, some states provided Recovery Act funds to lower-ranked 
projects. Some states provided funding to these priority projects in 
other ways, such as through state grants or non-Recovery Act SRF 
funds. In addition, although not required by the Recovery Act, the 
nine states used 24 percent of the funds they received to pay for 
projects in economically disadvantaged communities, the majority of 
which was provided as additional subsidies. 

States reported that the Recovery Act SRF programs funded an 
increasing amount of full-time equivalent (FTE) positions from the 
quarter ending December 2009 through the quarter ending June 2010, 
from 6,000 FTEs to 15,000 FTEs, declining to 6,000 FTEs for the 
quarter ending in March 2011 as projects were completed. EPA and the 
states are overseeing Recovery Act projects and funds using EPA’s 
oversight plan, updated in June 2010 in response to recommendations 
GAO made to specify procedures for oversight. 

The fiscal year 2010 and 2011 appropriations for the SRF programs 
continue the green project and additional subsidy requirements. State 
officials GAO interviewed identified challenges in implementing these 
requirements for the Clean and Drinking Water SRF programs, including: 

* Encouraging green projects. Officials in some states said that the 
goal of supporting green projects is important but that the percent of 
funds specifically dedicated to green funds (20 percent) was difficult 
to achieve. 

* Providing subsidies. Officials in several of the nine states noted 
that when monies are not repaid into revolving funds to generate 
future revenue for these funds, the SRF program purpose changes from 
primarily providing loans for investments in water infrastructure to 
providing grants. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-GAO-11-642T] or key 
components. For more information, contact David C. Trimble at (202) 
512-3841 or trimbled@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Mr. Chairman, Ranking Member, and Members of the Committee: 

I am pleased to be here today to discuss the preliminary results of 
our ongoing work examining states' use of funds made available for 
clean and drinking water projects under the American Recovery and 
Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Recovery Act).[Footnote 1] Among other 
things, the purposes of the Recovery Act were to preserve and create 
jobs, promote national economic recovery, and provide long-term 
economic benefits through infrastructure investments, including water 
infrastructure.[Footnote 2] The Recovery Act mandates that GAO conduct 
bimonthly reviews of the funds used by states and determine whether 
the act is achieving its stated purposes.[Footnote 3] We are 
completing the tenth bimonthly review responding to the act's mandate, 
which updates our May 2010 report and adds new information on the use 
of the Recovery Act funds provided for the Clean and Drinking Water 
State Revolving Fund (SRF) programs.[Footnote 4] Over the past 2 
years, our oversight of programs funded by the Recovery Act has 
covered a wide range of programs, including Medicaid, education, Head 
Start, highways and transit, and environmental and energy programs. 
[Footnote 5] 

My statement today is based on an ongoing review of clean and drinking 
water projects under the Recovery Act and examines the (1) status and 
use of Recovery Act SRF program funds nationwide and in nine selected 
states, (2) jobs funded by the Recovery Act SRF programs and federal 
and state efforts to oversee these programs, and (3) challenges, if 
any, that states have faced in implementing Recovery Act 
requirements.[Footnote 6] For our ongoing work, we are obtaining and 
analyzing nationwide data from the Environmental Protection Agency 
(EPA) on the status of Recovery Act Clean and Drinking Water SRF funds 
and projects, as well as information from nine states on their use of 
Recovery Act funds. We are discussing this information and Recovery 
Act requirements and reporting with EPA and state officials, including 
program officials in state environmental and public health departments 
responsible for the SRF programs and state Recovery Act officials. To 
develop a more in-depth view of the states' use of Recovery Act funds 
for Clean and Drinking Water SRF programs, we selected a 
nonprobability sample of nine states that we had not reviewed in our 
previous bimonthly reports, representing all but one of EPA's 10 
regions. We had state officials review and correct data in EPA's 
Recovery Act databases; we found the data reliable for our purposes. 
We conducted this performance audit from September 2010 through April 
2011, in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit 
to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable 
basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 
We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for 
our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

Background: 

Both the Clean Water and Drinking Water SRF programs authorize EPA to 
provide states and local communities with independent and sustainable 
sources of financial assistance, such as low-or no-interest loans, for 
projects that protect or improve water quality and that are needed to 
comply with federal drinking water regulations and protect public 
health. The Clean Water SRF program was established in 1987 under the 
Clean Water Act, which was enacted to protect surface waters, such as 
rivers, lakes, and coastal areas, and to maintain and restore the 
physical, chemical, and biological integrity of these waters. The 
Drinking Water SRF program was established in 1996 under the Safe 
Drinking Water Act, which was enacted to establish national 
enforceable standards for drinking water quality and to guarantee that 
water suppliers monitor water to ensure compliance with standards. 

The Recovery Act provided $6 billion for EPA's Clean Water and 
Drinking Water SRF programs.[Footnote 7] This amount represents a 
significant increase over the federal funds awarded to the base SRF 
programs in recent years. From fiscal years 2000 through 2009, annual 
appropriations averaged about $1.1 billion for the Clean Water SRF 
program and about $833 million for the Drinking Water SRF program. The 
Recovery Act funds represent a significant federal investment in the 
nation's water infrastructure at a time when, according to a 2010 
Congressional Budget Office report, overall spending on infrastructure 
has been declining, and when reported problems with the quality and 
safety of water supplies have raised questions about the condition of 
the nation's infrastructure.[Footnote 8] 

In addition to increasing funds, the Recovery Act included some new 
requirements for the SRF programs. First, projects funded with 
Recovery Act SRF program funds had to be under contract--ready to 
proceed--within 1 year of the act's passage, or by February 17, 2010. 
Second, states had to use at least 20 percent of these funds as a 
"green reserve" to provide assistance for green infrastructure 
projects, water-or energy-efficiency improvements, or other 
environmentally innovative activities. Third, states had to use at 
least 50 percent of Recovery Act funds to provide "additional 
subsidies" for projects in the form of principal forgiveness, grants, 
or negative interest loans (loans for which the rate of interest is 
such that the total payments over the life of the loans are less than 
the principal of the loans). Uses for these additional subsidies can 
include helping economically disadvantaged communities build water 
projects, although these uses are not a requirement of the act. 
Congress incorporated two of these requirements--green projects and 
additional subsidies--into the fiscal year 2010 and 2011 non-Recovery 
Act, or base, SRF program appropriations. 

In addition to program-specific provisions, water projects receiving 
Recovery Act funds had to meet the act's Buy American and Davis-Bacon 
provisions. The Recovery Act generally requires that all of the iron, 
steel, and manufactured goods used in the project be produced in the 
United States, subject to certain exceptions.[Footnote 9] Federal 
agencies could issue waivers for certain projects under specified 
conditions, for example, if using American-made goods was inconsistent 
with the public interest or if the cost of goods was unreasonable; the 
act limits the "unreasonable cost" exception to those instances when 
inclusion of American-made iron, steel, or other manufactured goods 
would increase the overall project cost by more than 25 percent. 
Furthermore, agencies do not need to use American-made goods if they 
were not sufficiently available or not of satisfactory quality. In 
addition, the Recovery Act applied Davis-Bacon provisions to all 
Recovery Act-funded projects, requiring contractors and subcontractors 
to pay all laborers and mechanics at least the prevailing wage rates 
in the local area where they were employed, as determined by the 
Secretary of Labor.[Footnote 10] Contractors were required to pay 
these workers weekly and submit weekly certified payroll records. 

To enhance transparency and accountability over Recovery Act funds, 
Congress and the administration built numerous provisions into the 
act, including a requirement that recipients of Recovery Act funding-- 
including state and local governments, private companies, educational 
institutions, nonprofits, and other private organizations--report 
quarterly on a number of measures. (Recipients, in turn, may award 
Recovery Act funds to subrecipients, which are nonfederal entities.) 
These reports are referred to as "recipient reports," which the 
recipients provide through one Web site, [hyperlink, 
http://www.federalreporting.gov] (Federalreporting.gov) for final 
publication through a second Web site, [hyperlink, 
http://www.recovery.gov] (Recovery.gov). Recipient reporting is 
overseen by the responsible federal agencies, such as EPA, in 
accordance with Recovery Act guidance provided by the Office of 
Management and Budget (OMB). Under this guidance, the federal agencies 
are required to conduct data quality checks of recipient data, and 
recipients can correct the data, before they are made available on 
Recovery.gov. Furthermore, additional corrections can be made during a 
continuous correction cycle after the data are released on 
Recovery.gov. 

A significant aspect of accountability for Recovery Act funds is 
oversight of spending. According to the federal standards of internal 
control, oversight should provide managers with current information on 
expenditures to detect problems and proactively manage risks 
associated with unusual spending patterns.[Footnote 11] In guidance 
issued in February 2009, OMB required each federal agency to develop a 
plan detailing the specific activities--including monitoring 
activities--that it would undertake to manage Recovery Act funds. EPA 
issued its first version of this plan in May 2009, as required, and 
updated this document as OMB issued new guidance.[Footnote 12] 

All Recovery Act SRF Program Funds Have Been Awarded and Obligated, 
and With Some Exceptions, States Reported Supporting Major 
Infrastructure Projects and Helping Economically Disadvantaged 
Communities: 

Nationwide, the 50 states have awarded and obligated the almost $6 
billion in Clean Water and Drinking Water SRF program funds provided 
under the Recovery Act and reported using the majority of these funds 
for sewage treatment infrastructure and drinking water treatment and 
distribution systems, according to EPA data. In the nine states we 
reviewed, states used these funds to pay for infrastructure projects 
that help to address major water quality problems, although state 
officials said that in some cases, Recovery Act requirements changed 
their priorities or the projects selected for funding. The nine states 
also used their Recovery Act funding to help economically 
disadvantaged communities, although officials indicated that they 
continue to have difficulty helping these communities. 

Nationwide, EPA Data Indicate States Used the Majority of Recovery Act 
Water Funds for Sewage Treatment Infrastructure and Drinking Water 
Treatment and Distribution Systems: 

As of March 30, 2011, states had awarded funds for contracts and 
obligated the $4 billion in Clean Water SRF program funds and $2 
billion in Drinking Water SRF program funds provided under the 
Recovery Act. As we reported in May 2010, EPA indicated that all 50 
states met the Recovery Act requirement to award Recovery Act funds to 
contracted projects by February 17, 2010, 1 year after the enactment 
of the Recovery Act.[Footnote 13] In the 2 years since the Recovery 
Act was passed, approximately 79 percent, or $3.1 billion, of the 
Clean Water SRF program funds and approximately 83 percent, or $1.7 
billion, of the Drinking Water SRF program funds have been drawn down 
from the Treasury by states. 

Across the nation, the states have used the $6 billion in Recovery Act 
Clean and Drinking Water SRF program funds to support more than 3,000 
water quality infrastructure projects. As shown in figure 1, the 
states used the majority of their Recovery Act Clean Water SRF program 
funds to pay for secondary and advanced treatment at wastewater 
treatment plants, as well as projects to prevent or mitigate sanitary 
sewer overflow. Wastewater treatment involves several processes, 
including primary treatment to remove suspended solids; secondary 
treatment to further remove contaminants using biological processes; 
and tertiary or advanced treatment to remove additional material in 
wastewater, such as nutrients or toxic chemicals. Sanitary sewer 
overflows can occur as a result of inclement weather and can pose 
significant public health and pollution problems, according to EPA. 

Figure 1: Categories of Clean Water SRF Projects Funded by the 
Recovery Act Funds in 50 States: 

[Refer to PDF for image: pie-chart] 

Secondary treatment: 31%; 
Advanced treatment: 17%; 
Sanitary sewer overflow: 17%; 
New sewers: 15%; 
Combined sewer overflow: 8%; 
Nonpoint source projects[A]: 8%; 
Storm water sewers: 2%; 
Recycled water distribution: 2%; 
Other: 0%. 

Source: GAO analysis of EPA data. 

[A] Nonpoint source pollution refers to water pollutants from nonpoint 
sources—diffuse sources from a variety of land-based activities, such 
as timber harvesting, agriculture, and urban development. 

[End of figure] 

As shown in figure 2, the states used about half of their Recovery Act 
Drinking Water SRF program funds to pay for projects to transmit and 
distribute drinking water, including pumps and pipelines to deliver 
water to customers. States used about 40 percent of their funds for 
projects to treat and store drinking water. 

Figure 2: Categories of Drinking Water SRF Projects Funded by the 
Recovery Act in 50 States: 

[Refer to PDF for image: pie-chart] 

Transmission and distribution: 52%; 
Treatment: 26%; 
Storage: 13%; 
Source: 6%; 
Other: 3%; 
Restructuring: 0%; 
Purchase of systems: 0%; 
Planning and design: 0%; 
Land acquisition: 0%. 

Source: GAO analysis of EPA data. 

[End of figure] 

In addition to requiring that projects awarded funds be under contract 
within 1 year of the act's passage, the Recovery Act required that 
states use at least 20 percent of their funds for "green" projects. 
According to EPA data, all states met the 20-percent green 
requirement, with $1.1 billion of total Clean Water SRF program funds 
going to green projects and $544 million of total Drinking Water SRF 
program funds going to green projects. The goal of supporting green 
projects is to promote green infrastructure, energy or water 
efficiency, and innovative ways to sustainably manage water resources. 
Green infrastructure refers to a variety of technologies or practices--
such as green roofs, porous pavement, and rain gardens--that use or 
mimic natural systems to enhance overall environmental quality. In 
addition to retaining rainfall and snowmelt and allowing them to seep 
into groundwater, these technologies can mitigate urban heat 
islands[Footnote 14], and sequester carbon. Figure 3 shows the amount 
of Clean Water and Drinking Water SRF program funds that states 
awarded to green projects by type of project. 

Figure 3: Total Recovery Act Funds Awarded to the 50 States for Green 
Projects under the Clean Water and Drinking Water SRF Programs, by 
Type of Project: 

[Refer to PDF for image: stacked vertical bar graph] 

Green investment category: Clean water; 
Green infrastructure: $209 million; 
Energy efficiency: $607 million; 
Water efficiency: $154 million; 
Environmentally innovative: $160 million. 

Green investment category: Drink water; 
Green infrastructure: $24 million; 
Energy efficiency: $137 million; 
Water efficiency: $343 million; 
Environmentally innovative: $40 million. 

Source: GAO analysis of EPA data. 

[End of figure] 

Nationwide, states also met the Recovery Act requirement to provide at 
least 50 percent of the Clean Water and Drinking Water SRF program 
funds as additional subsidies in the form of principal forgiveness, 
negative interest loans, or grants. Of the total Recovery Act funds 
awarded, 76 percent of Clean Water SRF Recovery Act funds and 70 
percent of Drinking Water SRF Recovery Act funds were distributed as 
additional subsidies. Figure 4 shows the total Clean Water and 
Drinking Water Recovery Act funds awarded by states as principal 
forgiveness, negative interest loans, or grants. The remaining funds 
will be provided as low-or no-interest loans that will recycle back 
into the programs as subrecipients repay their loans. 

Figure 4: Amount of Recovery Act Funds Awarded by the 50 States as 
Principal Forgiveness, Grants, or Negative Interest Loans and Low-or 
No-Interest Loans: 

[Refer to PDF for image: stacked vertical bar graph] 

Additional subsidies: Clean water; 
Low or no interest loan: $904 million; 
Principal forgiveness, negative interest loan, or grant: $2.9 billion. 

Additional subsidies: Drinking water; 
Low or no interest loan: $534 million; 
Principal forgiveness, negative interest loan, or grant: $1.27 billion. 

Source: GAO analysis of EPA data. 

[End of figure] 

Recovery Act Water Funds Generally Addressed Major Water Quality 
Problems in Nine States, Although Recovery Act Requirements Changed 
State Priorities or Projects: 

In the nine states we reviewed, Recovery Act Clean and Drinking Water 
SRF funding has been used to address the major clean and drinking 
water problems in the state. The nine states we reviewed received a 
total of about $832 million in Recovery Act SRF program funds--about 
$579 million for their Clean Water SRF programs and about $253 million 
for their Drinking Water SRF programs. In total, these funds supported 
419 clean and drinking water projects. Officials in the states we 
reviewed said, however, that Recovery Act priorities--particularly the 
need for projects to be under contract 1 year after the passage of the 
Recovery Act or green projects--either changed their priorities for 
ranking and funding projects or changed the projects they funded. 

To award SRF program funds, each of the nine states we reviewed used a 
system to score and prioritize water projects seeking funds to address 
water quality problems. To do this, states generally rank or group 
water infrastructure projects, submitted by local municipalities or 
utilities, using a system of points. The projects with the most points 
are considered the highest priority on the list of projects for 
funding and, in all but one state we reviewed,[Footnote 15] state 
officials used their ranking system to address major water problems. 
In most of the nine states we reviewed, compliance is a key aspect of 
their ranking system, allowing points to be awarded to infrastructure 
projects that help the states eliminate causes of noncompliance with 
federal or state water quality standards and permits. Officials in 
most of the nine states said that they generally obtain information on 
their water systems' compliance with federal and state water quality 
standards through discussions with their program compliance staff and 
from state databases. 

Officials in the nine states we reviewed told us that the Recovery Act 
requirements--the readiness of a project to proceed; the green project 
requirement; and, to a lesser degree, the Buy American and Davis-Bacon 
provisions--caused them to modify their ranking systems or otherwise 
modify the list of projects that receive Recovery Act funding. 

Readiness of a project to proceed. In the nine states, officials 
included readiness to proceed and other Recovery Act requirements in 
their ranking system and selected projects on the basis of that 
ranking system or said that they did not fund--or bypassed--top-ranked 
projects that were not ready to proceed to construction by February 
17, 2010, 1 year after the passage of the Recovery Act. For example, 
Washington State's two top-ranked clean water projects did not receive 
Recovery Act SRF program funds because they could not meet the 
February 2010 deadline. The projects were to decommission septic 
systems and construct a wastewater treatment plant to reduce 
phosphorus discharges to the Spokane River. In Wyoming, many of the 
projects that were not ready to proceed were water treatment plants, 
which state officials said take longer to design and plan for 
construction. Although these higher-ranked projects did not receive 
Recovery Act funds, at least two states were able to fund these 
projects in other ways, such as through state grants or non-Recovery 
Act SRF program funds. 

Green project requirement. Three states listed green projects 
separately from other projects. For example, Washington State 
officials told us that they established a green projects category 
because they had anticipated that energy and water efficiency projects 
(green projects) would not score well under their ranking system, 
which focuses on water quality protection and improvements. Other 
states funded green projects ahead of higher-ranked projects. For 
example, Maryland bypassed many projects to fund the first green-
ranked project on its list. Similarly, Nevada did not fund 11 higher-
ranked projects and funded a lower-ranked drinking water project that 
had green components. 

Buy American and Davis-Bacon provisions. State officials identified a 
few projects that did not proceed because potential subrecipients 
either did not want to meet one or more Recovery Act requirements, 
such as the Buy American and Davis-Bacon provisions, or did not want 
to increase the cost of their projects. For example, local officials 
in Alabama withdrew their application for a drinking water project 
because the project was already contracted without Buy American and 
Davis-Bacon wage requirements, and an addendum to the contract to meet 
the regulations would have increased the project's cost. Similarly, 
officials in all nine states said that a few communities chose not to 
apply for or withdrew from the Recovery Act funding process to avoid 
paperwork or the additional costs associated with the act's 
requirements. For example, Wyoming officials said that potential 
subrecipients for three clean water projects refused funding, citing 
time constraints or difficulty meeting Buy American requirements. 

States Supported Economically Disadvantaged Communities, in Part Using 
Additional Subsidies Authorized under the Act, Although Officials 
Cited Continuing Difficulty in Helping these Communities: 

Although the Recovery Act did not require states to target Clean and 
Drinking Water SRF program funds to economically disadvantaged 
communities, six of the nine states that we reviewed distributed more 
than $123 million in clean water funds, and eight of the nine states 
distributed almost $78 million in drinking water funds, to these 
communities.[Footnote 16] This amount represents about 24 percent of 
the almost $832 million in Recovery Act funds that the states were 
awarded.[Footnote 17] As shown in table 2, a large majority of the 
funds provided to these communities were provided as additional 
subsidies--grants, principal forgiveness, and negative interest loans. 
[Footnote 18] 

Table 1: Number of Economically Disadvantaged Community Projects 
Funded for Nine States under the Recovery Act SRF Programs: 

SRF Program: Clean Water; 
Total Clean and Drinking Water SRF projects funded: 261; 
Number of projects funded in economically disadvantaged communities: 
70; 
Amount of: SRF funds provided to economically disadvantaged projects: 
$123 million; 
Amount of SRF funds: to economically disadvantaged projects provided 
as additional subsidies: $101 million; 
Percent of additional subsidies provided to economically disadvantaged 
projects: 82%. 

SRF Program: Drinking Water; 
Total Clean and Drinking Water SRF projects funded: 158; 
Number of projects funded in economically disadvantaged communities: 
63; 
Amount of: SRF funds provided to economically disadvantaged projects: 
$78 million; 
Amount of SRF funds: to economically disadvantaged projects provided 
as additional subsidies: $66 million; 
Percent of additional subsidies provided to economically disadvantaged 
projects: 85%. 

Total: 
Total Clean and Drinking Water SRF projects funded: 419[A]; 
Number of projects funded in economically disadvantaged communities: 
133; 
Amount of: SRF funds provided to economically disadvantaged projects: 
$201 million; 
Amount of SRF funds: to economically disadvantaged projects provided 
as additional subsidies: $167 million; 
Percent of additional subsidies provided to economically disadvantaged 
projects: 83%. 

Source: GAO analysis of state provided data. 

[A] The nine states funded a total of 419 clean and drinking water 
projects; all 50 states funded more than 3,000 clean and drinking 
water projects. 

[End of table] 

According to officials in five states, they provided additional 
subsidies to economically disadvantaged communities because the 
communities would otherwise have had a difficult time funding 
projects. For example, officials in Nevada told us that clean and 
drinking water subsidies were directed to such communities because 
these communities not only have a difficult time funding projects, 
they also have some of the projects with the highest priority for 
addressing public health and environmental protection concerns. New 
Mexico officials told us that they directed additional drinking water 
subsidies to economically disadvantaged communities because these 
communities have historically lacked access to capital. In addition, 
officials in a few other states told us that small and economically 
disadvantaged communities often lack the financial means to pay back 
loans from the SRF programs or lack funds to pay for the upfront costs 
of planning and designing a project. Officials in at least two states 
also said that many small and economically disadvantaged communities 
even lack full-time staff to help manage the water infrastructure. 

Even with the additional subsidies available for projects, officials 
in a few states said that small and economically disadvantaged 
communities found it difficult to obtain Recovery Act funds. For 
example, Missouri officials told us that the Recovery Act deadline was 
the single most important factor hindering the ability of small and 
economically disadvantaged communities from receiving funding. New 
Mexico officials also told us that because small and economically 
disadvantaged communities typically do not have funds to plan and 
develop projects, few could meet the deadline and several projects 
that sought Recovery Act funds could not be awarded funding owing to 
the deadline. 

EPA's Office of Inspector General (OIG) noted an additional challenge 
for EPA related to economically disadvantaged communities. In April 
2011, the OIG reported that EPA could not assess the overall impact of 
Recovery Act funds on economically disadvantaged communities because 
it did not collect data on the amount of SRF program funds distributed 
to economically disadvantaged communities nationwide.[Footnote 19] The 
OIG recommended that EPA establish a system that can target program 
funds to its objectives and priorities, such as funding economically 
disadvantaged communities. 

The Recovery Act Funded Jobs, and Federal and State Efforts to Oversee 
the Recovery Act SRF Programs Continue: 

For the quarter ending December 2009 through the quarter ending in 
June 2010, the number of full-time equivalent jobs (FTE) paid for with 
Recovery Act SRF program funds increased each reporting quarter from 
about 6,000 to 15,000 quarterly FTEs for planning, designing, and 
building water projects, as shown in figure 5. As projects are 
completed and funds spent, the number of FTEs funded has declined to 
about 6,000 for the quarter ending March 2011. Following OMB guidance, 
states reported FTEs that included only the jobs directly paid for 
with Recovery Act funding, not the employment impact on suppliers of 
materials (indirect jobs) or on the local communities (induced jobs). 
In addition, state officials told us that, although funding varies 
from project to project, 10 percent to 80 percent of a project's 
funding is typically for materials such as cement for buildings and 
equipment such as turbines, pumps and centrifuges, and the remainder 
pays for labor or FTEs. 

Figure 5: SRF FTE Positions Reported Funded With Recovery Act Funds in 
50 States: 

[Refer to PDF for image: multiple line graph] 

Reporting quarters: October-December 2009; 
Clean water: 3,416; 
Drinking water: 2,317; 
Grand total: 5,734. 

Reporting quarters: January-March 2010; 
Clean water: 5,271; 
Drinking water: 3,204; 
Grand total: 8,475. 

Reporting quarters: April-June 2010; 
Clean water: 9,136; 
Drinking water: 5,549; 
Grand total: 14,684. 

Reporting quarters: July-September 2010; 
Clean water: 8,644; 
Drinking water: 4,941; 
Grand total: 13,585. 

Reporting quarters: October-December 2010; 
Clean water: 6,285; 
Drinking water: 3,409; 
Grand total: 9,694. 

Reporting quarters: December-March 2011; 
Clean water: 4,141; 
Drinking water: 1,651; 
Grand total: 5791. 

Source: GAO analysis of EPA data. 

Note: We did not include data from the first reporting quarter due to 
concerns about comparability. Nearly all recipients reported funding 
at least a partial FTE with Recovery Act funds. In comparing clean and 
drinking water funds across the reporting quarters from October 2010 
through March 2011, we found that the percentage of recipients who 
reported funding at least a partial FTE ranged from 97 percent to 100 
percent. 

[End of figure] 

To oversee Recovery Act projects and funds, EPA developed an oversight 
plan, as required by OMB. In response to our May 2010 bimonthly review 
and recommendation, EPA updated its guidance to include specific steps 
to monitor compliance with Recovery Act Clean and Drinking Water SRF 
program provisions.[Footnote 20] Our current work is showing that EPA 
and the states have made progress in implementing EPA's updated plan, 
which included details on frequency, content, and documentation needed 
for regional reviews of state programs and state reviews of projects. 
EPA officials said that regional staff are visiting all 50 states and 
reviewing their Clean and Drinking Water SRFs according to its plan. 
Furthermore, officials in the nine states we reviewed indicated that 
they have visited Recovery Act projects at least once during 
construction, as required in EPA's oversight plan. 

Challenges in Implementing Recovery Act SRF Programs Highlight 
Potential Future Challenges for SRF Programs: 

Our May 2010 report identified the challenge of maintaining 
accountability for Recovery Act funds and recommended improved 
monitoring of Recovery Act funds by EPA and the states.[Footnote 21] 
As we note above, our current work shows that EPA and the nine states 
we reviewed have made progress in addressing this challenge. Two 
challenges EPA and the states faced in spending Recovery Act SRF 
program funds may continue as requirements introduced with the 
Recovery Act are incorporated into the base programs. Specifically, in 
fiscal years 2010 and 2011, the Clean and Drinking Water SRF programs 
were required to include green projects and additional subsidization 
provisions. 

Encouraging green projects. The effort to support green projects was 
included in EPA's fiscal year 2010 and 2011 appropriations for the 
base Clean and Drinking Water SRF programs. As we discussed above, 
under the green requirement in the Recovery Act, in certain cases 
state officials said they had to choose between a green water project 
and a project that was otherwise ranked higher to address water 
quality problems. We found similar results in our May 2010 report, 
when officials in some of the 14 states we reviewed said that they 
gave preference to green projects for funding purposes, and sometimes 
ranked those projects above another project with higher public health 
benefits. In addition to competing priorities for funding, EPA's OIG 
found, in its February 2010 report, that a lack of clear guidance on 
the green requirement caused confusion and disagreements as to which 
projects were eligible for green funding.[Footnote 22] Officials in 
two of the nine states we reviewed noted that the goal of supporting 
green projects was not difficult to achieve because they had already 
identified green projects, but officials in four other states said 
that achieving the 20-percent green project goal was difficult to 
achieve, leading one official to suggest that green projects be 
encouraged without setting a fixed percentage of program funds. 

Providing subsidization. The fiscal years 2010 and 2011 appropriations 
for the Clean and Drinking Water SRF programs also continued the 
requirement to provide additional subsidies in the form of principal 
forgiveness, negative interest loans, or grants. The subsidy 
provisions reduced the funds available to use as a subsidy from a 
minimum of 50 percent of total Recovery Act funds to a minimum of 30 
percent of base SRF program funds.[Footnote 23] As with the Recovery 
Act, the appropriations in fiscal year 2010 and 2011 do not require 
this additional subsidy to be targeted to any types of projects or 
communities with economic need,[Footnote 24] and as the recent EPA OIG 
report notes, there are no requirements for EPA or the states to track 
how these subsidies are used. The Clean and Drinking Water SRF 
programs were created to be a sustainable source of funding for 
communities' water and wastewater infrastructure through the continued 
repayment of loans to states. Officials in four of the nine states we 
reviewed identified a potential challenge in continuing to provide a 
specific amount of subsidies while sustaining the clean and drinking 
SRF programs as revolving funds. State officials pointed out that when 
monies are not repaid into the revolving fund, the reuse of funds is 
reduced and the purpose of the revolving SRF program changes from 
primarily providing loans for investments in water infrastructure to 
providing grants. 

Mr. Chairman, Ranking Member, and Members of the Committee, this 
concludes my prepared statement. I would be pleased to respond to any 
questions that you or other Members of the Committee might have. 

GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

For further information regarding this statement, please contact David 
C. Trimble at (202) 512-3841 or trimbled@gao.gov. Contact points for 
our Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found 
on the last page of this statement. Individuals who made key 
contributions to this statement include Jillian Fasching, Susan Iott, 
Jonathan Kucskar, Carol Peterson, Beverly Ross, Carol Herrnstadt 
Shulman, Dawn Shorey, Kathryn Smith, and Kiki Theodoropoulos. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] Pub. L. No. 111-5, 123 Stat. 115. 

[2] As of April, 8, 2011, the Department of the Treasury had paid out 
$208.7 billion in Recovery Act funds for use by states and localities. 
For updates, see [hyperlink, http://gao.gov/recovery]. 

[3] Pub. L. No. 111-5, § 901(a)(1). 

[4] We last reported on the use of Recovery Act Clean and Drinking 
Water SRF program funds for water in GAO, Recovery Act: States' and 
Localities' Uses of Funds and Actions Needed to Address Implementation 
Challenges and Bolster Accountability, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-604] (Washington, D.C.: May 26, 2010). 

[5] See [hyperlink, http://gao.gov/recovery] for related GAO products. 

[6] These states were Alabama, Connecticut, Maryland, Michigan, 
Missouri, New Mexico, Nevada, Washington State, and Wyoming. We did 
not select any states in EPA Region 2--which includes New Jersey, New 
York, and Puerto Rico--because we had reviewed New Jersey and New York 
in previous Recovery Act reports. 

[7] The $6 billion in Recovery Act funds includes about $39 million in 
Clean Water Act (CWA) Section 604(b) Water Quality Management Planning 
Grants. Section 604(b) of the CWA requires the reservation each fiscal 
year of a small portion of each state's Clean Water SRF allotment-- 
usually 1 percent--to carry out planning under Sections 205(j) and 
303(e) of the CWA. States generally use 604(b) grants to fund regional 
comprehensive water quality management planning activities to improve 
local water quality. In addition, the $6 billion included a small 
amount of funding for trust territories, tribal governments, and the 
District of Columbia. Any reference to Recovery Act funds in this 
report excludes these water quality planning, territorial, tribal, and 
District of Columbia funds. 

[8] Congressional Budget Office, Public Spending on Transportation and 
Water Infrastructure (Washington, D.C.: November, 2010). 

[9] Pub. L. No. 111-5, § 1605. 

[10] Pub. L. No. 111-5, §1606. 

[11] GAO, Standards for Internal Control in the Federal Government, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/AIMD-00-21.3.1] 
(Washington, D.C.: Nov. 1999). 

[12] The most recent version of the plan is EPA, Environmental 
Protection Agency Recovery Act Plan: A Strong Economy and a Clean 
Environment (Washington, D.C.: June 1, 2010). 

[13] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-604]. 

[14] Urban heat islands are metropolitan areas that are significantly 
warmer than the surrounding rural areas. 

[15] Alabama officials indicated that the ranking system for their 
Clean Water program was developed in the 1980s to address impaired 
waters and did not reflect the state's current clean water problems. 
The officials said that the state's major water quality problem is now 
aging infrastructure and that they were planning to revise their 
ranking system based on the current water quality problems. 

[16] States differ in how they define disadvantaged communities. In 
general, disadvantaged community status takes into account factors 
such as median household income and community size. 

[17] In our May 2010 report, we found that the 14 states in that 
review provided $1.2 billion, or about 43 percent of total funds, for 
assistance in disadvantaged communities. 

[18] In total, the nine states in our review provided more than $558 
million of their Recovery Act funds--67 percent--in the form of 
additional subsidies to all projects. Of this money, 30 percent was 
awarded to projects in economically disadvantaged communities. 

[19] EPA OIG, Evaluation Report: EPA Faced Multiple Constraints to 
Targeting Recovery Act Funds, Report No. 11-R-0208 (Washington, D.C.: 
April, 11 2011). 

[20] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-604]. 

[21] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-604]. 

[22] EPA OIG, Evaluation Report: EPA Needs Definitive Guidance for 
Recovery Act and Future Green Reserve Projects, Report No. 10-R-0057 
(Washington, D.C.: Feb. 1, 2010). 

[23] For the Clean Water SRF program, the 30 percent-minimum only 
applies to the portion of appropriated funds exceeding $1 billion. 

[24] The Drinking Water SRF program had a subsidy provision that 
allowed states to use up to 30 percent of their annual grant to 
provide additional subsidies to help economically disadvantaged 
communities. 42 U.S.C. § 300j-12(d). 

[End of section] 

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