HR-9226-119
Referred to the Committee on Natural Resources, and in addition to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.
Sponsored by James McGovern (D-MA)
What it does
This bill would establish a nonregulatory Connecticut River Watershed Partnership program, administered by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, to coordinate restoration and protection activities across the five-state Connecticut River watershed (Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont). It would also create a competitive matching grant program — managed by the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation or a similar organization — open to state, Tribal, and local governments, nonprofits, and universities. The bill authorizes "such sums as are necessary" in appropriations for fiscal years 2026–2030, with at least 75% directed to grants and technical assistance.
Who benefits
Residents of the five watershed states who use the Connecticut River for recreation, fishing, and drinking water. Environmental justice communities (low-income, communities of color, and Tribal communities) that receive elevated federal cost-sharing of up to 100%. Federally and non-federally recognized Tribes indigenous to the watershed, whose traditional ecological knowledge and cultural practices would be formally recognized. Nonprofit conservation organizations, universities, and local governments eligible for competitive grants. Farmers and forest landowners who may receive support for habitat protection and carbon sequestration. Hunters, anglers, hikers, and wildlife viewers who would benefit from improved habitat and trail access. Fish and migratory species populations that depend on the watershed ecosystem.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who would fund the open-ended "such sums as are necessary" appropriation with no fixed spending ceiling. Landowners near the watershed who may face indirect pressure from conservation priorities, even though the program is explicitly nonregulatory. Competing federal conservation programs in other regions that may face reduced relative funding or administrative attention. Private developers or agricultural operations whose activities near the watershed could be affected by coordinated conservation strategies, even absent direct regulation. States or localities that prefer to manage watershed resources without federal coordination frameworks.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Connecticut River watershed — spanning 11,000 square miles and serving as a drinking water source and ecological corridor for millions of New Englanders — has historically lacked a unified federal coordination mechanism, leaving restoration efforts fragmented across dozens of agencies and organizations. They contend the bill's nonregulatory, voluntary, and collaborative design avoids federal overreach while leveraging federal resources to multiply the impact of state, local, and private conservation dollars through matching grants. The elevated cost-sharing for environmental justice communities (up to 100%) directly addresses documented disparities in access to clean water and green space in lower-income and minority communities within the watershed.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's open-ended authorization of "such sums as are necessary" sets no fiscal guardrails, creating an indefinite federal spending commitment without the accountability of a fixed appropriation. They contend that watershed management is fundamentally a state and local responsibility under the Tenth Amendment, and that establishing a federal coordination framework — even a nominally nonregulatory one — risks gradually centralizing decision-making authority over land and water use across five states. Critics may also argue that the bill duplicates existing programs administered by the EPA, Army Corps of Engineers, and Natural Resources Conservation Service, adding bureaucratic overhead without clear evidence of improved outcomes over current efforts.