S-1107-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry.
Sponsored by John Curtis (R-UT)
What it does
This bill would modify USDA's Emergency Watershed Protection (EWP) program to allow states, local governments, and Indian tribes (called "sponsors") to begin certain emergency watershed protection measures before signing a formal project agreement with USDA. It would require USDA to publish a list of eligible pre-agreement measures and create a state-level process for sponsors to request additional eligible measures. Costs a sponsor incurs for those measures before an agreement is signed would count toward the sponsor's required share of the total project cost once an agreement is in place.
Who benefits
State and local governments and Indian tribes that currently bear upfront emergency response costs without federal credit — particularly those in disaster-prone or rural areas with limited cash reserves. Communities in flood plains, fire-prone regions, and drought-affected watersheds that would receive faster protective action. Property owners and residents near at-risk watersheds who would benefit from quicker response times. Emergency management agencies that could act immediately rather than waiting for federal paperwork. Contractors and workers hired for early-stage watershed cleanup and stabilization work.
Who is hurt
USDA and federal budget administrators who would have less control over pre-agreement spending, potentially complicating cost verification and audit processes. Taxpayers broadly, if pre-agreement costs are difficult to verify or if the change leads to higher total federal outlays. Sponsors in states with slower administrative processes who may be less able to take advantage of the pre-agreement flexibility. Potentially, sponsors who act quickly but later find their pre-agreement costs do not qualify, leaving them without federal reimbursement credit.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that natural disasters do not wait for federal paperwork, and that the current EWP program structure penalizes sponsors who act quickly to protect communities by denying them credit for costs incurred before a formal agreement is signed. They contend that allowing pre-agreement costs to count toward the sponsor's match removes a bureaucratic barrier that delays emergency response, particularly for smaller local governments and tribes with limited budgets who cannot afford to front costs without assurance of federal credit. Faster action, they argue, reduces long-term damage to watersheds and lowers total recovery costs.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that requiring a project agreement before costs are incurred is a critical accountability safeguard that ensures federal funds are spent on verified, eligible activities — and that allowing pre-agreement spending creates opportunities for waste, fraud, or ineligible expenditures that are difficult to audit after the fact. They contend that USDA's ability to review and approve project scopes before work begins protects taxpayers from cost overruns and scope creep, and that the bill's flexibility, while well-intentioned, could result in sponsors incurring large pre-agreement costs that later fail to qualify, creating disputes and financial hardship for local governments.