S-3015-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Environment and Public Works.
Sponsored by John Boozman (R-AR)
What it does
This bill would reauthorize the Water Resources Research and Technology Institutes program under the Water Resources Research Act of 1984. It would authorize $16 million per year in appropriations for fiscal years 2026 through 2029, with 20 percent of those funds directed toward research on water problems that cross state lines. It would also update the program's statement of purpose to explicitly include the artificial intelligence industry as a partner in water research and technology efforts.
Who benefits
University-based water research institutes in all 54 eligible states and territories, which receive federal grants to conduct water research. Academic researchers and graduate students working on water science and technology. State and local water managers who use research outputs to guide policy. Communities facing regional water challenges such as drought, flooding, or contamination. The artificial intelligence industry, which is explicitly named as a new private-sector partner. Rural and agricultural communities that depend on water availability research. Downstream water users in interstate river basins who benefit from coordinated research.
Who is hurt
Competing federal research programs that may vie for the same discretionary appropriations pool. Researchers focused on single-state water issues, who would see a smaller share of funds available as 20 percent is reserved for interstate research. Taxpayers who bear the cost of the $16 million annual authorization. Private water research firms that compete with federally subsidized university institutes for contracts and talent.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that water scarcity, drought, and interstate water conflicts are intensifying across the country, and that sustained federal investment in university-based research institutes provides the scientific foundation that states and localities need to manage these challenges. They contend that the explicit inclusion of the AI industry reflects the growing role of data-driven tools in water management — such as predictive drought modeling and smart irrigation — and that the 20 percent set-aside for interstate research ensures that funding addresses problems too large for any single state to solve alone.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that water research is primarily a state and local responsibility, and that a recurring $16 million annual federal authorization adds to discretionary spending without a demonstrated accounting of outcomes from prior funding cycles. They contend that singling out the AI industry in the bill's purpose statement could steer research priorities toward commercially valuable applications rather than public-interest water science, and that the 20 percent interstate set-aside reduces flexibility for institutes to address the most pressing local water needs in their regions.