S-4016-118
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 610.
What it does
The Help Hoover Dam Act would authorize the Bureau of Reclamation to draw from a designated account within the Colorado River Dam Fund to pay for operations, maintenance, investigation, cleanup, and capital improvements at Hoover Dam and on land used for its construction and operation. It would clarify and expand the permissible uses of existing funds already held within the Colorado River Dam Fund for the Boulder Canyon Project.
Who benefits
Residents of Nevada, Arizona, and California who rely on Hoover Dam for electricity generation and water supply from Lake Mead. Agricultural operations in the Southwest that depend on Colorado River water allocations. The Bureau of Reclamation, which would gain clearer legal authority to spend existing funds on dam upkeep. Contractors and workers who perform maintenance and capital improvement work at the dam site.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers or other programs that might otherwise draw from the Colorado River Dam Fund if those funds are redirected to Hoover Dam operations. Competing water and power infrastructure projects within the Bureau of Reclamation's portfolio that could receive less attention or funding priority as a result. Downstream stakeholders who may have preferred fund allocations directed elsewhere within the Colorado River system.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Hoover Dam is one of the most critical pieces of infrastructure in the American West, supplying water and electricity to millions of people across Nevada, Arizona, and California. They contend that the Bureau of Reclamation currently lacks sufficiently clear statutory authority to use Colorado River Dam Fund money for the full range of maintenance, cleanup, and capital improvement needs at the dam. Without this authorization, necessary upkeep could be delayed, putting a 90-year-old structure at risk of degraded performance. Supporters also argue the bill uses existing dedicated funds — not new appropriations — making it a fiscally responsible way to protect a national asset that underpins the regional economy and water security of the Southwest.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill may set a precedent for loosening restrictions on how dedicated infrastructure funds can be spent, potentially undermining the financial discipline that keeps the Colorado River Dam Fund solvent for its intended purposes. They contend that if Hoover Dam truly requires additional maintenance funding, Congress should appropriate new money through the normal budget process rather than expanding access to an existing restricted fund. Critics may also raise concerns that broadening the Bureau of Reclamation's spending discretion — particularly for "investigation and cleanup actions" — could allow the agency to undertake activities with limited congressional oversight, and that the bill's scope is vague enough to invite mission creep beyond core dam operations.