S-518-115
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 89.
Sponsored by Roger Wicker (R-MS)
What it does
This bill would amend the Clean Water Act to allow the EPA to award grants or cooperative agreements to qualified technical assistance providers. Those providers would then help small, publicly owned water treatment facilities — those serving 10,000 people or fewer — comply with Clean Water Act requirements or secure financing for eligible water infrastructure projects. Assistance could be delivered through on-site visits, circuit rider programs (where experts travel to multiple communities), regional programs, and training sessions.
Who benefits
Residents of small and rural communities (populations of 10,000 or fewer) who rely on publicly owned water treatment works (POTWs) for clean water. Local governments and municipal water authorities in those communities that struggle to meet Clean Water Act compliance requirements. Technical assistance organizations and consultants that would be eligible to receive grants or cooperative agreements. Rural communities that lack the in-house engineering or legal expertise to navigate federal water regulations or financing programs.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers who would fund the grants and cooperative agreements, though the bill does not specify an appropriations amount. Private water consulting firms that currently provide similar services on a fee-for-service basis may face increased competition from federally subsidized technical assistance providers. Larger municipalities (populations above 10,000) are explicitly excluded from eligibility and would not receive this form of assistance.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that small and rural water systems face a structural disadvantage: they must meet the same federal Clean Water Act standards as large cities, but they lack the staff, budget, and technical expertise to navigate complex compliance requirements or access federal financing programs. Without targeted help, these communities risk violations, fines, and degraded water quality — outcomes that fall hardest on residents who have no alternative water source. A grant-based technical assistance program levels the playing field by connecting small systems with qualified experts, helping them avoid costly enforcement actions and access infrastructure funding they would otherwise miss. Because assistance is delivered through existing qualified providers rather than a new federal bureaucracy, supporters contend the approach is cost-effective and flexible, allowing help to be tailored to each community's specific needs.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that creating a new federal grant program duplicates assistance already available through existing EPA programs, USDA Rural Development initiatives, and state revolving fund technical assistance components — raising questions about whether additional federal spending is necessary or efficient. They contend that compliance with the Clean Water Act is primarily a state and local responsibility, and that federal subsidies may reduce the incentive for small communities to build their own long-term administrative capacity. Critics may also argue that without a defined funding cap or rigorous eligibility criteria, the program could expand over time in ways Congress did not intend, and that the broad discretion given to the EPA to select "qualified" providers lacks sufficient accountability mechanisms to ensure taxpayer funds are used effectively.