The Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies Subcommittee, chaired by U.S. Rep. Mike Simpson (R-Idaho), on Thursday marked up a GOP appropriations bill for fiscal year 2024. A Republican fact sheet celebrates proposed “cuts to wasteful spending” and “claw-backs of prior appropriations,” highlighting that it “reins in” the Environmental Protection Agency, “limits abuse of the Endangered Species Act,” and provides protections for the fossil fuel industry.

The GOP proposal would slash appropriations for the Clean Water State Revolving Fund (CWSRF) and Drinking Water State Revolving Fund (DWSRF). The former provides low-interest loans for infrastructure projects like wastewater facilities while the latter provides assistance for initiatives like improving drinking water treatment and fixing old pipes.

  • @can
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    411 year ago

    How can they possibly spin this as a good thing?

    • @[email protected]OP
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      181 year ago

      The water is rusty because metal rusts over time, metal is a natural substance therefore rust is a natural substance as well. The human body is natural as it was created by God, therefore rusty water is not harmful to the human body.

    • Unaware7013
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      151 year ago

      Bad water dumbs people down, which creates more voters for them.

    • Matt Shatt
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      111 year ago

      They just want to let the local municipalities have the freedom to treat their own water how they want!

      Unless it’s Austin or Houston or any blue city. Then the state will tell them how to not do it.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      Are the programs shown to actually improve anything or does it become a slush fund? Don’t get caught up in the name of something, look into what it actually does (or doesn’t do).

      Edit to add: that’s just one avenue, then you have alternate strategies to tackle the same problem

      • 133arc585
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        1 year ago

        Here’s the eleven categories of projects that CWSRF loans can be used for.

        Here’s the six categories of projects that DWSRF loans can be used for. The DWSRF also publishes a periodic Drinking Water Infrastructure Needs Survey that lays out approximate costs for various system sizes, and the distribution of system sizes across communities.

        There is also a lot of overlap; quoting the OP article:

        The [CWSRF] provides low-interest loans for infrastructure projects like wastewater facilities while the [DWSRF] provides assistance for initiatives like improving drinking water treatment and fixing old pipes.

        The CWSRF Environmental Benefits Report from 2014 says:

        • 14,838 Projects Financed
        • To 5,222 Communities

        with one of the highlights being:

        95% of Subsidy Goes to Recipients that Could Not Otherwise Afford the Project

        With the variety of activities they support, and the fact that they are permitting projects that communities could not otherwise afford to engage in, I’d say they’re very valuable.

        • Nix
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          51 year ago

          People who make such well sourced and written comments like yours is why i love lemmy/forum style communities.

      • @[email protected]
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        131 year ago

        Do you really think regulatory agencies serve no purpose? Does not the FDA protect you from deadly medication side effects? Does not the government protect your water, air and ground? Do you think shit water is unsafe to drink?

        TL/DR; have you no common sense?