- Federal agenciesMakes more types of investments—including digital asset-management and operational software, energy- and water-efficien…
- Targeted stakeholdersCould accelerate adoption of energy- and water-saving technologies and green/stormwater infrastructure, potentially imp…
- Targeted stakeholdersMay reduce long‑term operating costs for utilities (through improved asset management and efficiency) and relieve rate…
To amend the Federal Water Pollution Control Act to make certain technology investments eligible for additional subsidization, and for other purposes.
Referred to the Subcommittee on Water Resources and Environment.
This bill amends section 603(i)(1)(B) of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act to expand the kinds of processes, materials, techniques, and technologies that can receive "additional subsidization." The amendment expressly lists water‑efficiency goals, energy‑efficiency goals, stormwater runoff mitigation, and projects that are cost‑effective and sustainably planned, designed, and constructed as eligible purposes.
The provision also retains an explicit mention of software for asset management, operational analysis, and advanced digital construction management systems as examples of eligible technologies.
The change is limited in text to eligibility for additional subsidization; it does not itself appropriate funds or set detailed program rules in this language.
On content alone this is a modest, administratively focused amendment to an existing water program that expands eligible investments to include digital tools and efficiency/ stormwater measures — items that are commonly supported across interests. It does not create large new entitlement spending, change controversial policy areas, or substantially reallocate federal/state authority. Its fate will largely depend on whether it is attached to a larger water or infrastructure package or passed as a standalone technical fix; absent appropriation offsets there could be scrutiny from budget and appropriations stakeholders.
Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill is a narrow, statutory amendment that clearly identifies the provision to be changed and specifies categories of technologies and goals to be newly eligible for additional subsidization. It is concise and legally focused but minimalistic in supporting detail.
Liberals emphasize environmental/climate and equity benefits; conservatives emphasize fiscal restraint, local control, and risk of vendor capture.
Who stands to gain, and who may push back.
- Targeted stakeholdersCould shift limited SRF additional-subsidization funds toward software, planning, and digital systems at the expense of…
- StatesMay impose additional administrative and compliance burdens on EPA and state SRF programs to define eligible activities…
- UtilitiesRisks favoring private technology and consulting vendors; procurement and lifecycle costs for digital systems (includin…
Why the argument around this bill splits.
Liberals emphasize environmental/climate and equity benefits; conservatives emphasize fiscal restraint, local control, and risk of vendor capture.
A mainstream liberal would likely view this bill as a constructive, targeted improvement to water infrastructure funding that encourages efficiency, climate resilience, and smarter project planning.
They would appreciate explicit support for water and energy efficiency, stormwater mitigation, and digital tools that can improve asset management and long‑term sustainability.
They would, however, watch for whether funds are distributed equitably, guarantee benefits to disadvantaged communities, and include labor and environmental safeguards.
A pragmatic centrist would see the bill as a modest, targeted tweak to existing Clean Water Act funding rules that could produce efficiency gains and resilience without being revolutionary.
They would value the potential for long‑term cost savings through energy and water efficiency and improved asset management, but would want clearer definitions, oversight, and evidence of cost‑effectiveness.
Their support would hinge on administrative details, fiscal discipline, and measurable outcomes rather than broad rhetoric.
A mainstream conservative would approach this bill cautiously: they may accept support for technologies that demonstrably reduce costs and improve efficiency, but would be skeptical of expanding federal subsidization authority without strict fiscal limits and clear local control.
Concerns would focus on federal overreach, increased spending, potential for cronyism in choosing vendors (especially software), and vague terms like 'sustainably planned' that could be used to impose regulatory preferences.
They would be more likely to support narrowly tailored, budget‑neutral or state‑led approaches.
The path through Congress.
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Still ahead
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On content alone this is a modest, administratively focused amendment to an existing water program that expands eligible investments to include digital tools and efficiency/ stormwater measures — items that are commonly supported across interests. It does not create large new entitlement spending, change controversial policy areas, or substantially reallocate federal/state authority. Its fate will largely depend on whether it is attached to a larger water or infrastructure package or passed as a standalone technical fix; absent appropriation offsets there could be scrutiny from budget and appropriations stakeholders.
- No cost estimate or CBO score is included in the text; the ultimate fiscal impact depends on how agencies and Congress apply expanded eligibility and on future appropriations.
- The bill does not define key terms (e.g., 'sustainably planned') or set standards for what qualifies as 'cost-effective,' leaving implementation details to agencies or guidance that could become points of contention.
Recent votes on the bill.
No vote history yet
The bill has not accumulated any surfaced votes yet.
Go deeper than the headline read.
Liberals emphasize environmental/climate and equity benefits; conservatives emphasize fiscal restraint, local control, and risk of vendor c…
On content alone this is a modest, administratively focused amendment to an existing water program that expands eligible investments to inc…
Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill is a narrow, statutory amendment that clearly identifies the provision to be changed and specifies categories of technologies and goals to be newly eligible for addit…
Go beyond the headline summary with full stakeholder mapping, legislative design analysis, passage barriers, and lens-by-lens tradeoff breakdowns.