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Washington, D.C. : Congressional Research Service, Library of Congress, 2017.
Summary:
Each state and the District of Columbia must receive at least 1% of available funds, and as much as 0.33% of the total appropriation must be made available for grants to the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, American Samoa, and Guam. States also have the option of using as much as 15% for a combination of the following: loans for the acquisition of land or conservation easements; loans to implement voluntary source water protection measures; technical and financial assistance to systems as part of a capacity development strategy; and development and implementation of ground water protection programs. Congress gave states flexibility to set priorities between the SDWA and Clean Water Act SRF programs to accommodate the divergent drinking water and wastewater needs and priorities among the states. The law authorized states to transfer as much as 33% of the annual DWSRF allotment to the CWSRF or an equivalent amount from the CWSRF to the DWSRF. EPA is required to distribute the DWSRF funds to the states based on the results of the latest needs survey.
Notes:
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
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