The proposal allocates $16.5 billion to the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund and $14 billion to the Clean Water State Revolving Fund, alongside $260 million for the Water Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act. Beyond direct funding, the bill integrates two cybersecurity initiatives championed by the American Water Works Association, focusing on infrastructure resilience and participation in the Water Information Sharing and Analysis Center.
AWWA CEO David LaFrance described the Water Resources Development Act of 2026 as a necessary step toward stabilizing federal utility partnerships. These programs serve to lower debt costs for communities, ultimately insulating households from steeper water bills. However, the scale of the investment remains a fraction of the total requirement; the association’s recent report, Beyond the Replacement Era, estimates that replacing aging infrastructure and enhancing system resilience will demand between $2.1 trillion and $2.4 trillion in spending through 2050.





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