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State Revolving Fund 1) How the Program Works 2) How Federal Stimulus Funds Will be Used

State Revolving Fund 1) How the Program Works 2) How Federal Stimulus Funds Will be Used. Lori Beary, Iowa Finance Authority Patti Cale-Finnegan, Department of Natural Resources. *. State Revolving Fund.

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State Revolving Fund 1) How the Program Works 2) How Federal Stimulus Funds Will be Used

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  1. State Revolving Fund1)How the Program Works 2) How Federal Stimulus Funds Will be Used Lori Beary, Iowa Finance Authority Patti Cale-Finnegan, Department of Natural Resources

  2. * State Revolving Fund The SRF is one of Iowa’s primary sources of financing for drinking water and wastewater infrastructure projects

  3. * State Revolving Fund Jointly administered by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources and the Iowa Finance Authority

  4. * Growth of SRF

  5. * Growth of SRF

  6. DrinkingWater SRF • Loans for: • Improvements to public water supply systems • Consolidations and connections • Source water protection • DWSRF set-asides fund technical assistance, capacity development, state drinking water program, SWP

  7. Clean Water SRF • Loans for: • Publicly owned wastewater treatment facilities • Sewer system rehabilitation • New systems for unsewered communities • Stormwater management for water quality

  8. * Types of Loans • Planning & design • Construction • Source water protection • Watershed protection

  9. SRF Infrastructure Projects (FY08) Drinking Water Wastewater

  10. Nonpoint Source Loans • Private landowners for soil conservation practices • Livestock producers for manure management • Rural homeowners to replace inadequate septic systems

  11. Nonpoint Source Loans • Communities and private developers for storm water quality management • Watershed groups for land acquisition • Communities for brownfield and landfill cleanups

  12. SRF Nonpoint Projects

  13. * SRF and ARRA • American Recovery and Reinvestment Act funnels some drinking water and water quality dollars through SRF • As an existing program, can get funds allocated quickly • Iowa will receive $53 million for CWSRF, and $24 million for DWSRF

  14. * SRF and ARRA • Primary Objectives: • “To preserve and create jobs and promote economic recovery” • “To invest in transportation, environmental protection, and other infrastructure that will provide long-term economic benefits” • “To assist those most impacted by the recession” • “To stabilize state and local government budgets” • “To provide investments need to increase economic efficiency by spurring technological advances in science and health”

  15. * SRF and ARRA • Half the funds must be in the form of loan forgiveness • $26.5 million for CWSRF • $12 million for DWSRF

  16. * SRF and ARRA • Intended Use Plans • Iowa’s strategies for meeting the goals of the ARRA. • The plan for allocating the $77 million in stimulus funds, including 50% for forgivable loans and 20% for “green” projects. • The method for determining which projects may receive stimulus funds -- disadvantaged community criteria. • A list of “shovel-ready” projects.

  17. * SRF and ARRA • Projects must be “shovel-ready” – working with current SRF projects • Must have construction permits as needed • Must have environmental review completed • Must have gone to bid using SRF and special stimulus front-end requirements

  18. * SRF and ARRA • Applicants must be “disadvantaged” • Median Household Income (MHI) as % of statewide average • Water or sewer rates as % of MHI • System debt • Unemployment levels

  19. * SRF and ARRA • Additional requirements: Davis-Bacon prevailing wages • Previously not a requirement for SRF • Applies to CDBG projects • In Clean Water Act reauthorization and likely to be permanent in CWSRF

  20. SRF and ARRA • Additional requirements: Buy American • 100% of iron, steel, and manufactured goods must be made in U.S. • Waiver provision in case U.S. made products not available or if cost of project increases 25% • Waiting for guidance on certifications

  21. SRF and ARRA • Clean Water SRF priority list • 40 projects • Loan forgiveness from 20% to 40% of SRF loan amount • Loan forgiveness amount = $27 million • Total loan amount = $96 million

  22. SRF and ARRA • Drinking Water SRF priority list • 20 projects • Loan forgiveness from 30% to 50% of SRF loan amount • Loan forgiveness amount = $13 million • Total loan amount = $63 million

  23. SRF and ARRA • 20% of funds for “green” projects • Water efficiency • Energy efficiency • Green infrastructure • Environmentally innovative

  24. SRF and ARRA • Green application process yielded 120 applications totaling $123 million • 49 projects proposed for funding • Water meters, fine bubble aeration, rain gardens, nitrate removal wetlands, porous paving, high efficiency pumps, decentralized wastewater, etc.

  25. SRF and ARRA • Timelines and deadlines • Application deadline for green projects – March 27 • Publication of draft IUPs –April 3 • Public hearing – April 16 • Public comment period closed – April 23

  26. SRF and ARRA • Timelines and deadlines • Presented to EPC – May 19 • EPA goal of having half of funds committed – June 17 • All funds committed to projects under contract or under construction – February 17, 2010

  27. SRF and ARRA • Will there be another round of funding? • Possibly, depending on current projects not proceeding or needing less money • Who might be considered for it? • Projects that have completed SRF requirements and are shovel-ready • Additional green projects

  28. SRF and ARRA • Balancing multiple objectives: • Be transparent and accountable • Get money out quickly • Implement new and additional processes and requirements • Fund innovative projects

  29. Sign up for SRF list serve Send an e-mail to Eunice Boyd Eunice.boyd@dnr.iowa.gov And ask to subscribe

  30. For more information Patti Cale-Finnegan Iowa Department of Natural Resources 515-725-0498 Patti.cale-finnegan@dnr.iowa.gov Lori Beary Iowa Finance Authority 515-725-4965 Lori.beary@iowa.gov

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