Wisconsin to provide $402M for drinking water loans

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The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources announced that more than $402 million has been allocated for financial assistance through the Safe Drinking Water Loan Program to 106 municipalities to improve drinking water quality for Wisconsinites.

One of the Northeast Wisconsin communities to receive funds is the village of Reedsville. The village will get more than $3 million in SDWLP funding, of which $639,275 is principal forgiveness, and the remaining $2.5 million will be available at a subsidized interest rate. Reedsville will use the funding for a project to add ion exchange treatment to address recent nitrate exceedances, along with making upgrades at the well to other aging equipment.

The funding will help municipalities across the state construct needed water infrastructure projects, including replacing lead service lines and addressing emerging contaminants such as per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances, with a special focus on small and disadvantaged communities.

There are more than 167,000 known lead service lines throughout the state, and this funding will help municipalities continue their efforts toward the goal of replacing the remaining lead service lines. Wisconsin has been a national leader in providing funding to replace lead service lines and was the first state to utilize SDWLP funds for this purpose.

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The money will be awarded to municipalities over the next year and disbursed as eligible costs are incurred. The funding comes from a combination of the DNR’s SDWLP ($276.7 million), Supplemental Drinking Water Bipartisan Infrastructure Law funding ($24.9 million), Emerging Contaminant (PFAS) Drinking Water BIL funding ($26.6 million), and the Lead Service Line Replacement BIL Funding ($74.1 million).

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