Skip to Content
Planet Laundry
Welcome | Sign-Up | Login
Topics:
  • Equipment
  • Utilities
  • Store Operation
  • Sales + Marketing
  • Business Management
  • Laundry 101
  • News/Features
  • The Magazine
  • Subscribe
  • Multimedia
  • Bulletin Board
  • Blog
  • Buyers Guide
  • Classifieds
  • Event Calendar
Home › Business Management
Planet Laundry

EPA: U.S. Needs Major Sewer, Water Upgrades

By PlanetLaundry staff | Feb 10, 2012

Image

A federal study shows municipalities nationwide need more than $300 billion worth of essential upgrades to long overlooked water and sewer systems over the next 20 years.

The need is acute in Northeastern states with older systems like New York, which requires $29.7 billion worth of improvements, according to U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer, in an Associated Press report. However, he said that price is a "just a drop in the bucket" compared to the higher cost of continuing to upgrade parts of sewer and water systems when emergencies strike. He is pushing a bill that would counter planned funding cuts in the federal transportation bill now being negotiated in Washington.

"The EPA found that the nation's 53,000 community water systems and 21,400 not-for-profit, non-community water systems will need to invest an estimated $334.8 billion [by] 2027," stated the federal Drinking Water Infrastructure Needs Survey and Assessment.

The National Association of Counties' 2008 report estimated the need for water and sewer upgrades at $300 billion to $450 billion nationwide, and the federal stimulus project provided just a fraction of that as the recession reduced local governments' revenues.

"This is a very serious concern," said Carolyn Berndt of the National League of Cities. "Many communities have a long-term plan to replace all of their underground water infrastructure, but even if they do a couple percentages of pipes a year, it's still going to take more than 100 years for some of them to replace it all."

She said local governments have been paying more than 95 percent of the cost of water and sewer upgrades since the 1990s as federal aid has declined. Schumer said federal aid covered 75 percent of local costs in the 1980s and 1970s.

"It's a huge undertaking," Berndt explained. "Some of these pipes are 100 years old. That's why they continue to see water main breaks."



Print SHARE Yahoo! Digg Stumble Upon Facebook Twitter

Discussion

To post comments, Register OR Login

Comments | See all comments | Info/Rules

Planet Laundry is pleased to provide you an opportunity to share your thoughts, comments & experiences about what is going on in the laundry industry. Some comments may be reprinted elsewhere online or offline. We encourage lively, open discussion and posts, and only ask that you refrain from personal comments and remarks that are off topic. We reserve the right to edit/remove comments. Thanks for being part of the Planet Laundry community.

Post A New Comment

Subject:
Comment: *
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.


Print SHARE

Sponsored By:
  • Featured in Business Management
  • Discuss
  • Habit Forming

    Develop these 7 habits – and enhance your business and personal success

  • ‘Clean, Filled and Working’

    An interview with Vending Times Senior Editor Emily Jed

  • CLA Insurance Announces 25-Year Anniversary

    Company to celebrate at Clean ’13 in New Orleans

  • The Card Game

    What to consider when adding credit card acceptance to your laundry business

  • 10 Years… 10 Lessons

    The 10 most powerful lessons the author has learned about owning a business in the last 10 years

    • Tax Burden
    • No lease
    • analyze this situation please
    • Re fi on our mat in Michigan --help / question
    • Financing options for new store/new equipment
  • Most Read
  • Most Discussed
  1. Stirring the Melting Pot
  2. A Perfect Storm
  3. Breaking Through
  4. 2008: The Year in Review
  5. How ‘Recession-Proof’ Are We?
  6. ‘This Is Not a Short-Term Investment’
  7. If You Want to Lead the Orchestra, You Must Turn Your Back on the Crowd
  8. Taking Stock of the Coin Laundry Business
  9. The More Things Change… The More Your Turns Stay the Same
  1. If You Want to Lead the Orchestra, You Must Turn Your Back on the Crowd
  2. Minimum Wage Milestone
  3. Can a Shareholder be Liable for Corporate Debt?
  4. Small-Business Group Releases 2012 Survey Results
  5. Take Advantage of Tax Incentives Now
  6. Swipe Fee Limit Raised
  7. On the Money
  8. Rental Market: Occupancy Rates On the Rise
  9. When Colleges Offer ‘Free Laundry’…




Coin Laundry Association

  • About Us
  • Benefits
  • Resources/ Education
  • Insurance

Become a Member

Newsletter Signup

Video

  • Insuring Your Laundry

more videos

Podcast

  • PlanetLaundry: The Magazine
  • Garment Care Toolkit
  • Equipment Replacement: Cost vs. Benefit Analysis
  • Why Kansas Hired a Lobbyist

Webinar

Get Creative!

Stephen Bean
Monday, November 1, 2010

Login or Register to watch

  • Insurance Basics: What You Need to Know
  • Evaluating an Investment in the Laundry Business
  • Evaluating an Investment in the Laundry Business
  • RSS Headlines
  • Send Your Story Tips
  • Login
  • Register to post
Editorial:
  • News/Features
  • The Magazine
  • Blogs
  • Videos
  • Podcasts
  • Webcasts
  • Buyers Guide
Discussion:
  • Business Management
  • Equipment
  • For Fun
  • Laundry 101
  • Sales & Marketing
  • Store Operations
  • Utilities
  • General Topics
Sections:
  • Business Management
  • Equipment
  • Laundry 101
  • Sales & Marketing
  • Store Operations
  • Utilities
Classifieds:
  • For Sale
  • Wanted
  • Services
  • Business Opportunities
  • Place an Ad
Services:
  • Register
  • Member Login
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • RSS Headlines
  • Subscribe to The Magazine

Home | News/Features | The Journal | Community | Multimedia | Bulletin Board | Blog | Buyers Guide | Classifieds | Event Calendar | Advertise

© 2013 Coin Laundry Association | Privacy | Top Navigation | Sitemap | Member Login | Contact