Contact Us

Newsroom

All News Releases By Date

 

VICE PRESIDENT ANNOUNCES NEW MEASURES TO PROVIDE SAFER DRINKING WATER FOR 40 MILLION AMERICANS

Release Date: 03/28/2000
Contact Information:


FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MARCH 28, 2000

Vice President Gore today announced new measures to provide safer drinking water for 40 million Americans. The press release is attached. For further information, contact Robin Woods at 202 260-4377.


R-39 ###

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Vice President
For Immediate Release Contact:
March 28, 2000 (202) 456-7035

VICE PRESIDENT ANNOUNCES NEW MEASURES TO PROVIDE
SAFER DRINKING WATER FOR 40 MILLION AMERICANS
      Washington, D.C.--Vice President Gore today unveiled steps to protect an additional 40 million Americans from potentially dangerous microbes, including Cryptosporidium, in their drinking water. A new standard proposed by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will provide the first-ever protection against these contaminants for people in small communities. This proposal is expected to prevent as many as 83,000 cases of waterborne illness each year.

      In addition, the Vice President announced how the President’s proposed $825 million Safe Drinking Water Revolving Loan Fund for fiscal year 2001 would be allocated among all the states if fully funded by Congress.
      “Americans enjoy some of the safest drinking water in the world. Today, more than 90 percent of the people served by community water systems receive tap water that meets all federal health standards,” Gore said. “I am proud of this Administration’s commitment to ensuring that every American receives safe, healthy drinking water from their tap. I am dedicated to ensuring that they receive the resources they need to continue to make that happen.”
      Cryptosporidium, a microscopic parasite found in animal and other organic wastes, is one of several potentially harmful microbes that can contaminate drinking water. It is highly resistant to traditional disinfection treatments, and requires advanced filtration and other processes to be removed from water. A 1993 Cryptosporidium outbreak in Milwaukee sickened 400,000 people, hospitalized more than 4,000, and caused more than 50 deaths among people with weakened immune systems. Since then, there have been smaller cryptosporidiosis outbreaks in Nevada, Oregon and Georgia.
      In December l998, President Clinton announced the first public health standards to remove Cryptosporidium in large water systems that serve 140 million people, to prevent up to 460,000 cases of waterborne illness a year. The l998 standards strengthened filtration and monitoring requirements to remove Cryptosporidium and other microbes.

      Today’s proposal would extend these public health protections by requiring 11,500 small water systems serving fewer than 10,000 people each to protect against Cryptosporidium and will improve treatment processes at water systems of all sizes. Currently, more than 18 million people are served by these smaller water systems. To help communities upgrade their water systems, the Administration’s FY 2001 budget proposes $825 million for the Safe Drinking Water revolving Loan Fund. The fund, created by the Safe Drinking Water Act amendments signed in l996 by President Clinton, provides grants to make low-interest loans to cities to upgrade the nation’s drinking water systems. This initiative maintains that fifteen percent of the loans must go to small communities.
      Since 1996, this revolving loan fund has made almost $3.6 billion available to water systems around the country, and this month, the EPA will have funded over 1,000 loans and grants under this program. Vice President Gore’s announcement unveils what the President’s proposed $825 million would mean for every state in the country. (A list of state-by-state allocations is attached.)
      EPA will take public comment for 60 days on the proposals, called the “Long Term 1 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Proposed Rule” and the “Filter Backwash Proposed Rule.” Additional information on the proposals can be found at: https://www.epa.gov/safewater or by calling EPA’s Safe Drinking Water Hotline at 1-800-426-4791.

BREAKDOWN OF SAFE DRINKING WATER GRANTS:
      Following is a list of the funds that would be allocated under the President’s FY2001 budget proposal:

State FY01 request

Alabama $9,279,900
Alaska $7,806,300
Arizona $7,955,400
Arkansas $11,106,800
California $84,525,400
Colorado $10,503,400
Connecticut $7,806,300
Delaware $7,806,300
Florida $22,628,500
Georgia $16,720,600
Hawaii $7,806,300
Idaho $7,806,300
Illinois $27,134,300
Indiana $9,523,100
Iowa $12,319,800
Kansas $10,970,800
Kentucky $11,895,400
Louisiana $10,906,300
Maine $7,806,300
Maryland $7,806,300
Massachusetts $30,051,400
Michigan $22,966,700
Minnesota $12,996,600
Mississippi $9,067,300
Missouri $10,496,000
Montana $7,806,300
Nebraska $7,806,300
Nevada $7,806,300
New Hampshire $7,806,300
New Jersey $19,016,600
New Mexico $7,806,300
New York $49,396,100
North Carolina $14,096,400
North Dakota $7,806,300
Ohio $24,999,900
Oklahoma $11,207,700
Oregon $11,584,300
Pennsylvania $24,560,000
Puerto Rico $11,208,500
      Rhode Island $7,806,300
South Carolina $8,407,200
      South Dakota $7,806,300
Tennessee $10,476,800
Texas $59,210,000
Utah $7,806,300
Vermont $7,806,300
Virginia $15,231,900
Washington $21,013,000
West Virginia $7,806,300
Wisconsin $10,466,800
Wyoming $7,806,300

D.C. $7,806,300
Territories $2,576,100

Tribal $12,375,000
      Unregulated Contaminants $2,000,000
Operator Certification $30,000,000