Gillibrand Pushes To Have Water Measure OK’d
Senator Kirsten Gillibrand is pushing Congress to pass the Contaminant and Lead Electronic Accounting and Reporting Requirements (CLEARR) for Drinking Water Act, which she says would help small and disadvantaged communities across New York state clean up water contamination in their local water systems.
The CLEARR Drinking Water Act would increase funding for disadvantaged communities to comply with Safe Drinking Water Act requirements, help communities identify at-risk drinking water systems, and modernize the testing of public water systems.
“The CLEARR Drinking Water Act would give communities the resources they need to clean up water pollution.
New Yorkers have a right to know what is in their drinking water and whether it’s safe to drink, and I urge my colleagues to pass this important legislation now.” The CLEARR Drinking Water Act would increase the amount of funding provided by the Assistance for Small and Disadvantaged Communities program from $60 million per year through 2021 to $230 million for 2019 and $300 million each year for 2020 through 2023.
The Assistance for Small and Disadvantaged Communities program helps small and disadvantaged communities comply with Safe Drinking Water Act requirements.
The legislation would also provide funding for in-home water quality tests.
In addition, the CLEARR Drinking Water Act would help modernize the testing of public water systems by requiring the EPA to establish new electronic reporting of water system compliance data, helping to provide communities with a real-time look at water quality.
It would also create new transparency requirements from the EPA about water pollution in order to help New York communities identify and report at-risk drinking water systems.
Specifically, the CLEARR Drinking Water Act would require the EPA to do the following: ¯ Provide advice and technical assistance to state and public water systems to help bring those systems into compliance with drinking water regulations; ¯ Perform research on drinking water contaminants, serious public health crises, and the possible health effects that contaminants have on the health of residents.
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