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Program Overview: How SRF Works
The Clean Water State Revolving Fund (SRF) program
was authorized by Title VI of the Clean Water Act
(CWA) Amendments of 1987. The SRF program replaced
the long-running Federal Construction Grants program
providing independent and permanent sources of low-cost
assistance for water quality infrastructure projects.
EPA provides "seed money" to all 50 states and Puerto
Rico to capitalize state loan funds. States administer
the SRF program to provide financial assistance to
local communities.
| Did
you know...?
The following states distributed
the most SRF funding to small
communities since 1988 (in millions):
| Pennsylvania |
$376.7 |
| Ohio |
$334.5 |
| Texas |
$321.2 |
| New Jersey |
$219.6 |
| New York |
$214.5 |
Small communities have received
about 23 percent ($5.2 billion)
of the total available SRF funding
since 1988.
3,897 assistance agreements (loans)
have been awarded to small communities
since 1988.
States in EPA Regions 3 and 5
have awarded the most assistance
agreements to small communities;
953 and 741 respectively.(1)
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| 1
EPA Region 3 States: Delaware, District
of Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania,
Virginia, and West Virginia. Region
5 States: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan,
Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin. |
Low interest loans are the primary form
of SRF financial assistance, which can also include
purchasing insurance or guaranteeing loans. The "revolving"
nature of the SRF is such that as loan payments are
made, funds are recycled to support additional water
quality projects. Total assets of the SRF program
exceeded $27 billion in 1998.
SRF funding allows states to address their highest-priority
water quality needs. Funding is most commonly used
to support wastewater treatment systems (including
decentralized systems), nonpoint source controls,
and estuary protection activities.
Funding Trends
Since 1988 the SRF has lent $22.9 billion
to communities nationwide. Small communities (10,000
or fewer people) account for $5.2 billion. Very small
communities (3,500 or fewer people) have received
44 percent of that $5.2 billion. Table
1 provides a state-by-state summary of loan
dollars and agreements. This information was compiled
from the SRF database maintained by EPA. Figure
1 summarizes the distribution of SRF dollars to
small communities relative to total SRF funding during
the past 11 years. Certain states may provide a higher
percentage of their total state allocation to small
communities, but their total SRF allocation is smaller
than other states. Small communities averaged 23 percent
of total SRF funding with some annual variability;
since 1993 small communities have received from 18
to 29 percent of the total on an annual basis. SRF
funding to small communities has nearly doubled from
$456 million in 1993 to $866 million in 1998.
SRF assistance to small communities also
may be evaluated in terms of the number of assistance
agreements (loans). Only two states had capitalization
grants in SRF's inaugural year (1988) and only three
agreements were awarded that year. More states applied
in 1990 and, as Figure 2 illustrates, the number
of agreements has risen steadily since then. In 1998,
1,139 SRF assistance Agreements were awarded, with
701 of those going to small communities. A total of
3,897 of 6,816 SRF assistance agreements has been
awarded to small communities since 1988.

While small communities received about
23 percent of SRF dollars, they account for 57 percent
of SRF agreements awarded between 1988 and 1998. Small
communities have never received less than 50 percent
of the total number of loans. The apparent disparity
between percentage of agreements and percentage of
dollars indicates that loans to small communities
are usually for lesser amounts of money than loans
to large ones. A possible explanation for the smaller
awards is that relatively smaller and less expensive
wastewater treatment systems are being built for communities
of 10,000 or fewer people.
Although SRF funds a portion of wastewater
treatment needs of small communities, their needs
are relatively large. EPA's 1996 Clean Water Needs
Survey (CWNS) says the total documented need for wastewater
treatment and collection systems for small communities
amounts to $13.8 billion. The 1990 U.S. Census Bureau
data indicate that more than 80 percent of the houses
in the United States without access to wastewater
treatment are in small communities. Figure 3
shows the costs associated with specific categories
of need (as they are defined by the Needs Survey)
and reveals that small communities clearly have the
greatest need for new collector sewers and secondary
treatment. Each of these needs will require approximately
$4 billion of small community funding nationwide.

The Needs Survey states that small communities
with limited financial, technical, administrative,
and legal resources encounter difficulties qualifying
for and repaying SRF loans. Small financial bases
limit the ability of small and rural communities to
finance wastewater projects. Many of these communities
also lack access to private credit markets. Consequently,
these communities may delay addressing their needs.
Future SRF Direction for Small Communities
Despite their comparatively weak economic
status, small communities still must comply with the
CWA requirements for wastewater collection and treatment
and must continue to address human health risks. In
recognition of financial constraints on small communities,
President Clinton's Clean Water Initiative of 1994
proposed the establishment of special subsidies to
make loans more affordable for small communities as
part of the reauthorization of the CWA. These potential
subsidies may include zero or negative (down to negative
two percent) interest rates on loans, extension of
the loan repayment period from 20 to 30 years, or
loan forgiveness.
| Additional copies of
this Fact Sheet may be obtained by
contacting the Office of Water Resource
Center in EPA at (202) 260-7786 and
referring to the document number EPA
832-F-99-057. You may also visit our
Website (http://www.epa.gov/OWM/smallc.htm)
to obtain other summaries of this
information. |
Small Community SRF Data Tables:
| Table
Name |
On-line
View |
Text
Download* |
Excel Spreadsheet
Download
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Table 1. State Clean
Water SRF Assistance and Agreements
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Table 2. EPA Region
and State-by-State Clean Water SRF
Assistance and Agreements
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Table 3. National
Summary of Clean Water SRF Assistance
and Agreements
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* Note: To download
tab-delimited text, right-click on the selected
icon, then save the file to the desired location.
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