Vermont
Delegation Announces $39 Million
In Economic Stimulus Funds for
Statewide Clean Water Projects
At St. Albans
Press Conference
ST.ALBANS, JUNE 1 – Senator Bernie Sanders,
Congressman Peter Welch and a representative of Senator Patrick Leahy
announced today the release of $39 million in economic stimulus funds
during a press conference at the St. Albans Bay Village Pavilion.
The grants and low-interest loans, to be distributed
through the Environmental Protection Agency, will go to 41 wastewater
clean-up projects and 42 drinking water projects throughout
Vermont. The funds, which were made possible by
the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, will help
municipalities finance overdue improvements to wastewater and clean
drinking water projects essential to protecting public health and the
environment, while creating new jobs in Vermont.
The delegation members made the announcement in
St. Albans, which will receive $2 million in direct funding
and low-interest loans to upgrade its wastewater treatment facility. The
ARRA funding will allow St. Albans to move forward with the project,
which will reduce pollution into Lake Champlain and provide for future development in the
city and town.
Sanders and Welch were joined at the event by Mayor
Marty Manahan, St. Albans Town Selectboard Chairman Bill Nye and St.
Albans City Manager Dominic Cloud.
The wastewater ARRA funding will support wastewater
treatment plant upgrades in Brattleboro, South Burlington, Pawlet and St. Albans; pump
station improvements in Essex and Hartford;
solar panel projects in Montpelier, Troy and Jay; and major sewer upgrades in
Springfield, Glover, Bradford and
Waterbury. The clean drinking water ARRA funding
will support projects in 42 schools and municipal water districts
throughout Vermont.
For a complete list of the wastewater projects, click
here, and for a list of the drinking water projects, click
here.
Sen. Leahy said, “By investing in communities' water
and wastewater infrastructure, we can help promote smart growth, protect
Lake Champlain
and other natural treasures, and sow the seeds of economic growth.
The work that will be done this year and next will help put engineers,
contractors and many others back to work. The long-term benefit of
these projects will make our state a better place to live and work for
future generations and for all Vermonters.”
Sen. Sanders said, “These grants are another example
of how the economic recovery package is helping
Vermont
and states across the country rebuild our crumbling infrastructure and
in the process creating millions of good-paying jobs.”
Rep. Welch said, “Throughout our state, Vermonters are
seeing the results of our federal economic recovery investment. Bridges
are being built, roads are being paved and, soon, cities and towns will
be able to make long overdue improvements to critical wastewater and
drinking water infrastructure. These funds will create jobs, provide
much-needed assistance to
Vermont
municipalities and decrease our impact on the environment.”
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