K A R E N F L I G G E RU S E P A , O F F I C E O F W A S T E W A T E R M A N A G E M E N T
N O V E M B E R 1 5 , 2 0 1 1
Clean Watersheds Needs Survey 2012 Update
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What is CWNS
Assessment of capital costs needed to meet the Clean Water Act’s (CWA) water quality goals
Joint effort by EPA, States, & Local organizations
Conducted every 4 yearsNext data collection: 2012
Data is submitted by states via the CWNS Data Entry Portal (DEP)
Results in Report to Congress and publicly available data on the Internet
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Clean Water Act Authority
CWA Sec. 516 excerpt defines EPA’s role:“The EPA Administrator, in cooperation with the States, …shall make (a)
a detailed estimate of the cost of carrying out the provisions of this Act”; (b) a detailed estimate…of the cost of construction of all needed publicly owned treatment works in all of the States and publicly owned treatment works in each of the States”
CWA Sec. 205(a) excerpt defines Congress’s role:“Allotments…shall be made only in accordance with a revised cost
estimate made and submitted to Congress in accordance with Sec. 516 of this Act and only after such revised cost estimate shall have been approved by law specifically enacted hereafter.”
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CWNS 4-Year Cycle
Survey data becomes publicly availableAnticipated time of availability is approximately 12-18 months after the survey closes.
Data Entry & Review PeriodOfficial data entry period is January 9, 2012-October 27, 2012.
Data review period will end in December 2012
Report to CongressEPA uses survey data to complete Report to Congress.
Congress uses report to inform policy.
CWNS 2012 Workgroup & SubcommitteesStates and Regions work with EPA HQ to plan for CWNS 2012
November 2009 – July 2011
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Methodology
Inventory of Needs6
CWNS periodic inventory of existing and projected publicly owned wastewater treatment works (POTWs) and other water pollution control facilities in the United States
Not a census nor a sample
Enter data for as many facilities in the state as possible
Needs Definition
The unfunded capital costs -- as of January 1, 2012 -- of a project that addresses an existing or projected (within next 20 years) water quality or water quality related public health problem
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Data is entered at Facility/ Project Level8
Examples:Treatment plantCollection system (combined & separate)Stormwater management projectCombined sewer overflow (CSO) control projectPump StationRecycled water distribution facilityDecentralized wastewater treatment projectNon-point source pollution control project
Information Collected9
NeedsWater quality or water quality related public health problemEstimated costsDocumentation outlining needs & costs
Technical dataFacility/ Project typesPermit informationPoint of contact informationLocation InformationDecentralized, treatment plant, and collection system population servedTreatment plant flow, effluent, and discharge information
CWNS 2012 Wastewater Needs Categories10
I: Secondary wastewater treatmentII: Advanced wastewater treatmentIII-A: Infiltration/inflow correctionIII-B: Sewer replacement/rehabilitation IV-A: New collector sewers appurtenancesIV-B: New interceptor sewers and appurtenancesV-A: Combined sewer overflow correction
-- Traditional Infrastructure
V-B: Combined sewer overflow correction -- Green Infrastructure
X: Recycled water distribution
CWNS 2012 Stormwater Needs Categories 11
VI-A: Stormwater Conveyance InfrastructureVI-B: Stormwater Treatment SystemsVI-C: Green InfrastructureVI-D:General Stormwater Management
CWNS 2012 Nonpoint Source and Decentralized Wastewater Treatment Needs Categories
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VII-A: Nonpoint Source (NPS) Control Agriculture (cropland)VII-B: NPS Agriculture (animals)VII-C: NPS SilvicultureVII-E: NPS Ground Water Protection VII-F: NPS MarinasVII-G: NPS Resource ExtractionVII-H: NPS BrownfieldsVII-I: NPS Storage TanksVII-J: NPS Sanitary LandfillsVII-K: NPS HydromodificationVII-M: NPS Other Estuary Management ActivitiesXII: Decentralized wastewater treatment systems
Eligibility Criteria
1. Description of the water quality or public health problem
2. Location of the problem3. Solution to the problem4. Cost of the solution5. Basis for the cost6. Total cost7. Current Documentation
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eeds
Cos
ts
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CWNS 2008 Results
Highlights from CWNS 2008
Total reported wastewater and stormwater needs are $298.1 billion (January 2008 dollars) as of January 1, 2008. Total reported Nonpoint Source needs are $22.8 billion and Decentralized Wastewater Treatment System needs are $23.9 billion. Reported needs increased 17% from 2004 to 2008.Largest increases in needs are for secondary and advanced wastewater treatment and stormwater management.Seven states (DC, NJ, GU, NE, WV, NY, MD) reported per capita needs greater than $1,500. Eight states (NJ, CA, NY, FL, IL, OH, PA, TX) reported more than half of the total needs. 14,780 treatment facilities serve 226.4 million people. If all needs are met, 15,617 treatment facilities will serve 284.2 million people.
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Total Needs by State (Jan. 2008 dollars)
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CWNS Data Uses
Authorized to be used for the allotment of Clean Water State Revolving Funds (CWSRF) fundsProvides information to Congress and state legislatures for budget and policy purposesInforms the public and contributes to academic research
Assists with program implementation
Informs programmatic planning at the state and national level
CWNS Data Online18
The CWNS 2008 Report to Congress and complete data set is available at www.epa.gov/cwns.
Factsheets for each facility or project entered
Customizable tables and graphs of key data organized by State, EPA Region, Congressional District, County, and Watershed
Access database of all data nationally or by state
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CWNS 2012
Charge to States for 201220
Full participationIn 2008, 3 states and 2 territories did not participate
Increased reporting of needs in areas that are traditionally underreported
Small communitiesDecentralized wastewater treatment systemsNonpoint source pollution controlStormwater managementMexico Border region
2012 Schedule
November 1, 2011: Interim Data Entry beginsDecember 7-9, 2011: Training for States & Regions in Dallas, TX (Region 6 office)January 9, 2011: Official Data Entry Period begins
Virtual Kick-off meeting with States & Regions at 1:00 pm ET
October 26, 2012: Official Data Entry Period endsNovember-December: Final data review and reconciliation
Spring 2013: End of Survey Meeting~Late 2013 or early 2014: Report to Congress delivery & data available to public
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Questions and Feedback23
How can EPA better support states during 2012 data entry?
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