Rep. Juan Vargas Leads Effort to Fund U.S.-Mexico Border Water Infrastructure Program
WASHINGTON, D.C. (May 1, 2019) – Rep. Juan Vargas is leading a funding request for the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) U.S.-Mexico Border Water Infrastructure Program and the EPA’s Office of International and Tribal Affairs, which supports vital programs, including the Border 2020 environmental program. These programs are critical to protecting public health and improving wastewater infrastructure on both sides of the border.
“We have a real environmental crisis in our border region that demands urgent assistance,” said Rep. Juan Vargas. “Funding infrastructure improvement programs along the U.S.-Mexico border are imperative to protecting public health and the regional environment, keeping the waterways free from pollution, and mitigating harmful sewage spills impacting our communities.”
In a letter to the House Committee on Appropriations, Representatives from California, Arizona, and Texas are requesting the inclusion of $100 million in funding of the U.S. -Mexico Border Water Infrastructure Program in the Fiscal Year (FY) 2020 Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies appropriations bill. The Representatives are also requesting robust funding for the EPA’s Office of International and Tribal Affairs.
The full text of the letter is below:
April 1, 2019
Dear Chair McCollum and Ranking Member Joyce:
We write in strong support of the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) U.S.-Mexico’s border programs, and respectfully request you include $100 million in funding for the U.S.-Mexico Border Water Infrastructure Program in the Fiscal Year (FY) 2020 Interior, Environment and Related Agencies appropriations bill. Additionally, we urge you to provide robust funding for the EPA’s Office of International and Tribal Affairs which supports vital programs such as the Border 2020 environmental program and other related projects.
We recently marked the 31th anniversary of the La Paz Agreement which defines the EPA’s U.S.-Mexico Border work to advance our priorities of protecting the environment and public health along the U.S.-Mexico Border. EPA addresses these trans-boundary issues through both the U.S.-Mexico Border water infrastructure program and the US-Mexico Border 2020 environmental program.
The two-thousand-mile border between the United States and Mexico is one of the most complex and dynamic regions in the world, with a growing need to address trans-border environmental issues. This region accounts for three of the ten poorest counties in the U.S., with an unemployment rate 250-300 percent higher than the rest of the United States. Additionally, 26 U.S. federally recognized Native American tribes are located in the U.S.-Mexico border region. The La Paz Agreement and the adoption of the Border 2012 program in 2003 have gone a long way to protect and improve the health and environmental conditions along a border that extends from the Gulf of Mexico to the Pacific Ocean. Building on the successes of the Border 2012 program, the Border 2020 program lays out a roadmap for continued environmental cooperation of the next eight years.
The Border 2020 Program addresses border-wide air pollution, access to clean and safe water, material and waste management, emergency preparedness, and compliance assurance. Projects funded address the greatest environmental health issues in the areas of greatest need in the U.S. and the trans-boundary issues along Mexico’s U.S. border. The U.S.-Mexico Border 2012 Program improved access to actionable information to increase compliance with water and air quality standards; reduced contamination through cleanup and proper disposal of 560 tons of used electronics and more than 12 million scraps tires from the largest tire piles; increased joint readiness for environmental response through enhanced training and equipment exchanges; and improved enforcement through coordinated communication and training.
The EPA’s Border Water Infrastructure Program is unique among federal funding programs. It is the only federal program that can fund projects on both sides of the border, with all projects benefiting communities on the U.S. side of the border. The EPA investments in these wastewater projects are protecting public health from waterborne diseases and have been a key factor in significant water quality improvements in the U.S. waterbodies, such as the Rio Grande (Texas and New Mexico), Santa Cruz River (Arizona), New River (California), and Tijuana River and Pacific Ocean (California). Since the program began in 1997, it has provided over 60,000 border homes with access to safe drinking water and more than 550,000 homes with adequate wastewater collection and treatment services. Most border communities have received access to these services for the first time. The program’s funding has made significant progress addressing the public health and environmental impact of inadequate drinking water and wastewater infrastructure among the U.S.-Mexico border. Currently, the EPA has identified nearly $125 million in projects in need of funding through the Border Water Infrastructure Program.
We appreciate your consideration and strongly urge the Committee to provide robust funding for the EPA’s U.S.-Mexico’s border programs at the requested amount. Underserved border communities are still challenged by existing infrastructure gaps and would greatly benefit by continued support for these programs.
Sincerely,
Rep. Juan Vargas
Rep. Susan Davis
Rep. Scott Peters
Rep. Mike Levin
Rep. Filemon Vela
Rep. Vicente Gonzalez
Rep. Raul M. Grijalva
Rep. Tony Cárdenas
Vargas represents California’s 51st Congressional District which includes the southern portion of San Diego County, all of Imperial County and California’s entire U.S.-Mexico border. Vargas was first elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 2012 and is currently serving his fourth term in Congress. He serves on the House Financial Services Committee and House Foreign Affairs Committee.
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