New Orleans Could Get Up to $111 Million Loan for Sewer Upgrades
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The Environmental Protection Agency has invited New Orleans to apply for up to $111 million in loans to help restore its aging sewer system.
The money could help the city’s Sewerage and Water Board meet a 2025 federal court deadline for completing that restoration, the New Orleans agency said in a news release Tuesday.
The EPA got letters of interest from 51 public and private agencies, and 38 were chosen to apply for $6 billion in loans to help finance about double that amount in water infrastructure investments, the federal agency said in its own news release.
The New Orleans agency and EPA will be working on the arrangement, with the aim of getting the first payment in mid-2020.
“We’re confident the negotiations with EPA will go smoothly, and we’re looking forward to the partnership this process will forge for the future,” chief financial officer Yvette Downs said.
New Orleans’ sewer and sewage treatment system has been under a federal court consent decree with EPA since 1998 for violating the Clean Water Act for “sanitary sewer overflow violations” that sent untreated sewage into Lake Pontchartrain, the Mississippi River and other waterways. Deadlines were extended three times after Hurricane Katrina flooded 80% of the city in 2005.
The Sewerage and Water Board said it has completed work in six of nine affected areas, all on New Orleans’ east bank.
It said the loan will speed up work on the others and gives the agency the flexibility to move future money toward other critical projects.
The loans are being given under the Water Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act of 2014.
Related News
From Archive
- Fatal trench collapse halts sewer construction in Massachusetts; two workers hospitalized
- Alaska LNG pipeline could require 7,000 workers at peak construction, developers say
- Ohio trench collapse kills one worker, injures two during pipe installation
- Elon Musk's Boring Co. fined for dumping drilling waste into Vegas sewer system
- $1.4 billion Midwest pipeline expansion to move more Canadian oil to U.S. Gulf
- Glenfarne Alaska LNG targets late-2026 construction start for 807-mile pipeline project
- Fatal trench collapse halts sewer construction in Massachusetts; two workers hospitalized
- Massive water line failure leaves majority of Waterbury without service
- Infrastructure failure releases 100,000 gallons of wastewater in Houston; repairs ongoing
- Pennsylvania American Water launches interactive map to identify, replace lead water service lines

Comments