N.J. launches Water Infrastructure Investment Plan

Feb. 2, 2022
Funded by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Plan, the state's plan will be funding $169 million this year for drinking water, wastewater, and stormwater infrastructure.

The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) has announced the launch of the state’s Water Infrastructure Investment Plan.

The plan will provide short- and long-term investments in drinking water, wastewater, and stormwater infrastructure.

Over the next three months, the DEP and N.J. Infrastructure Bank (I-Bank) will engage with a broad array of stakeholders in developing the Water Infrastructure Investment Plan (WIIP)’s parameters for the first of a five-year period.

The WIIP will be fueled by new federal funding under the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and continuing state appropriations.

“This Water Infrastructure Investment Plan reaffirms our commitment to modernize New Jersey’s aging water infrastructure and deliver safe drinking water to our residents,” said Governor Phil Murphy. “This once-in-a-generation opportunity allows New Jerseyans to participate in the planning process to shape and better their communities through these investments. I am grateful for the work of President Biden and our Congressional delegation to ensure that New Jersey receives billions of dollars for these critical water infrastructure projects while advancing environmental justice.”

“By coming together to shape the Wastewater Infrastructure Investment Plan, we can better deliver what New Jersey residents deserve and expect: safe drinking water when they turn on the tap, streets and businesses not so easily overcome with floodwaters, and waterways that are clean and vibrant,” said DEP Commissioner LaTourette. “This is our moment to make once-in-a-generation investments that will create jobs improving our public and environmental health, while motivating long-term term growth in communities that our infrastructure investments will uplift and support.”

The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law is the single largest investment in the nation’s water infrastructure, providing New Jersey with $169 million this year for drinking water, wastewater, and stormwater infrastructure improvement projects. This is the first of five years of investment through the law.

Further supported by state investments, these funds will begin the construction of projects that better protect drinking water supplies, ensure the delivery of clean drinking water to all New Jersey communities, and reduce the risk of exposure to lead and synthetic chemicals in drinking water.

The funding will also improve our communities’ resilience in the face of increasing precipitation, extreme weather, and flooding by right-sizing stormwater infrastructure.

The funding will also improve the quality of New Jersey’s lakes, rivers, and streams through upgrades to wastewater infrastructure, including long-deferred improvements to combined sewer overflow systems.

This funding will support federal and state priorities to help communities replace lead-containing water service lines, reduce pollution of waterways from combined sewer systems, harden critical infrastructure to climate change, adapt and modernize stormwater management systems to a changing climate, improve wastewater treatment plants and their collection systems, and help public water suppliers to install treatment systems to address threats from emerging contaminants such as per-and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS).

For 2022—the first of five allotments through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law – New Jersey will receive:

  • $73.3 million for any eligible Clean Water State Revolving Fund project
  • $30.6 million for any eligible Drinking Water State Revolving Fund project
  • $48.3 million to address drinking water lead service line replacements
  • $12.9 million to address contaminants of emerging concern, such as PFAS in drinking water
  • $3.8 million to address contaminants of emerging concern in wastewater.

The DEP is kicking off the WIIP development effort with a series of stakeholder sessions beginning Jan. 24 that will gather input from interested parties on the broad goals of WIIP. The sessions will help the DEP develop criteria for prioritizing drinking water and clean water infrastructure projects to be funded through an initial investment of $169 million provided by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The process will culminate in the adoption of a WIIP for State Fiscal Year 2023/Federal Fiscal Year 2022.

During the engagement sessions, attendees will have the opportunity to share their water infrastructure needs and challenges and shape WIIP, criteria including project priority rankings, affordability criteria, funding packages, and project types that qualify for principal forgiveness. The sessions will also include discussions on the allocation of principal forgiveness and funding packages to address lead, PFAS, climate change, and sea-level rise.

The session schedule is as follows:

  • Elected officials, including mayors and county officials, Jan. 24 from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.
  • Potential applicants, professional organizations and other agencies, Jan. 24, from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Register Here.
  • Environmental Justice advocates, non-governmental organizations and interested members of the public, Jan. 27 from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Register Here.

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