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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
The
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President’s 2009 Budget will:
Clean up the Nation’s most contaminated hazardous waste sites;
Revitalize communities and encourage business investment at abandoned industrial sites;
Support decontamination research, improve preparedness, and protect water infrastructure;
Help States and communities finance wastewater and drinking water infrastructure needs;
Collaborate with international and domestic partners to address energy and climate issues;
and
• Protect human health and the environment through application of the best available science.

Cleaning Up Contaminated Sites
• Minimizes human exposure and groundwater migration at hazardous waste sites.
¡ $1.3 billion for the Superfund program to clean up the Nation’s most contaminated sites; and
¡ $39 million for the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act cleanup program.
• Promotes economic development. $166 million to assess more than 1,000 Brownfields properties,
clean up over 60 properties, and make 225 acres ready for reuse.
• Removes toxic sediments from the Great Lakes. $35 million to clean up contaminated sediment
in the region in concert with non-Federal partners, reducing its negative impact on humans,
wildlife, and aquatic organisms.

Protecting the Homeland
• Continues efforts to protect against terrorism. Supports critical decontamination, preparedness,
response, and capacity activities, including:
¡ $102 million for decontamination research and to close emergency preparedness gaps;
¡ $10 million to increase lab capacity; and
¡ $35 million to support the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA’s) Water Security
activities.
• Coordinates protection of critical water infrastructure.
¡ Evaluates pilot systems participating in EPA’s Water Security initiative.
¡ Adds 50 partners to the Water Lab Alliance network while continuing to provide training and
technical assistance to improve the capabilities and capacity of the water sector.
¡ Continues outreach to increase water protection efforts and local investment in contaminant
warning systems.
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

Providing Clean and Safe Water
• Helps State and local governments
finance wastewater and drinking water
infrastructure.
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$555 million to meet the Administration’s commitment to provide a total
of $6.8 billion between 2004-2011 for
the Clean Water State Revolving Fund
(SRF). Over the long term this will
result in the Clean Water SRF providing an annual average of $3.4 billion
in loans for wastewater infrastructure.

2009 Budget Meets Funding Commitment
for Clean Water State Revolving Fund
8

Dollars in billions, cumulative
$6.8

7
6
5
4
3
2
1

2004 Budget
2009 Budget

0

2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
$842 million for the Drinking Water
SRF to continue the President’s
commitment to capitalize the program until 2018. Over the long term this will result in the
Drinking Water SRF providing an annual average of $1.2 billion in loans for drinking water
infrastructure.

Removes the State volume cap on private activity bonds (PABs) issued for public purpose
drinking water and wastewater facilities if the entity using the PABs implements full-cost
pricing within five years.

Partnering to Promote Energy Efficiency and Reduce Emissions Intensity
• Addresses greenhouse gas emissions. Continues working with the Department of Transportation to implement the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 to reduce U.S. gasoline
consumption and greenhouse gas emissions from motor vehicles.
• Continues the Asia Pacific Partnership. $5 million to continue partnership of seven nations
developing strategies for improving energy security, reducing pollution, and addressing the
climate.
• Provides energy-efficient options to consumers and companies. $44 million to help the public
make informed energy-efficient choices through Energy Star product labeling efforts and other
tools.
• Supports international methane recovery efforts. $5 million to lead this international partnership
that works with the private sector, multilateral development banks, and other governmental and
non-governmental organizations to advance the recovery and use of methane as a clean energy
source.

Relying on Science
• Applies the best available science. Works closely with partners to protect human health and the
environment through policies that focus on results, maintain the Nation’s economic competitiveness, and embrace collaboration.

THE BUDGET FOR FISCAL YEAR 2009

119

Major Savings and Reforms
• The Budget includes five terminations and reductions representing $303 million in savings,
including:
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$133 million earmarked by the Congress for specific unrequested water infrastructure projects
that circumvent normal allocation and priority setting processes.
$10 million for Mexico border water infrastructure assistance due to the program’s slow rate
of project development over the last 10 years.

Since 2001, the Environmental Protection Agency has:
• Initiated implementation of the Administration’s Clean Air Interstate Rule, which
is projected to reduce SO2 emissions from
power plants in affected States by over
70 percent and NOx emissions by over 60
percent from 2003 levels.
• Helped more than 8,500 drinking water
utilities complete risk assessments,
update emergency response plans, and
improve emergency preparedness for
manmade and naturally occurring events
affecting water supplies.
• Supported business investment and
A nonprofit organization in Houston, Texas used a Brownfields grant
community revitalization by tripling
to assess, clean up, and redevelop a former hospital. This resulted in
affordable loft-style apartments that opened in October 2005 and were
the number of Brownfields properties
fully leased by November 2005.
assessed during the prior Administration,
making over 2,300 properties ready for reuse, and leveraging over $6.7 billion in private
investment and over 31,000 redevelopment and cleanup jobs.
• Instituted a series of performance requirements that resulted in the agency earning the
President’s Quality Award in 2007, the highest management award given to Executive Branch
agencies for exceptional management across the entire organization.

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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

Environmental Protection Agency
(Dollar amounts in millions)
Estimate

2007
Actual

2008

2009

Spending
Discretionary Budget Authority:
Operating Program 1 ..........................................................................................
Clean Water State Revolving Fund ................................................................
Drinking Water State Revolving Fund ...........................................................
Brownfields Assessment and Cleaunup ......................................................
Clean Diesel Grants ............................................................................................
California Diesel Emission Reduction Grants ............................................
Targeted Water Infrastructure ..........................................................................
Requested (non-add) ....................................................................................

4,298
1,084
837
89
7
—
84
84

4,270
689
829
94
49
10
177
44

4,251
555
842
94
49
—
26
26

Unrequested (non-add) ................................................................................
Superfund ................................................................................................................
Leaking Underground Storage Tanks ...........................................................
Cancellation of unobligated balances ...........................................................
Total, Discretionary budget authority .................................................................

—
1,255
72
—
7,726

133
1,254
106
5
7,472

—
1,264
72
10
7,142

Total, Discretionary outlays ...................................................................................

8,509

7,636

8,143

Total, Mandatory outlays ........................................................................................

250

95

144

Total, Outlays ..............................................................................................................

8,259

7,541

7,999

Major Savings, Discretionary
Terminations................................................................................................................
Reductions...................................................................................................................
1

Number of
Programs

2009
Savings

2
3

143
160

Includes $11 million in pass-through grants in 2008 provided in Sections 435 and 436 of the Department of the Interior, Environment, and
Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2008 as contained in P.L. 110-161.