The House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, Subcommittee
on Water Resources and Environment held a heating to consider a proposal
for a Water Resources Development Act (WRDA) in 2008.
Last November, in a show of bipartisanship, Congress overrode a
Presidential veto of a water resources bill that authorized
approximately $23.2 billion for more than 900 Army Corps of Engineers
water projects in 23 states.
Normally, Congress considers a water resources bill every two
years, but last year's bill was the first water resources measured
passed since 2000. The WRDA 2007 bill primarily focused on the backlog
of project authorizations, modifications and studies that had
accumulated since 2000.
The legislation this year is intended to address new project
studies and authorizations that have arisen over the past two years.
Subcommittee Chairwoman Eddie Bernice Johnson (D-Texas) said she hoped
the overwhelming bipartisan support for a new water resources bill would
convince President Bush to sign it.
"Water related infrastructure should not be a partisan
issue--these flood control, navigation, environmental restoration, and
other water related projects are far too important to our constituents,
our local economies and the American people's lives and
livelihoods," said Johnson.
John Paul Woodley Jr., assistant secretary of the Army for Civil
Works, cautioned against passing another large water resources bill.
"Last year, the Congress passed the most expensive WRDA bill
ever at a time when the Corps was already facing a large backlog--well
over $50 billion--of authorized, but unconstructed projects. WRDA 2007
added at least $15 billion of projects to the backlog," he said.
Woodley's comments drew a sharp rebuke from committee Chairman
James L. Oberstar (D-Minn.), who criticized the Administration for
failing to fund water resource projects from last year's bill in
the FY 2009 budget request.
The subcommittee will gather information and individual project
requests over the next several weeks in order to move a new bill later
this summer, Johnson said.
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