Code of Colorado Regulations
1000 - Department of Public Health and Environment
1002 - Water Quality Control Commission (1002 Series)
5 CCR 1002-51 - REGULATION NO. 51 - WATER POLLUTION CONTROL REVOLVING FUND RULES
Section 5 CCR 1002-51.20 - Statement of Basis and Purpose

Current through Register Vol. 47, No. 17, September 10, 2024

In accordance with the requirements of Sections 25-8-202(1)(e) and (g), 25-8-308(1)(d), and 25-8-703, C.R.S., the Commission adopts this Statement of Basis and Purpose.

These regulations will be used concurrently with the Construction Grant regulations, 5 CCR 1002-15, and will eventually replace them once the Grant Program has ended. The purpose of these new regulations is to bring the State into conformity with Title VI of the 1987 Clean Water Act Amendments. Title VI allows the State to establish a permanent Water Pollution Control Revolving Fund (WPCRF) to provide continuing sources of financing (except grants) needed to maintain water quality.

Since this is a water quality program, the priority list will still be developed by awarding points to governmental agencies discharging to "threatened" or "impaired" waters and severity of pollution as defined in the regulations. In addition, a subcategory has been included to promote regionalization and a new category has been developed for assigning points to projects based on financial need.

This program will allow the State to fund out of priority order and, once all enforceable requirements of the Act are met, the State will be allowed to fund nonpoint source and ground water projects as well.

Fiscal Impact Statement

The shift in the program from grants to loans will create more of a financial burden on local governments. The individual user charges and fee structures will have to be sufficient to operate and maintain their wastewater management systems as well as to repay any WPCRF loan, and existing debt.

The Authority through the WPCRF will provide loans below market interest rates which will benefit small communities. In some cases where a Governmental Agency would have to bond its share of a grant project, a low interest loan from the WPCRF for up to the entire amount of the eligible project would be less costly than the grant and bond combined.

The conversion from a grant program to a revolving fund program is mandated by Title VI of the Federal Act.

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