Site icon ASCE's 2021 Infrastructure Report Card

It’s Fiscal Year 2020. Where do the FY2020 Appropriations Bills Stand?

To close out the fiscal year last month, House passed a stopgap spending measure, or continuing resolution (CR), to fund the government through November 21, 2019. The current fiscal year expired on September 30, and without a second stopgap measure or the approval of Fiscal Year (FY) 2020, we will expect a government shutdown.

The House passed 10 of its 12 FY2020 appropriations bills before the August recess; however, the Senate waited until the final hour in September to pass its FY20 appropriations bills. The additional time offered by the continuing resolution allows the House and Senate to continue negotiations on full appropriations for the rest of FY 2020 over the next few weeks.

Here’s what the Senate’s FY20 Environment & Water Development appropriations bill includes:

The Senate’s FY20 Interior & Environment appropriations bill includes:

ASCE supports all three of these programs as critical funding and financing mechanisms to help raise our nation’s “D” drinking water and “D+” wastewater grades.

While the House’s FY20 Homeland Security appropriations bill did not include any funding for the High Hazard Potential Dam Rehabilitation program, the Senate stepped up to the plate and funded the program at $10 million, which is consistent with the FY19 funding level, but nowhere near the program’s fully-authorized $40 million. This program provides federal grant assistance for the rehabilitation, repair, or removal of non-federal high hazard potential dams. Ensuring funding for this program is just one of ASCE’s recommendations to raise our nation’s “D” dams grade.

Both the House and Senate Appropriations Committees have voted out their Transportation, Housing, and Urban Development (THUD) spending bills, which will need to be reconciled under conference. In both bills, ASCE made the following requests:

Any House and Senate bills whose funding numbers do not align will head to a conference committee to iron out differences before Congress can vote on a final spending bill.