Title 33 › Chapter CHAPTER 26— - WATER POLLUTION PREVENTION AND CONTROL › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - GRANTS FOR CONSTRUCTION OF TREATMENT WORKS › § 1302f
Creates grant programs to start centers of excellence and to pay for stormwater projects that use new and emerging, but proven, technologies. A "center" is one of those centers of excellence. An "eligible entity" is a State, Tribal, or local government or a public agency that manages stormwater or wastewater. An "eligible institution" is a college, research group, or nonprofit that has strong work on stormwater technology and, for nonprofits, a core mission in water management as decided by the Administrator. The Administrator must give competitive grants to eligible institutions to set up 3 to 5 regional centers. Each center must research regional stormwater technologies, list local needs and available technologies, study financing options, share findings with a national clearinghouse, help governments with design and maintenance, work with local partners, and coordinate with other centers. One center will be the national electronic clearinghouse center and must run a public website and database that posts information from all centers. Up to $5,000,000 is authorized per year for these centers for fiscal years 2022–2026, and up to 2% of that may pay the Administrator’s administrative costs. The Administrator must also give competitive grants to eligible entities for planning, development, and implementation of projects that use new and emerging, but proven, technologies. Planning grants can pay for design, standards, fee plans, partnership studies, and training; a single planning grant may be up to $200,000 and planning grants may total no more than one‑third of yearly funds. Implementation grants can pay to install technologies, restore natural networks, monitor benefits, and adopt best practices; a single implementation grant may be up to $2,000,000 and implementation grants may total no more than two‑thirds of yearly funds. Applicants must describe the project, monitoring plans, other benefits, and long‑term operation and maintenance. Priority goes to places with combined sewer systems or to small, rural, or disadvantaged communities, or projects that dedicate at least 15% of funds to serve those communities. Federal funding may cover up to 80% of project costs, but the Administrator can waive that limit for entities with demonstrated financial need and can count prior non‑Federal work toward the non‑Federal share. The Administrator must report to Congress within 2 years after the first grant about grants, projects, outcomes, benefits, recommendations, and challenges. Separate grants (not the centers) are authorized $10,000,000 per year for fiscal years 2022–2026, with up to 2% for administrative costs.
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Navigation and Navigable Waters — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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33 U.S.C. § 1302f
Title 33 — Navigation and Navigable Waters
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73