EFAB

 Richard Toriceleon
 Chair

 Frieda ICWalllson
 Vice Chair

 Herbert Barrack
 Executive Director
Members
Henonbto fa» Oonwnlel
Henerabto B«yl Anthony. Jr.
KararabtoAnmNoithup
Honenbl* Rotund Uwb
Philip BMehrat
Jo»»phBUIr
Jack Bond
RegtrFtldmin
Or.RtolivdFwmtoMr.
Dr.WUttunfta
ShookteyOvdncr.Jr.
DavU011b«t
HmnqrOeUimn
John Qunyou
StwrnLtobtniMn
Robert Maboo, Jr.
MarflnMoiby,Jr.
JahnMcCtrtSy
QtorgtRcfUQ*
DouglnWhMUr
                                                                 EFAB Advisory
  PRIVATE SECTOR PARTICIPATION IN THE

 PROVISION OF ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES:

         BARRIERS AND INCENTIVES
The views and opinions expressed in this advisory do not
represent those of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
nor are they intended to reflect consideration of other fiscal
issues which may be overriding in terms o! Administration
domestic policy.
                                            November 25,1991
                                             Printed en Rwydtd Pepvr

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                              ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
      The Board wishes to thank the many finance professionals and others who assisted in the
preparation of tins statement  To a great  extent, this statement reflects the diverse input of
experts  in  the  field from academia,  state and local  government, the investment banking
community, and professional organizations.  The Board also appreciates the able assistance of
EPA expert staff, particularly the Grants Administration Division.

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                    TABLE OF CONTENTS


EXECUTIVE SUMMARY	 i

L    INTRODUCTION	  1

IL   DEVELOP FEDERAL POLICIES TO ENCOURAGE THE
     ESTABLISHMENT OF PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS	  6
     A.   STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE	  6
     B.   POTENTIAL APPROACHES	  7

DX   EVALUATE IMPLICATIONS OF INCREASING FLEXIBILITY IN
     APPLYING FEDERAL GRANT POLICIES AND REGULATIONS	  8
     A.   STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE	  8
     B.   POTENTIAL APPROACHES	  9
     C.   CONCERNS	  12

IV.   ENCOURAGE STATES AND LOCALITIES TO MODIFY LAWS
     THAT ARE DISINCENTIVES TO PRIVATE INVESTMENT
     OR OPERATION OF FACELITDES	  13
     A.   STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE	  13
     B.   POTENTIAL APPROACHES	  14
     C.   CONCERNS	  15

V.   PROMOTE FULL-COST PRICING	  16
     A.   STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE	  16
     B.   POTENTIAL APPROACHES   	  18
     C   CONCERNS	  18

VI.   REDUCE RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH PRIVATE INVESTMENT OR
     OPERATION OF PUBLIC FACILITIES	  20
     A.   STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE	  20
     B.   POTENTIAL APPROACHES	  21
     C.   CONCERNS	  24

NOTES	  25

APPENDIX	   A-l
     EFAB Members, Workgroup Support Staff, and Expert Consultant to the EFAB

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

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                           EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
      The Environmental Financial Advisory Board (the Board) was established in August 1989
to advise the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on ways to encourage and facilitate efficient
provision of environmental services and to enhance investment in environmental facilities.
Private participation in the  provision of environmental services  can serve these goals by
increasing the funds available for facilities and, in many instances, by reducing construction and
operating costs. Accordingly, the Private Sector Incentives Workgroup (the Workgroup) was
formed within the Board to identify ways to reduce barriers and create incentives for increased
private sector participation in the provision of environmental services.

      The Board's suggestions are based on reports and research prepared by public and private
entities, testimony to Congressional committees, discussions with experts in the field, and the
professional  experience  of  Board  members.   Some suggestions could be  implemented
immediately; others require longer-term cooperation with other federal, state, and local agencies.
Together,  they can significantly  enhance  the  potential for private sector participation in
environmental services.
CONSTRAINTS ON PRIVATE PARTICIPATION IN ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION

      Traditionally, governmental units have provided environmental services  such  as  the
provision of drinking water and treatment of wastewater. The large scale of, monopolistic nature
of markets  for, and involvement of public interests in these services seemed to make their
provision by government desirable.  Recently, however, public-private partnerships have proved
equally or more effective and efficient in delivering environmental services to the public.1  Yet
additional private involvement may be limited by a wide variety of impediments.

      Federal laws and regulations developed to protect the public interest in the provision of
environmental  services  can  constrain  private involvement by restricting public choices or
undermining incentives for private investment  These laws may not  be the only or the best
means of protecting the public interest, however. For example, some of the conditions associated
with the funding of wastewater treatment facilities through EPA's State Revolving Fund program
can inhibit private sector participation.

      Federal and state environmental regulations affect private sector operations and frequently
constrain the nature of  private  sector  investments in  pollution  control technologies.  Using
economic incentives — rather than command-and-control regulations — could stimulate the private
sector to invest in cost-effective improvements in environmental quality.   In  addition, other
changes to environmental regulations  could  improve  the  efficiency  with which firms meet
environmental quality goals.

      At the state and local levels, other constraints on private investment are found.   For
example, laws  subjecting contracts with private sector entities to  annual  reapproval  and
appropriation of funds are intended to ensure public accountability and competition. However,


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they also can discourage private investment by exposing contractors to additional risks that their
contracts will be terminated before their, investments have been amortized.

       User fees that are below the cost of service also can act as a disincentive  to private
investment, because they result in revenue streams for environmental facilities that are inadequate
to cover costs, including the cost of capital In addition, user fees set below costs encourage
greater demands on environmental facilities man would full-cost pricing. Increased demands, in
turn, increase the cost of providing environmental services and waste scarce natural resources.

       In some cases, private tenders have been reluctant to invest in environmental facilities,
as they judge potential returns too low for the risks involved.  Sometimes,  the private investor's
evaluation of risk is shaped by misperceptions; in other cases, the zeal risks  associated with some
investments are indeed unmanageable from the perspective of a private investor.
STRATEGIES TO INCREASE PRIVATE INVOLVEMENT

       The Board has developed the following strategies for the Administrator's consideration
to increase private participation.

Stimulate the Creation of Public-Private Partnerships

       In oider to expand the range of financing options available to local governments seeking
to meet environmental quality goals, the first strategy is for EPA to continue to expand its efforts
to forge new links between the public sector and private partners. This effort can take  the form
of demonstration projects, creation of a privately supported development fund to finance the
formation  of public-private  partnerships, technical  assistance and expert advice  to  local
governments who want to engage the private sector, recognition of successful partnerships, and
encouragement of voluntary private sector projects to finance environmental facilities or projects.

Evaluate Implications of Increasing Flexibility of Federal Grant Policies

       This strategy would increase private investment in wastewater treatment plants because
it specifically addresses means of overcoming grant-related restrictions on private financing for
these facilities.  It specifies several actions that EPA should evaluate with regard to their public
policy implications and the practicality of their implementation. The actions, listed below, would
increase EPA's flexibility in applying federal grant regulations.

             •      Provide individual facilities, on  a case-by-case basis, waivers mat define
                    public ownership as majority public ownership  of assets or as public
                    control over financial flnf* operational decision-making;

             •      Through waivers, include reinvestment in EPA-approved facilities in the
                    definition of compensation to the federal government for grant-funded
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             •     Provide explicit regulatory definition of the period of federal interest for
                   grant-funded real property as a facility's design life; and

             •     Define and sanction acceptable encumbrance of grant-funded real property
                   through case-by-case waivers.

      The Board recognizes that there are many potential public policy concerns that need to
be addressed in an evaluation of these actions. Three in particular should be examined:  impacts
on POTW compliance; project finance implications; and protection of the public interest.

Encourage Modification of State and Local Laws that Constrain Private Investment

      The next strategy is to assist state and local  government efforts to modify laws that
unnecessarily restrict the  involvement of the private sector.   Some  states have  adopted
privatization statutes designed to remove obstacles to private financing, ownership, or operation
of facilities, or to private service delivery.  The EPA can use the experiences of these states,
along with other model statutes (such  as the ABA Model Procurement Code) to develop the
ability to provide technical assistance to sates and localities that are seeking to increase the
flexibility of then* financing options.

Encourage Full Cost Pricing

      The purpose of the strategy of encouraging full cost pricing is twofold: first, to encourage
the most efficient use of resources possible,  and second to provide the private  sector with
accurate indications of the potential revenues from an investment, and so encourage the highest
level of private funding possible.

Reduce Risks Associated With Private Investment  or Operation of Public Facilities

      The final strategy addresses the need to reduce  the risk associated with investments in
environmental facilities in order to encourage higher levels of private funding. Information on
the actual  levels of risk associated with different types of environmental facilities would help
investors avoid decisions made on the basis of misperceptions about environmental risks.  More
importantly, EPA should encourage different approaches to risk pooling and risk sharing to limit
potential investors' exposure to liability from environmental investments.
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THE IMPACT OF GREATER PRIVATE PARTICIPATION

      Each strategy discussed by the Board is designed to stimulate private participation while
protecting federal and local interests and ensuring that standards for compliance and financial
accountability are maintained. The net effect should be more efficient delivery of high-quality
environmental services.

      By helping to improve the conditions for private investment in environmental facilities,
the EPA will provide state and local governments with another source of investment capital to
meet environmental objectives. Private sector innovation and efficiencies also have the potential
to reduce the cost of providing environmental services regardless of the source of capital  In
addition, strategies that result hi increased private investment may stimulate development and use
of innovative technologies to help meet environmental objectives.  Conservation and pollution
prevention can be encouraged, and the potential hazards of environmental service provision may
be reduced.
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Mr. William K. Reilty
Administrator
US. Environmental Protection Agency
Washington, DC  20460

Dear Mr. Reflly.

       I am very pleased to transmit to you the Private Sector Incentives Advisory of the
Environmental Financial Advisory Board (the Board).  It describes problems that the private
sector confronts when it wishes to join forces with public partners to invest in and/or provide
environmental services. It also presents potential approaches that the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency may wish to consider to encourage greater private participation or investment
in providing environmental services to the citizens of this nation. This is very much consistent
with the work your staff has done under the Public-Private Partnership Initiative and other
private sector initiatives.

       The Board has concluded that greater private participation in the provision of
environmental services would be in the public interest In the Board's opinion, however, the
development of public-private partnerships is inhibited by a number of factors that limit the
operational flexibility of public environmental facilities or that reduce incentives for private
partners.

       EPA could help alleviate constraints and increase incentives for public-private
partnerships by working within the Agency and with other federal, state, and local agencies and
with Congress, the private sector, and others to implement the actions presented in this
Advisory. By taking these steps, EPA can help promote efficient and effective environmental
facilities. For example, the Board recommends an evaluation of increasing the flexibility of
applying federal grant policies and regulations to encourage private sector involvement in
needed environmental investment

       I would like to thank Warren Tyler, Chair of the Private Sector Incentives Workgroup
for his leadership. The Board would like to express its appreciation to EPA for inviting us to
assist the Agency in its work. We look forward to continuing our support and this dialogue in
the future.

Respectfully submitted,
Richard Torkelson
Chair, Environmental Financial
     Advisory Board

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                                L  INTRODUCTION
       Since the early  1970s, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has been
entrusted to oversee the restoration and protection of the nation's water, land, and air resources.
This is a substantial undertaking, and EPA has come to rely on state and local governments as
partners in administering environmental management programs and allocating resources to ensure
compliance.

       Tightened environmental  controls due to statutes enacted in the 1980s  and necessary
expansions of programs challenge the ability of state and local governments to  pay for future
environmental quality services. Compared to roughly $100 billion a year in 1990 the combined
public and private cost of maintaining current environmental service standards is  expected to be
$148 billion a year by the year 2000—an average annual increase of about $5  billion.2  New
federal and state environmental mandates could further increase costs.

       Private participation in the planning, financing, and delivery of these services is one way
to help meet expanded needs by raising additional capital and lowering the costs of future
compliance. This Advisory evaluates several policies to encourage private participation in public-
private partnerships for funding the costs of environmental services and infrastructure.
A.    THE ROLE OF THE PRIVATE  SECTOR IN MEETING ENVIRONMENTAL
      OBJECTIVES

      The private sector has several roles in providing environmental services and meeting
environmental  quality objectives.  The total amount  of private expenditures for facilities,
equipment, and operations that improve environmental quality is significant. In fact, 63 percent
of all environmental expenditures (both capital and operating costs) in 1987 were incurred by the
private sector (See Figure 1).  Specific private sector roles, which are not mutually exclusive,
include:

      •      Service provider: The private sector provides environmental services either under
             contract to  public agencies or at  a firm's own initiative.  It can deliver these
             services as an owner-operator or as an operator under contract to a public agency
             or a private firm. The private sector assumes the service provider role principally
             in the supply of drinking water and the disposal of solid and hazardous waste.
             More than  half of the community drinking-water systems, particularly those
             serving small communities, are privately owned and operated. Approximately 80
             percent of the nation's solid waste is collected by private firms, with IS percent
             of landfills  privately owned and another 7 percent publicly owned but privately
             operated.3

       •      Investor:  The private sector provides  financial  resources for environmental
             facilities owned by public or private entities. Both investment capital firms and
             private banks  provide financing  for several types of environmental facilities,
             particularly small public water supply systems as well as solid and hazardous

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waste facilities.  Financing can take the form of a direct equity share in  the
facility, or it can take the form of a loan, backed by some form of collateral,
usually the revenue stream of the facility, or the facility itself.

Regulated industry; Private industries that produce goods and services also invest
in environmental facilities in order to comply with environmental regulations and
continue their production activities. For example, most manufacturing facilities
must invest in air pollution control equipment to receive a permit to operate.
Most  environmental expenditures incurred  by  regulated  industries  are  for
maintaining compliance, rather than for providing  services to households or
communities. For example, 41 percent of private environmental expenditures in
1990 were for complying with air pollution control standards.4

Third-party regulator  The private sector also plays a role  in  enforcing the
environmental compliance of individual firms when it finances or insures facilities
that must  meet environmental regulations. As a condition for the financing of
environmental and other facilities, some lenders or insurers oversee the  owner-
operator's  compliance with environmental regulations (including assurance of
financial capability), and may withdraw funds if the noncompliance results in a
risk to the lender's or insurer's investment.
                        FIGURE 1
           Private And Public Shares Of The  Cost Of
            Attaining Environmental  Quality (1990)
              Private Share
              63.1%
                                          Local
                                          21.8%
                   Total Costs  = $99.8  Billion
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      The current panem of private involvement in providing environmental services within
different types of environmental media reflects the varying effects of market forces, regulatory
requirements, and historical factors (such as the provision of federal grants) within each media.
Private involvement, in the form of facility ownership and operation, is most common in the
treatment,  storage, and disposal of hazardous wastes,3  while private service provision is very
common in other types of solid waste management6 A large number of drinking water systems
are privately owned and operated, but they only serve a small proportion of the U.S. population.7
There is little private ownership of wastewater treatment facilities,8 but there is an increasing
amount of private operation of public wastewater treatment facilities.9

      Actions taken by the Administrator and the EPA to encourage private involvement in the
provision  of environmental  services will have different effects on how the private sector
contributes to the attainment of objectives for different environmental media.  These effects will
depend on the forces that shape private involvement in providing services for each type of media,
and the extent to which the private sector is affected by changes in federal policy.  •  •

      There are several specific constraints on private sector investment in  or provision of
services that  affect different types of environmental media.  Few of these constraints uniformly
affect private involvement in each type of service; where appropriate, media-specific effects are
identified.  Possible  actions  that the EPA could undertake to overcome these constraints are
proposed and discussed below.
B.    CONSTRAINTS  AND   DISINCENTIVES   TO   INCREASED   PRIVATE
      PARTICIPATION IN PUBLIC ENVIRONMENTAL FACILITIES

      The limited participation of the private sector in the investment in and provision of
environmental services to date is largely a function of historical factors.  However, it is also
perpetuated by current public policies, legal constraints, and financial factors.  The Board has
identified four major groups of impediments to private investment that either directly constrain
private involvement — even when revenues appear sufficient to generate profits — or that provide
disincentives to  private participation because they  limit private  profitability or  impose
unacceptable investment risks.

Federal policies and regulations

      Several federal laws and regulations affect private investment in or the private operation
of public environmental facilities.  Federal tax laws have an impact on the cost of capital needed
to construct facilities, while regulations associated with federal grant programs  may restrict the
profitability or availability of private financing for publicly owned facilities.  This Advisory
discusses the potential use of waivers to overcome restrictions imposed by grant regulations;
federal tax policy is discussed in a separate Advisory.
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Program-specific environmental and other regulations at the federal and state level
                                    \
       Environmental regulations affect both production processes and costs for most industries.
Regulations to control pollution of the major environmental media - air, water, and land — tend
to be of the command-and-control variety - that is, they specify the types of emissions control
equipment or waste product handling procedures to be used. This type of regulation successfully
controls a high percentage of pollutant emissions but limits the flexibility of industry to seek
cost-effective means of complying with environmental quality standards.

       Therefore, the command-and-control approach to environmental regulation will probably
not provide the best strategy for achieving further reductions in pollutant emissions.  Because
environmental regulations affect the efficiency of private investments in  both  environmental
facilities and nonenvironmental production facilities, economic incentives that help to harmonize
compliance and profitability are likely to be more effective in the future.

Pricing policies

       For some types of environmental services, user fees fully cover the costs of operation and
maintenance activities, as well as the costs of capital. For other types of services, however, user
fees have been held at levels that are lower than the actual costs of providing the  service.  From
the private-sectors' perspective, these facilities are operating at a loss.  Private investors are
unlikely to consider investment in a facility that is operating at a loss unless user fees can be
increased to a level that covers the costs  of providing services, and/or they anticipate mat they
can reduce the costs of providing services sufficiently to generate a return on their investment
Even when subsidies from other local government revenues make up the difference between user
fees and actual costs, private investors may be hesitant to make-  long-term commitments that
depend on annual budget appropriations for price subsidies.

State and local procurement practices

       Private firms that invest in  public environmental facilities or provide  environmental
services under contract to state and local  governments can face procurement practices that limit
their flexibility in designing, financing, and operating facilities or in providing services.  Such
limitations can result in higher-cost environmental services and a lack of innovation in meeting
the demand for environmental services.
                                                                               \
Investment risk

       For those environmental investments that pose real financial risks,  such as  potential
Superfund clean-ups or post-closure requirements for  solid waste  landfills,  private sector
investment can be significantly deterred by the limited availability of adequate liability insurance.
In addition, private investors may lack adequate information on the true level of risks associated
with environmental facilities that have been traditionally owned and operated by the public sector.
In the  absence of adequate information, misperceptions of risk also can act as a disincentive to
private investment.
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C.    POTENTIAL APPROACHES TO INCREASING  PRIVATE PARTICIPATION
      IN PUBLIC ENVIRONMENTAL FACILITIES

      State and local governments are rinding that the need for private sector investment in
environmental facilities and services has  never been greater.  This is because their financial
resources for complying with federal environmental requirements are being reduced at the same
time that their provision of lowest-cost environmental services is being inhibited.  The Board has
developed five  strategies, designed to increase private sector involvement in environmental
facilities and services, for the Administrator's consideration. These strategies, which are detailed
in chapters n through IV, respectively, are as follows:

      •      Develop federal policies and programs to encourage the establishment of public-
             private partnerships for environmental services;

      •      Evaluate the public policy implications of increasing flexibility in applying federal
             grant policies and regulations to stimulate private investment;

      •      Encourage states and localities to modify laws that  act as disincentives to private
             investment or operation of facilities;

      •      Promote strategies that encourage communities to develop user-fee systems that
             cover the full cost of providing environmental services; and

      •      Reduce risks associated with private investment or operation of public facilities.

      Like  constraints, these actions will have  different  effects on the private  sector's
involvement in facilities and services for each environmental media. Some media-specific effects
of constraints are identified and discussed in the sections that follow, as are possible actions that
EPA could undertake to overcome these constraints.
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 IL DEVELOP FEDERAL POLICIES TO ENCOURAGE THE ESTABLISHMENT OF
                        PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS
       This section addresses the general incentives for and merits of public-private partnerships
for environmental purposes. In addition, it suggests actions that EPA could take to promote such
partnerships.
A.     STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE

       The fiscal constraints of the 1980s have affected die ability of state and local governments
to enact national environmental programs.  These governments face the dilemma of having to
provide greater services with fewer resources.  While local environmental mandates increased
substantially during the 1980s, available federal funding remains focused on surface water, quality
projects and is gradually being phased out10 This has made it difficult for state governments
to help EPA administer environmental programs and for local governments to expand resources
to comply with these programs.  Some of the traditional sources of local public financing will
either become more expensive or will be unavailable in the 1990s.  For example, state and local
governments face annualized costs of $33 billion in the year 2000 simply to maintain today's
level of environmental quality.11  This represents a doubling of environmental protection costs
for 1981."

       Additional private investment could  assist  states and localities in financing their
environmental  programs in several ways. First, when private sector involvement reduces the
costs of providing environmental services, it can also free public funds for use in other areas.
In addition, when public financial resources are inadequate or nonexistent, or when municipal
debt has already reached its limit under current law, private investment may effectively  be the
only source of funds for expanding the capacity of services.

       Second, the private sector may be able to effect solutions not legally or politically possible
for local government  For example, private commercial tendfills outside municipal limits may
be the only viable option for cities such as Chicago, where existing landfills are rapidly reaching
capacity and where there has  been a ban on the construction of new landfills and the expansion
of existing ones since 1984.

       Third, private firms can provide services at a significantly lower cost than can local
govemments-especially when the need  for public monitoring of  their performance, fees, and
profits is minimized.  For example, it has been estimated that, on the average, municipal refuse
collection  in the absence of competition is 28 to 42 percent more costly than refuse collection
by a private contractor.13  The literature suggests that the cost differential can be attributed to
innovations in technology and management and to savings in operating costs,14 and in  design
and construction costs.13  In contrast to the image of private sector contractors permitting serious
cost overruns or providing inadequate services because the public sector will always provide
additional funding, properly  drafted  service contracts that contain provisions for penalties or
losses  if specified conditions are not met - for example, if operating costs are exceeded -
increase the accountability of the private sector and ensure that cost savings are realized.

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B.     POTENTIAL APPROACHES \

       Public-private partnerships can find creative ways  to leverage available resources to
achieve environmental quality goals.  EPA can assist in the development of these partnerships
through its own activities-such as rule-making, re-authorization of legislation, and establishment
or revision of program policies. It can also assist communities in establishing public-private
partnerships.

Demonstrations

       EPA  has established  a  demonstration program for public-private partnerships.   This
program should be expanded to include the development and implementation of public-private
partnerships  for financing environmental facilities or services.  In addition, it should include a
project evaluation component to assist the future development and implementation of independent
public-private partnerships.

       For those local governments that are successfully finding ways - such as public-private
partnerships  - to finance their environmental facilities, EPA could establish an awards program
to publicly recognize their achievement  Similarly, voluntary actions on the part of businesses
and corporations to help meet environmental objectives — such as through pollution reduction
efforts, developing corporate environmental policies and programs, or providing assistance to
local government efforts  — should be recognized by  EPA and rewarded.  The information
acquired from the awards program would serve as a valuable resource, and EPA should make it
widely available to state and local environmental agencies.

Funding

       Some local governments that wish to establish public-private partnerships find that one-
time sort-up costs limit their opportunities with the private  sector. EPA should investigate the
strengths and weaknesses of assisting in establishing an independent authority to make low-
interest loans or grants to finance key stages in  the formation of public-private partnerships.
Sources of funding for the authority's development fund could include federal appropriations,
corporate funds, and funds from other non-federal sources mat have an ongoing commitment to
improving the quality of state  and local  government  The Board generally believes  that the
concept may hold great potential in supporting the expanded use of public-private partnerships
providing environmental services to local governments. In particular, the Board suggests that a
development fund could prove advantageous in implementing the  Agency's iPiM-Tngdia
geographic initiatives.
  i*
Technical Assistance

       Based on EPA expertise and the experience gained in demonstration projects, EPA should
provide assistance to local governments that are  interested in establishing  public-private
partnerships. This assistance could take many forms, including seminars, publications, and direct
consultation on specific projects.
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      EVALUATE IMPLICATIONS OF INCREASING FLEXIBILITY IN APPLYING
                FEDERAL GRANT POLICIES AND REGULATIONS
      This section addresses ways to accommodate and attract private investment in federally
grant-funded environmental facilities.
A.    STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE

      Over the past twenty years, the federal government has invested about $50 billion in the
construction of facilities to help communities meet the requirements for treatment of wastewater.
 Many of these facilities must now be upgraded or expanded to satisfy increasing demands for
wastewater treatment The Board has analyzed the potential for private financing of these new
construction costs and has found that it could be increased if waivers from current federal statutes
and grant regulations were permitted.  The Board, however, is not recommending that these be
changed at this time.  Rather, the Board is recommending that EPA  analyze from both  a
governmental and an environmental perspective the policy implications of case-by-case waivers.

      Public wastewater treatment facilities face pressures both to upgrade their facilities to
meet regulatory  standards and water quality objectives, and to expand their facilities in order to
process increasing volumes of wastewater as communities grow.  As for any major capital-
intensive project, access to financing affects the ability of local jurisdictions to implement facility
upgrades and expansion. Local jurisdictions, increasingly responsible for funding the full costs
of wastewater treatment, have an incentive to seek the most cost-effective combination of project
design, implementation and available financing options, in order to rmmnnn*. the  costs of
attaining water quality objectives.  In theory, these options could include private sources of
capital, design methods, and/or facility operation. Current federal policies associated with grant-
funded publicly-owned wastewater treatment facilities, however, constrain the private financing
options available to those facilities that seek private sector involvement

      Some POTWs may find that a facility upgrade "package," which includes private sources
of finance coupled with private sector design innovations or construction savings, provides the
lowest-cost means of complying with permit requirements and meeting water quality objectives.
The financing - whether debt or equity - would be repaid through the guaranteed revenue
stream generated by user fees, and could, in some circumstances, involve encumbering the facility
as collateral. Because individual jurisdictions' access to financing varies considerably with local
economic conditions and competing demands  for limited SRF or bond funds, some wastewater
treatment upgrades or expansion may experience significant delays — or even little possibility -
in obtaining financing.  For  those facilities  that have difficulty obtaining financing, permit
violations, degradation of water quality, and possible bans on increased growth may result Some
of the facilities that are unlikely or unable to  obtain financing  through common  public finance
channels may wish to obtain financing in the private capital market

      According  to federal  grant policy, established in Circular  A-102 of  the  Office of
Management and Budget  (OMB)  and implemented  through the Uniform Administrative
Requirements for Grants and Cooperative Agreements to State and Local Governments (Uniform

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Regulation), the recipient of any federal grant to fund a capital facility must hold the title to
grant-funded property. The grant application agreement prohibits both the sale of grant-funded.
property during the period in which the federal government retains an interest in it, and the use
of such property as collateral.

       If a grant-funded facility is sold, federal grant policy requires that the federal government
be reimbursed for its share of the funding for the property. That share is calculated by applying
the current market value of the property to the  proportion  of original funding provided as a
federal grant Thus, a private firm that invests in a grant-funded facility for treating wastewater
would have to pay the federal government for a portion of the facility's current market value as
well as for any upgrading or expansion of the facility.  (If a private firm buys the facility, these
payments would be added to the purchase price.)  Unless costs could be cut enough without
affecting the quality of the service, the private investor would have to increase the facility's
revenues to cover these payments. This  would be accomplished by raising annual sewage fees,
unless a municipality chose to reallocate existing taxes or other revenues to augment the facility's
fee revenues.

       The potential magnitude of increases in sewage fees due to grant repayment and facility
upgrading or expansion  could be great  Unpublished estimates of the costs of upgrading an
actual wastewater treatment plant in Connecticut demonstrate that upgrading with private funds
would raise user fees by  140 percent (55 percent to cover the cost of repaying the federal share
in the facility and 85 percent to cover the cost of upgrading).16

       EPA adopted the Uniform Regulation (with modifications) to implement the requirements
of Circular A-102  for wastewater treatment facilities.  As  the granting agency, EPA is also
required to review and approve requests to dispose of grant-funded wastewater treatment facilities
and to administer repayment requirements. EPA implements A-102 through  its Administrative
grant regulations at 40 CFR Parts 30, 31 and 33.
B.     POTENTIAL APPROACHES

       If consistent with federal policy and sound public policy, EPA could improve conditions
for private investment in wastewater treatment facilities.  For example, on a case-by-case basis,
EPA could increase the flexibility of grant regulations and the application of those regulations
to local governments. Greater flexibility could potentially be accomplished by permitting waivers
from existing definitions of terms — such as public ownership — in EPA grant regulations, or
from specific requirements - such as what can be considered fulfillment of grant repayment -
in those regulations.

       The  anticipated  benefit of considering waivers under  EPA  and other regulations
concerning private investment in publicly owned wastewater treatment plants is to reduce the
potential cost burden on consumers by permitting an influx of private capital needed to upgrade
and expand wastewater treatment facilities. If the public owner is required to repay the federal
grant in order to involve  a private partner in  the facility, the rate increases associated with
repayment may obviate any cost savings associated with access to private sources of capital and
private sector expertise.

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Define Public Ownership
                                       *»
      The Clean Water Act confines the allocation of federal program funds (Title n grants and
Title VI loans) to publicly owned wastewater treatment works.  While public ownership is not
explicitly defined in the Clean Water Act or in EPA regulations that implement the Act, EPA
currently interprets public ownership to mean 100 percent ownership by a state or a municipal
government or public authority.

      This definition of public ownership limits the ability of local governments to obtain
private financing for expansion or upgrading of facilities and construction of new facilities. It
has a direct impact on those joint public-private proposals to upgrade, expand, or replace facilities
with State Revolving Fund (SRF) loans under Tide VI of the Clean Water Act  According to
EPA guidance on SRFs, if a portion of a federally funded wastewater treatment plant is to be
privately owned, SRF loans can be used to support only the publicly owned  portion.17  This
policy restricts the currently available options for addressing the financial and management needs
of facilities by limiting  private finance to those situations in which  the privately  funded
components of a facility form an independent and physically separable unit, leaving the original
grant-funded facility in its original condition.

      While the public ownership requirement of the Clean Water Act most directly affects
facilities seeking SRF loans, those grant-funded (Tide It) facilities seeking equity (ownership)
investment might also be precluded from commingling existing publicly owned portions of a
facility with privately owned ones.  This is the case because the current interpretation of the
Uniform Regulation apparently requires 100 percent public ownership of grant-funded facilities.

      To permit greater levels of private participation in facility financing, EPA could permit
waivers from grant regulations that provide the option to redefine public ownership in either one
of the following ways:

       •      Public control of assets —  mat is, more man SO  percent of assets owned  by a
              public entity; or

       •      Public control over financial and operational decision-making.

      Defining public ownership  as  public  control of assets would allow public-private
partnerships to participate in federally funded SRF programs restricted by statute to POTWs.
This could potentially double the amount of financing available for much needed new facilities
without triggering repayment requirements and thus increasing user fees. A grant-funded facility
that is currently 100 percent owned by public authorities, might also be able to invite private
investment of equity as long as the investment does not exceed 49.9 percent of the facility's
value. Either definition should result in the ability to obtain SRF loans; however, the implication
of either definition from an environmental public policy perspective would need to be carefully
assessed.  Defining public ownership as public control over financial and operational decision-
making would allow even greater financing flexibility. Such a definition may be more attractive
to the private sector than majority ownership of assets.
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Accept Reinvestment as Compensation

       Compensation requirements are triggered if a grantee seeks to sell a facility or equity
financing for a newer  facility.  This limits the effectiveness of a facility owner's  efforts to
leverage  the value of the facility - usually in terms of its revenue stream — because a portion
of the capital that is raised must be used for a purpose that does not increase the value of the
facility or its capacity to provide service.  As a result, repayment requirements can result in an
increase  in user fees that is not offset by an increase in the rate base (the number  of people
served) or in services provided, including improved water quality.

       To minimize the impact of facility upgrades on  user fees and  to  encourage private
investments in grant-funded facilities, EPA could consider allowing the federal repayment
requirement for individual facilities to be fulfilled by reinvestment in EPA-approved wastewater
treatment projects.  Such reinvestment would ensure that money  intended for public use would
not being used for private,gain.

Define Period of Federal Interest

       EPA could evaluate the  governmental and environmental implications of modifying its
grant regulations to explicitly define both, the period of federal interest in wastewater treatment
plants, and the period for which plants are needed, as equivalent to the design life of die facility.
After this period, grant agreement assurances would be considered fulfilled, and repayment would
not be required.  A precedent for this approach exists. The duration of federal interest in grant-
funded airports is 20 years, after which federal grant requirements no longer are in effect Either
definition should promote public-private partnerships.

       Local  governments frequently face the need to  augment the capability of facilities or
renovate  facilities by the time their design life ends. Limiting the duration of federal interest and
defining public ownership as a majority share would allow private sector financing to meet these
needs. However, this approach would not permit newer facilities to seek equity or debt financing
without triggering repayment requirements.

Permit Acceptable Encumbrance

      .The financing options of facilities supported by Tide n construction grants may, in some
cases, be limited by restrictions on what can and cannot be encumbered — used as collateral —•
to secure refinancing.   In  cases where a public facility is required  to identify property as
collateral for obtaining credit, these requirements would preclude access to debt financing. In
a clear departure both from past practice and current federal policy, if a facility were limited by
these requirements, EPA could define the concept of acceptable encumbrance for mat facility.
Through   such  facility-specific  reviews, EPA would retain oversight  to ensure that  such
encumbrance was in the public interest
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C.     CONCERNS
                                       \
       The Board recommends that EPA evaluate the public policy implications of waiving
certain grant requirements on a case-by-case basis. The Board recognizes that there are many
potential public policy concerns  that need to be addressed with respect to waivers for this
purpose. Three in particular should be examined in such an evaluation:

       •     Compliance Impacts of Waivers

                    In order to  obtain a waiver from grant regulation restrictions on private
             sector involvement, a publicly-owned wastewater treatment facility should be able
             to demonstrate the  compliance impacts of the waiver — in other words that mere
             is a demonstrated need for capital investment for compliance purposes.

       •     Project Finance Implications

                    Waivers are only appropriate if project finances are improved under a
             private sector involvement option. A POTW should be able to demonstrate that
             project finances, including long-term impacts on user fees, are optimized under a
             private  sector involvement option  that requires  waivers  from  federal  grant
             regulations.

       *     Protection of the Public Interest

                    If waivers are considered, protection of the public interest would have to
             be ensured in the waiver process,  potentially in  terms of whether adequate
             protections can be provided through contract arrangements, permit requirements,
             or other means. The public interest is not protected if facilities are not operated
             in compliance with environmental regulations and requirements, if they do not
             continue to provide services as long as they are needed, or if they are not operated
             in a fiscally sound  manner.
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        IV. ENCOURAGE STATES AND LOCALITIES TO MODIFY LAWS
            THAT ARE DISINCENTIVES TO PRIVATE INVESTMENT
                        OR OPERATION OF FACILITIES
      This section addresses actions that state, and local governments can take to promote
private interest in financing environmental facilities.  EPA's role in these activities is limited,
therefore, to the provision of information and assistance.
A.    STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE

      Some government practices, such as those aimed at assuring accountability and public
control over decisionmaking, indirectly discourage private involvement Consistent with a move
toward federalism, EPA may wish to encourage states to modify these practices if there are viable
alternatives for maintaining their purposes, and the benefits of these practices are outweighed by
their negative effect on private participation.

      In some cases, state or local statutes simply prohibit public entities  from entering into
certain kinds of relationships with the private sector.   In other cases, statutes limit private
activities to such a degree that public-private partnerships are discouraged. For example, about
a half dozen states impose some form of restriction on interstate shipments of solid waste,'8
effectively prohibiting the development of efficient regional waste management facilities. Such
constraints preclude private investment in potentially profitable public-private partnerships.

      Many state and local procurement laws also require selection of die lowest-cost bidder19
— thereby eliminating competition on the basis of best service provision or  most innovative
technology — and prohibit alteration of project  design or financing once project specifications
have been established. Such laws limit the range of technology and innovative approaches that
are available to the public sector, by restricting bidders to specifications expressed in requests
for  bids on  a project, rather than making arrangements to incorporate changes in design,
technology, and financing as a project progresses. Some states do allow negotiation of  service
contracts for privatization projects, making those projects exempt from  rnini"TiiTn bidding
requirements. The state procurement law in Maryland, for example, allows  negotiated turnkey
contracts on a case-by-case basis. Kentucky's privatization law allows sole-source procurement
under a carefully structured process.

      State and local regulations that require  periodic contract negotiations between  private
investors and local authorities may also discourage investors. These regulations introduce a large
degree of uncertainty into long-term planning, threatening the ability of private investors to
amortize capital costs over a sufficient period of assured operation.

      Long-term contracts are attractive for private investment since they allow private firms
to lower the fees  they charge  by spreading amortization costs over a longer period  and by
reducing the premium on risk included in user fees.   Conversely, private participation is
discouraged and/or user costs are potentially higher due to the risks associated with short-term
contracts subject to periodic renegotiation without any assurances of renewal. However, some

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states and localities place constitutional or  statutory restrictions on the ability of local
governments to enter into long-term contracts.  These restrictions reflect a concern that localities
may lose control of essential public services unless the terms of agreement can be renegotiated
frequently.20  Local governments may find it harder to attract private sector interest when they
are unable or unwilling to enter into long-term service contracts with private firms.  This is due
to the increase in risk to the private sector and the increase in user  fees to compensate for
increased risk.21
B.     POTENTIAL APPROACHES

Encourage Use of Competitive Negotiation in Procurement

       To reduce barriers to competitive negotiation, where appropriate, EPA could provide
guidance to states that are considering revision of then* procurement laws  to enable local
governments to adopt the  American Bar Association  (ABA)  Model Procurement Code and
Ordinance. The Agency could also provide guidance to local governments on facilitating private
sector participation through use of the ABA Code. The ABA Model Procurement Code and
Ordinance provides voluntary standards that states and local governments can use to revise their
procurement statutes to provide greater sophistication  and flexibility.  Under a procurement
system based on this model,  local  governments would have the  legal authority to use a
competitive negotiation process, and contracts could be  given to the offerer submitting the best
overall proposal, as measured by the evaluation criteria stated in a request for proposal (RFP).
Contract awards would not have to be made to the lowest bidder. This approach is more like that
taken in federal procurement processes under the Federal Acquisitions Regulation (FAR), which
specifies that contracting entities are required only to accept the minimum reasonable bid if a
bidding process other than  single sealed bids is employed.  Moreover, competitive negotiation
practices,  implemented according to  requirements similar  to  those in the ABA Model
Procurement Code, assure that the objective of minimum bid requirements-ensuring that public
funds are allocated on the basis of competition and that public expenditures are efficient—are met,
without creating a disincentive to private participation.

Establish Guidance on Effective Privatization Legislation

       Given the importance  of  long-term contractual  arrangements in  attracting private
participation, EPA could provide guidance to  states and localities on legislation that would
authorize long-term contracts between local governments and the private sector when feasible,
practical, and desirable.  This  would require  EPA establishing a sound empirical basis for
recommending arrangements that work.  Some states have already enacted such legislation. For
example, in Kentucky, privatization law authorizes local governments to negotiate long-term
service agreements for wastewater and drinking water projects.  In New Jersey, the state public
contracting law was recently amended to allow local governments to consider long-term contracts.

       Garnering and rigorously  evaluating  evidence  from  a variety  of state and local
experiences, EPA could help develop policies that minimize disincentives to private investors and
operators while ensuring mat public funds are allocated on the basis of competition, that public
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expenditures are efficient, and that the public sector maintains control over the provision of
environmental services.

      EPA could also develop "best practice" guidance on long-term service agreements. These
materials could cover methods of allocating risk between the public and private partners in ways
that assign private partners reasonable business risks while preserving public control over the
delivery of environmental services. For example, EPA could help authorities properly structure
service agreements that minimize design, construction, and operation risks for local governments
through  the inclusion of private performance and compliance  guarantees as well as private
reporting requirements suited to the nature of the project in question.
C.     CONCERNS

       One potential aspect of long-term contracting is its effect on tax-exempt financing. If a
service agreement extends beyond five years, it falls under the Treasury Department's definition
of a private activity and must be financed with higher-cost private activity bonds. Tax exemption
is available for some private activity bonds, but the volume of such debt is restricted by annual
volume caps for each state.  Therefore, EPA should incorporate IRS guidance on whether short-
term contracts that are automatically renewed could be used by some local agencies to avoid the
loss of tax-exempt bond status when long-term contracts are employed.
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                       V.  PROMOTE FULL-COST PRICING
       This section addresses the merits of full-cost pricing as the foundation for all types of
financing. In particular, full-cost pricing would eliminate one of the fundamental disincentives
inhibiting private investment in public environmental facilities.
A.     STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE

       The Board believes that the way communities charge and pay for environmental facilities
needs to change, both to meet tougher conditions for project finance and to better balance
demands with available  resources.   These changes in user fees  — based on  the full cost of
providing services - would ensure that consumers' demand for services is proportionate to the
cost of providing them.   It could also present an opportunity to encourage private investment
as an alternative to public financing of local environmental facilities.

       Local governments finance their  environmental facilities and  services with general
revenues, dedicated taxes, federal and state grants and loans, and user fees  for the  services
provided. Historically, many communities have not relied on user fees to cover the full costs of
providing services. Rather, they have subsidized service provision from one or more of the other
possible sources of revenue.

       The extent of subsidization varies for each kind of environmental facility and is affected
by  the original  form of financing  obtained for facilities and equipment   For example,  a
significant portion of the capital costs for wastewater treatment facilities, which are almost
entirely publicly owned and operated, have historically been covered by federal  grants. This has
towered the expenditures required for debt service, and thus has kept user fees and state or local
subsidies lower than if full capital costs had to be recovered with fees.  For example, a 1987
survey of major sewerage agencies  indicated mat user fees cover only about 60 percent of
combined O&M and debt service costs in 1986.22 Fees were more likely to cover O&M costs
(78 percent) man debt service for capital costs  (38  percent). Between 1982 and 1986, the
average proportion of O&M and debt service costs covered by user fees remained unchanged.23
Large jurisdictions — those serving populations over  250,000 - are more likely to be able to
cover their costs through user fees than small jurisdictions because they are able to spread them
over a much larger rate base.

       In the case of drinking water, a 1984 survey of community water systems2* found that
revenues for 334 publicly owned  systems  fell short of operating expenses plus debt service by
$0.76 per 1000 gallons.  On  the other hand, private water suppliers averaged a profit of $0.72
per 1000 gallons. Both types of providers  averaged deficits if they served smaller communities,
but the deficits of private suppliers were much lower than those of public suppliers.

       In addition to subsidies, communities have been able to keep user fees low for several
reasons.  As mentioned above, construction grants subsidized the capital cost of many wastewater
treatment plants, thus lowering the  costs that need  to be covered by fees or other sources.
Second,  some communities have not provided adequate  revenues  to cover  operation and

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maintenance costs.  They have allowed their environmental facilities to deteriorate and are, in
effect, "mining" their infrastructure.  Third, some communities have not provided the necessary
services required to safeguard the environment  For example, in some communities, universal
garbage collection is not available and home owners are permitted to dispose of their own waste
on their property.

       Two factors  are  likely to increase the costs  of environmental  services for local
governments: the decreasing availability of grant funding and other subsidized federal and state
funding; and the increasing cost of service provision due to regulatory requirements and, in some
cases, limited waste management capacity. Local governments will have to choose whether to
fund these cost increases through increased allocations of general revenue to  environmental
services, or through increased user fees, or both.

       One of the effects of subsidized user fees is that consumers' demand for services does not
reflect the actual cost of providing services, and so can result in wasteful use of services -and the
resources used to provide them.  For example, if water is priced below full cost, users will tend
to consume more  water than they would at higher, full-cost recovery  prices.  Also,  under
subsidized prices, users have fewer incentives to put water supplies to their highest valued uses.
Under subsidized prices, for example, homeowners may choose to water their lawns excessively.
This, in turn, results in increased demand for new water supplies, drives costs up, and can
promote costly supply augmentation investments.

       In addition to inefficient uses of resources, conventional ways of charging and paying for
public environmental services have discouraged private investors by sending price signals that
do not correctly reflect the value of the investment  Private investors look to the level of user
fees as the indicator of long-term income in estimating rates of return from investments in
environmental facilities. They will be attracted to public works investments only if the user fees
being  charged cover the public agency's costs  of providing services and private investors
anticipate that they will be able to lower the costs of providing services, thus generating a return
on their investment23  When private investors observe that a  facility is providing services at a
price that is lower than the public agency's costs and is, therefore, operating at a loss, it is only
reasonable for them to invest in the facility if they believe they can either (1) raise fees to a level
sufficient to cover the cost of providing services, or (2) reduce costs so far below those of the
public agency that they can maintain user fees at the same level and still make sufficient returns.

       When a public agency seeking privatization plans to make up the difference between user
charges and the cost of service provision through  subsidies and intergovernmental transfers,
revenues adequate to cover costs will be generated. Financially, the revenue stream of the
facility may be equivalent to a full-cost pricing approach.  For most types of investments,
however, the private sector will prefer full-cost pricing. If a public-private partnership includes
a proposed general revenue contribution to make the revenue stream equal to full-cost pricing,
the private sector may be hesitant about the risks  of annual appropriation processes and the
security of long-term revenue streams. Dependence on  subsidies to  generate a target rate of
return increases the uncertainty or risk associated  with  a project and, therefore, discourages
private participation.26
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      Full-cost, unsubsidized fee structures are usually greatly preferred, if not required, for
private participation in environmental investments. Accordingly, increasing fees to fully cover
current costs should elicit greater private investor participation.  By contrast, subsidization and
underpricing provide a disincentive to private investment because they send incorrect signals to
the consumer regarding the true value of the service. When fees are increased, not only will
private investors be able to make rational investment decisions, but households will often choose
to consume services at a level that reflects their true cost and value.
B.    POTENTIAL APPROACHES

      User fees that reflect the cost of providing services will reduce wasteful use of services
and will give the private sector an incentive to invest in environmental facilities and services,
treeing up local government resources for  other uses.  Thus, by promoting a greater public
awareness of the cost of environmental services, full-cost pricing encourages conservation,
recycling and, in conjunction with reduced demand, pollution prevention.

Endorse Full-cost Pricing

      EPA could encourage full-cost pricing of environmental services in three ways. First, it
could endorse the practice in EPA publications and operational guidance as a matter of public
policy and as a necessity for financial and operational efficiency. Second, it could help localities
implement full-cost pricing by providing technical assistance to set up effective cost-accounting
procedures, to estimate capital and operating costs per unit of service delivered, and to establish
appropriate volume discounts or rebates for  commercial on-site treatment Third, it could help
localities ease the transition from subsidized to full-cost pricing, as well as mitigate public
opposition to the transition, by providing technical support for public outreach and information
programs that explain the benefits of full-cost pricing.

Encourage States to Incorporate Adequacy of Fees in Permit Review Process

      Processes for reviewing state  permits  for environmental facilities provide  a logical
opportunity for encouraging full-cost fees for environmental services. States could either require
full-cost pricing as a condition for granting  or renewing permits, or they could simply include
a review of the  adequacy of fees in the permit process.  While EPA could consider requiring
states to implement these or similar requirements, the Board considers it more appropriately left
to the discretion of the states. However, EPA could provide guidance to states to assist them in
incorporating a review of fee adequacy in their permitting process.
C.     CONCERNS

       Although full-cost pricing is conducive to efficient resource allocation and increased
private participation in environmental infrastructure, it may nonetheless impose hardships on
small,  low-income communities  and on  low-income users within individual communities.
Elimination of local government subsidies — financed out of general revenues from taxes — in
favor of increased user  fees could unduly burden low-income users.  There may be some

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communities that have a user base too poor to support higher user fees. These communities may
not be able to adopt full-cost pricing.  \

       Determining actual "full cost pricing" user fees can  be difficult for a public agency
charged with overseeing rates set by private service providers. The objective in regulatory rate
setting is to establish rates that reflect actual coses plus a reasonable return on investment
Unless the regulatory agency has direct knowledge of costs - most likely with reference to a
public agency's costs of providing services - numerous regulatory issues arise.  It can be very
costly to establish a regulatory mechanism that reflects sufficient independent knowledge of
industry  costs in order to ensure that the private provider is not setting rates  at a level that
permits excessive profits.

       To the extent mat voters in local elections express their objections to higher prices there
may also be a political constraint to the implementation of full-cost pricing on a local  level

       If EPA encourages the inclusion of full-cost pricing in state permit review processes, some
states could perceive that their management prerogative is being undermined.
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      VL  REDUCE RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH PRIVATE INVESTMENT OR
                       OPERATION OF PUBLIC FACILITIES
      This section addresses steps EPA could take to reduce either the real or perceived risks
associated with private investment in public environmental facilities. Reducing the perception
of risk is relatively straightforward. Reducing real risks will require more concerted EPA action.
A.    STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE

      The private sector frequently perceives investment in  environmental facilities to be
financially risky. Unfortunately, tools for reducing investment risks are limited.  In particular,
insufficient information on environmental risks and inadequate environmental liability insurance
may act as a disincentive to private investment   The limited role of private investors in
regulating the risk-related activities of facilities may also be discouraging.

      The private sector evaluates rates of return in light of the risks associated with a project
Since investors require that returns be commensurate with risks, investment in high-risk projects
is attractive only if high rates of return are anticipated. Conversely, projects offering moderate
rates of return will attract investors only if the associated risks are perceived as moderate or low.

      Investment risk is also reflected in the premium paid to investors.  Lenders will exact a
higher than normal risk premium in the interest rates they charge to lend money if they perceive
risks to be higher than normal. In turn, this either increases the costs of services to communities
or, if risk premiums are insufficient,  discourages private investment

      One key  factor in investor response  to risk, however, is the perception of risk.  This
perception may or may not reflect an understanding of real risk. When perceived risk is greater
than real risk, communities pay too much to finance their environmental projects. Thus investors
need adequate information on actual  risks posed by environmental facilities and their operation
in order to  evaluate the returns they require to account for risks.

      The private sector is very experienced  in evaluating the risks of activities that have
traditionally involved private participants.   Yet it may lack specific  information relative to
degrees of risk associated with those types of environmental facilities that traditionally have been
publicly owned.  In addition, investors may erroneously extrapolate the risks and costs associated
with hazardous environmental activities — such  as waste  spills or site contamination — to other
less risky environmental undertakings such as the provision of community water supply or
wastewater treatment

       Perhaps more important than nrisperceptions of risk due to inadequate information is the
lack of widely available environmental insurance at reasonable rates.  This can prove a significant
disincentive to private investment For instance, under the "joint and several liability" provision
in Superfund, any participant in the generation, transportation, or management of hazardous waste
could be forced to pay the entire cost of cleaning up a contaminated site, even though other firms
contributed to the problem.  Because banks are forced  to view the liabilities associated with

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Superfund cleanups as dollar-for-dollar debits against corporate assets, they are leery of inheriting
a Superfund liability in the event of a bankruptcy. A growing number of banks are scrutinizing
all industrial loans for potential Superfund liabilities.27

       Environmental liability is also a concern in solid waste management and, to a lesser
extent, in drinking water and wastewater treatment   For example, leaching of toxics from
landfills can contaminate local wells,  instituting mitigation measures will greatly reduce risks,
but not eliminate them. EPA's proposed post-closure requirements are perhaps the greatest
liability facing private investors in solid waste landfills.   Owners of municipal solid waste
landfills will be required to provide some type of financial assurance that will protect against
future contamination. Liability insurance covering unforeseen contamination is offered by only
two underwriters and is expensive. Because liability insurance has not been required in the past
and the post-closure  rule is relatively new, most landfill owners currently do not cany post-
closure liability insurance.28
B.     POTENTIAL APPROACHES

Information on Sources and Degrees of Risk

       EPA could help potential lenders and investors evaluate the real risks of investment in
environmental projects by providing detailed information about the different types of risks and
the activities from which they derive. The two types of risk associated with environmental
facilities are catastrophes or single events  (such  as spills) and day-to-day events (such as
noncompliance with permits).  The likelihood of occurrence and costs are very different for each.

       Risks differ for each kind of environmental facility.  Thus for each facility, the following
information should be provided:

       •     Historical probability of each  type of catastrophic and day-to-day event;

       •     Measures in place to rmnimiw. the risks of these events and how each measure
             reduces the probability of each risk;

       *     Costs of mitigating the effects of events; and

       •     Objective factors associated  with catastrophic and  day-to-day  events  — for
             example, certain environmental conditions, or modes of operation.

       To the degree possible, such information should segregate truly random events that could
occur at any well-regulated facility from events  that can be traced to particular design or
operating parameters, such as groundwater contamination resulting from an ytiifa^ unmonitored
solid waste landfill.  One simple example of a way to organize mis information is presented in
the following table, for different types of minimization measures.
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                 Table 1. Analysis of Risk by Environmental Service
                               and Risk Minimization Measures
  Facility         Main Ririu

  Drinking Water   Source contamination


                Viral/bacterial
                               Mitigation of Ridci

                               Wellhead protection program: waienhed
                               ma
  Wastewater
  Treatment
  Solid Want*
  Overall
Vioiatian of discharge permit

Toxic* from induury




Environmental coniamination
from miihandling
Fflumtion. dutnfection ~
entoic compliance with EPA rega.


Better O&M. adequate facility nze

Industrial pietreaanent prognm
Source reduction, materials recovery.
                                               Suucmral controli (linen, leachate
                                               rollccuon» monitonng wella). scnenng
                                               of material* for acceptance
  Incineman
Air pollution (diouiu)
                                               Suck i
         i controli
Privately Provided Risk-Ratings

       EPA could provide technical assistance to develop "risk ratings" for facilities from an
independent organization, not unlike financial ratings obtained from Moody's or Standard and
Poors.  For example, an independent organization might develop ratings such as a triple "A"
rating for facilities  that have instituted stringent controls against environmental contamination.
and a "B" rating for facilities that have implemented basic control measures. Along with detailed
information on risks related to environmental activities, risk ratings for environmental facilities
would allow private investors  to make investment decision about those facilities on the same
basis as they make other investment decisions. As a result, investors would be more likely to
consider involvement  in low-risk environmental projects, and the user fees that  they would
consider necessary to cover costs and risks will more accurately reflect the actual risks posed by
a given project

Mitigation of Risks

       EPA could mitigate the real risks associated with environmental investment  by reducing
the magnitude  of liabilities that could be incurred by individual facilities.  It could accomplish
this  by promoting risk-pooling through insurance programs in which environmental facilities,
private insurers,  and/or governments as a group cover the liability associated with specific
environmental  projects. With more readily available environmental liability insurance for lenders,
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for example, banks and other lenders will be more willing to finance firms involved in Superfund
cleanups or other activities associated with environmental risks.

      EPA could also  reduce  risks  by endorsing and facilitating new programs  to  offer
environmental liability insurance to capital lenders and providers of environmental services. One
example of such a program that could serve as a model is one sponsored by the Environmental
Standards Group (ESG).  This program provides coverage analogous to title insurance for real
estate transactions and is designed to  protect lenders against the financial loss that might be
incurred in the event of mortgage foreclosures on waste-contaminated real estate.  Insurance
would cover up to $30 million of liability on each mortgaged property that bad been found clear
of contaminants following investigation of historical land use for that specific site  (using a
specially created database) and an onsite inspection.  Any site considered contaminated could be
insured after the environmental hazard was corrected.

      One. example of  an insurance mechanism that  could  help mitigate  risks is  a recent
proposal made by the American International Group (AIG), the largest issuer of environmental'
impairment insurance. The proposal constitutes a privately funded alternative to government
involvement in liability insurance.  It suggested that a small  percentage of  all premiums for
general business liability insurance be dedicated to a fund for clean-up of waste sites.  The
purpose of this plan is to raise cash needed  to clean up Superfund sites and to direct resources
to cleanup measures rather than to litigation.

      Private investment of equity could be encouraged by a similar program designed to insure
the facility itself.  Bearing in mind the environmental community's concern  that breaking the
linkage between those responsible for site contamination and those asked to finance site cleanups
may undermine the foundation of the  Superfund program, the concept of a privately  operated
fund appears attractive. It could reduce federal expenditure on litigation and collection; it would
reassure potential  private investors  now  concerned about  future liability for unforeseen
contamination; and, through savings realized by companies now subject to Superfund litigation,
it could increase the funds potentially available for further environmental investments. However,
the Board feels  that additional analysis of this type of approach would be required to determine
the public policy impact  of such a program.

      With increased private provision of environmental liability insurance,  the private sector
could likely.become much more involved  in the monitoring  and control of environmentally
related facility  actions.    Because insurers would clearly be interested in  maintaining a
contaminant-free site, they would police  subsequent use of sites they insure to ensure proper
materials handling.  In a sense they would  be acting as a tniid-party regulator to protect their
financial interests. Thus, in addition  to aiding early detection of contamination and spurring
private clean-up efforts  (a prelude to mortgage approval), private insurers could provide a
measure of comfort to commercial lenders and thus encourage private loans for environmental
infrastructure.
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C.     CONCERNS

       Because the operations and site conditions of environmental facilities are unique, general
information (beyond that the private sector could easily develop on its own) about the risks of
such facilities may have a limited application to specific investment decisions.  In addition, lack
of specific risk information may limit the technical ability of an independent risk-rating agency
to develop adequately a comparative system for ranking environmental projects in terms of risk.
Some risks may prove to be uninsurable due to their potential magnitude, degree of uncertainty,
or long-lived and latent nature.
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                                     NOTES
1.    US Environmental Protection Agency, Public -Private Partnership Case Studies: Profiles
      of Success in Providing Environmental Services, September 1989; page 6.

2.    US Environmental Protection Agency, Environmental Investments: the Cost of a Clean
      Environment Report to Congress, November 1990; Table 8-12A.

3.    National Solid Wastes Management Association, "Privatizing Municipal Waste Services:
      Saving Dollars and Making Sense" (1989), pages 1,4.

4.    See Note 2.

5.    National Governors' Association, Siting New Treatment and Disposal Facilities, Center
      for Policy Research (1989), pp. 2-3. Also personal communication with Norm Weiss,
      Arizona Department of Environmental Health Services (December 11,1990); Raoul Clark,
      Florida Department of Environmental  Regulation (December 31, 1990); Brett Smith,
      Minnesota Waste Management Board (December 19, 1990);  Marge Howell, North
      Carolina Hazardous Waste Management Commission (December 28, 1990); and "1990
      State-by-State Outlook for Commercial TSD Facilities," The Hazardous Waste Consultant
      (March/April  1990).

6.    National Solid Wastes Management Association, "Privatizing Municipal Waste Services:
      Saving Dollars and Making Sense" (1989), pages 1,4,6. See also Eugene J. Wingerter,
      "Where the Waste Industry is Going,"  Waste Age (April 1990), p. 282; Richard J.
      Sweetnam, Jr., 'Trends in Waste-to-Energy," Waste Age (November 1989), p. 41; and
      Eileen Berenyi and Robert Gould, Resource Recovery Yearbook, New York: Government
      Advisory  Associates,  Inc.  (1986),  pp.  13-16,  72; cited  in  National Solid Wastes
      Management Association, "Privatizing Municipal Waste Services: Saving Dollars and
      Making Sense" (1989), pp. 4-5; David A. Dorau and Keith R. Connor, "Meeting the MRF
      Challenge in the 1990s," Public Works (September 1990), p.  107; Dexter Ewel and Frank
      C. Shaw, "Risk Allocation in a Changing MRF Industry," BioCycle (April 1990), pp. 64-
      65; and Abbie C. Page,  "Financing a Material Recovery Facility," BioCycle (August
      1989), pp. 54-56.

7.    Research Triangle  Institute, Final Descriptive Summary: 1986 Survey of Community
      Water Systems, prepared for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (October 1987),
      p. 9.

8.    The privatised municipal wastewater treatment facilities am in Anhiim, Alabama; Priham,
      Alabama; Chandler, Arizona; Gilbert, Arizona; East Aurora, New York; and Downington,
      Pennsylvania.  Another facility in Greenville, South Carolina,  was developed under a
      privatization agreement but later sold back to the public partner. (This list was developed
      primarily through phone contacts with knowledgeable individuals.  An initial list .was
      obtained from: John G. Heilman and Gerald W. Johnson,  "A Feasibility Study of the
                                                                            Page 25

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      Privatization of Public Wastewater Treatment Works," prepared for the U.S. Geological
      Survey, Department of Interior (January 1989).)

9.    William T. Lorenz & Co., 1989 Update -  Water Pollution Control Industry Outlook
      (March 1989), pp. 533-549; and Apogee Research, Inc., The Nation's Public Works:
      Report on Wastewater Management, prepared for the National Council on Public Works
      Improvement (May 1987), p. 89, 95-96; "A Bull Market for Sludge Disposal," Public
      Works Financing  (June 1989), p. 7; personal communication with William Reinhardt,
      editor of Public Works Financing (December 18, 1990).

10.    See Note 2.

11.    U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Environmental Investments: The Cost of a Clean
      Environment. Tables 3-3 to 7-3 (1990).

12.    The costs double over the period 1981 to 2000 in real terms, reported in 1986 dollars.
      See  US Environmental Protection Agency,  Environmental Investments: the Cost of a
      Clean Environment, Report to Congress, November 1990; Page 1-11.

13.    National Council  on Public Works  Improvement, Fragile Foundations:  A Report on
      America's Public Works (February, 1988), p. 197.

14.    See  E.S. Savas Privatization:  The Key to Better Government, New  Jersey: Chathman
      House (1987). Chapter 6: "Applications in Physical and Commercial Services" in for a
      summary of the results of studies conducted through 1986; see also page 125. See also
      James D. McDavid & Gregory  1C  Schick, "Privatization Versus Union-Management
      Cooperation:  the  Effects  of Competition on Service Efficiency in  Municipalities",
      Canadian Public Administration Volume 30 No. 3 (Fall 1987):472-488.

15.    John G. Heilman and Gerald W. Johnson  "System and Process in Capital-Intensive
      Privatization: A Comparative Case Study of Municipal Wastewater Treatment Works",
      Policy Studies Review Volume 8  No.3 (Spring 1989): 549-572.  Heilman and Johnson's
      cost savings findings  are  highly sensitive to potential changes to local governments*
      internal review processes,  and thus are not inherent to private construction.

16.    Unpublished  estimates by Apogee  Research, Inc., based  on data  from Connecticut
      Department of Environmental Protection and construction cost data from Metcalf & Eddy.

17.    Federally-funded SRFs, however, can fund facilities in the nonpoint source and estuarine
      areas that have private participation.

18.    The Supreme Court has ruled mat it is unconstitutional to bar transport of solid waste into
      a state solely on the grounds that it originates out of state, unless the facility is publicly
      owned (City of Philadelphia v. New Jersey).   Several  states and localities  have
      promulgated laws or regulations which limit the intrastate transport of solid waste in such
      a way as to comply with this ruling, however (Waste Age, October 1987 pages 53-56).
      In addition, Congress has attempted to pass federal legislation to allow states to ban
      shipments of solid waste from other  states under certain conditions, such the proposal by

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       Senators Daniel R. Coats (R-Ind.) and Mitch McConnell R-Ky.) to amend the District of
       Columbia appropriations bill (HR 5311) in 1990.

19.    The Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) requires competitive, sealed bids in many, but
       not all, federal procurements (sect 6.4), but does allow for acceptance of the lowest
       reasonable bid (sect 14.5, 15).  Not all states have used the FAR as a model, however.

20.    Another form of risk mitigation often restricted by state and local rules is put-or-pay
       contracts that provide facilities with assured input flows or compensatory payments.

21.    It must be noted  that the advantages of long-term contracts in  attracting  private
       participation are  mitigated in part by federal regulations governing tax-exempt bond
       financing.   If a service agreement extends beyond five years,  it falls  under the IRS
       definition of a private activity and must be financed with generally higher cost private
       activity bonds.  Tax  exemption is available for some private activity  bonds, but the
       volume of such debt is restricted by annual volume caps for each state.

22.    Association of Metropolitan Sewerage Agencies, Municipal Wastewater Treatment
       Facility Financial Survey (1987).  Percentage of costs covered by user  fees calculated
       from data reported for Section C 3,4, and 5.

23.    Association of Metropolitan Sewerage Agencies, Municipal Wastewater Treatment
       Facility Financial Survey for (1983), Section IV data; (1987), Section B-l  data.

24.    Frederick W. Immerman, Final Descriptive Summary 1986 Survey of Community Water
       Systems, for EPA Office of Drinking Water (Washington. DC, October 23,1987), p. 48.

25.    In more economic terms, if user fees are set at a level mat covers the average total cost
       of the public agency, including the cost of capital, the optimal level of  service will be
       provided (assuming the facility is operating as a natural monopoly). If a private investor
       is considering investing in the plant and recovering costs from the revenues of the facility,
       they would not be able to earn "normal" profits (a market return on the use of capital and
       other resources) unless they can reduce average total costs to a level below those of the
       public sector. Alternatively, if a public agency is trying to attract a private investor and
       has already reduced costs as much as is possible, it can set user fees — based on the
       calculation of average total costs — at a level that reflects a normal return to the private
       sector. In this case user fees would be raised above a level required by the public sector
       to provide services and cover their costs, but would not provide the private sector with
       "monopoly" profits. The latter approach is one of the standard methods of setting rates
       for regulated private monopolies, such as power utilities.

26.    Personal communication with Harvey Goldman, Executive Vice President, Air and Water
       Technologies Corporation.

27.    A recent GAO study concluded that in response to the restricted availability and high cost
       of commercial insurance, more and more hazardous waste treatment, storage, or disposal
       facilities are relying on then* own  assets to pay for environmental liabilities associated
       with then* operations. The same study found that die number of firms offering insurance,

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      the number of polices written, and total liability coverage has decreased dramatically since
      1984.  In addition the average cost of liability insurance has increased by more than a
      factor of 10 since 1982.  See Government Accounting Office, Hazardous Waste: The
      Cost and Availability of Pollution Insurance, October 1988.

28.   Personal communication with Bob Peters, National Solid Waste Management Association.
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                                   APPENDIX

                     Environmental Financial Advisory Board
                                     (EFAB)
EFAB Chair

Richard Torkelson
Deputy Commissioner for Administration
New York State Department of
 Environmental Conservation
Albany, NY

EFAB Vice Chair

Frieda K. Wallison
Partner
Jones, Day, Reavis & Pogue
Washington, DC

Private Sector Incentives Workgroup

Warren W. Tyler  (Workgroup Leader)
Vice President
State Savings Bank
Columbus, OH

J. James Barr
Vice President and Treasurer
American Water Works Company, lac.
Voorhees, NJ

Philip Beachem
Executive Vice President
New Jersey Alliance for Action, Inc.
Edison, NJ

Joseph D. Blair
Executive Director
Massachusetts Industrial Finance Agency
Boston, MA

Honorable Pete V. Domenici
U.S. Senator
State of New Mexico
EFAB Executive Director

Herbert Barrack
Assistant Regional Administrator
Region U, U.S. Environmental Protection
 Agency
New York, NY
Harvey Goldman
Executive  Vice  President  and   Chief
Financial Officer
Air and Water Technologies Corporation
Somerville, NJ

W. Jack Hargett
Vice President Government Relations
The Parsons Corporation
Washington, DC

Honorable Rolland W. Lewis
Mayor of Mount Vernon
Mount Vemon, IL

Steven Lieberman
Assistant Director for General Management
Office of Management and Budget
Washington, DC

David W. Gilbert
Vice President
Envirotech Operating Services
Birmingham, AL
                                                                         Page A-l

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Public   Sector   Financing   Options
Workgroup
George A. Rafielis (Workgroup Leader)
Partner
Ernst & Young
Charlotte, NC

William H. Chew
Senior Vice President
Municipal Finance Department
Standard & Poor's Corporation
New York, NY

Roger D. Feldman, P.C.
Partner
McDermott, Will & Emery
Washington, DC

Shockley D. Gardner, Jr.
Executive Director
Virginia Resources Authority
Richmond, VA
Robert F. Mabon, Jr.
Morgan Stanley and Company, Inc.
New York, NY

Martin L. Mosby, Jr.
Managing Director
Public Financial Management, Inc.
Memphis, TN

Roberta H. Savage
Executive Director
Association of State & Interstate Water
 Pollution Control Administrators
Washington, DC

Douglas P. Wheeler
Secretary for Resources
Sacramento, CA
Economic Incentives Workgroup

Frieda K. Wallison (Workgroup Leader)
Partner
Jones, Day, Reavis & Pogue
Washington, DC

Honorable Beryl F. Anthony, Jr.
U.S. Representative
State of Arkansas

Dr. William Fox
Associate Director
Center for Business & Economic Research
University of Tennessee
Knoxvffle, TN
John Gunyou
Minnesota Department of Finance
SLPaaLMN

Heather L. Ruth
President
Public Securities Association
New York, NY

Richard Totkelson
Deputy Commissioner for Administration
New York State Department of
  Environmental Conservation
Albany, NY
                                                                          Page A-2

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Small Community Financing Strategies Workgroup
Elizabeth Ytell (Workgroup Leader)
Director, Water-Wastewater Division
Rural Community Assistance Corporation
Sacramento, CA

Jack Bond
City Administrator/Deputy Mayor
 for Operations
Washington, DC

Thomas Christensen
(Retired Supervisor)
Charter Township of Ironwood
Ironwood, MI

Dr. Richard Fenwick, Jr.
'Vice President, Corporate Economist
CoBank National Bank for Cooperatives
National Credit Services Division
Denver, CO
William B. James
Associate Director
Prudential-Bache Capital Funding
Public Finance Department
New York, NY

John C. "Mac" McCarthy
State Director
U.S. Department of Agriculture
Fanners Home Administration
Alexandria, LA

Honorable Anne Meagher Northup
Kentucky State Legislator
Louisville, KY
Workgroup Support Staff

Environmental Protection Agency

David P. Ryan
Comptroller

John J. Sandy
Director, Resource Management Division

David Osterman
Chief, Resource Planning and
 Analysis Branch

Helen Beggun
Chief, Grants Administration Branch
Region n

Alice Jenik
Chief, Policy and Program
 Integration Branch
Region n
Margaret Binney
Analyst

Ellen Fahey
Analyst

Vera Hannigan
Senior Analyst

Joanne Lynch
Analyst

Timothy McProuty
Senior Analyst

Eugene Pontillo
Senior Analyst
                                                                          PageA-3

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Environmental   Protection   Agency
(Cont)

Ben Abruzzo
Analyst

George Ames
Senior Analyst

Leonard Bechtel
Analyst
Kim Thomas
Secretary

Ann M. Watt
Analyst
Apogee Research, Inc.

Dr. Kenneth Rubin
President

Ann Carey
Vice President

Dr. Susan Jakubiak
Senior Economist

Matthew Hardison
Vice President
Barbara Richard
Senior Financial Analyst

Lisa Akeson
Senior Economist

Amy Doll
Policy Analyst

Chris  Knopes
Policy Analyst
Expert Consultants to the EFAB (from EPA)

Stephen AUbee
Chief, Municipal Assistance Branch
Office of Wastewater Enforcement
  and Compliance

Marian Cody
Analyst
Grants Administration Branch
Office of Administration and
  Resources Management

Ann Cole
Small Community Coordinator
Office of Regional Operations and
1  State/Local Relations
A. W. Marks
Senior Advisor
Enforcement and Program Implementation
  Division
Office of Ground Water and
  Drinking Water

Kitty Miller
Environmental Protection Specialist
Office of Water

Donald Rugh
Analyst
Office of Wastewater Enforcement
  and Compliance
                                                                          Page A-4

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Expert Consultants to the EFAB (from
EPA) (Cont.)

Michael Deane
Environmental Protection Specialist
Office of Wastewater Enforcement
 and Compliance

Ellen Haffa
Analyst
Grants Administration Branch
Office of Administration and
 Resources Management

James Home
Special Assistant
Office of Wastewater Enforcement
  and Compliance
Peter Shanaghan
Mobilization Manager
Office of Ground Water and
 Drinking Water

Ronald Slotkin
Analyst
Office of Research and Development

Brett Snyder
Economist
Economic Analysis and Research Branch
Office of Policy, Planning, and Evaluation
                                                                        Page A-S

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