Denton awarded water infrastructure grant
Governor Roy Cooper recently announced that communities statewide will receive more than $253 million in drinking water and wastewater infrastructure funding and storm water construction grants to help pay for 70 projects in 30 counties statewide, including 51 construction projects. The awards include emerging contaminants (PFAS) funding and funding for lead service line inventories and replacements.
"Strong water and wastewater systems are vital for safe drinking water and economic development," said Governor Cooper. "Thanks to federal funding from the Biden-Harris Administration and state appropriations we’ve made historic investments to rebuild and replace aging systems, especially in rural communities, which will make our state stronger."
“Replacing aging infrastructure and adding the capacity to remove forever chemicals from drinking water benefits the health and pocketbooks of North Carolinians,” said DEQ Secretary Elizabeth S. Biser. “Funding these projects supports the future success of communities across our state.”
The following local government units designated as distressed by the State Water Infrastructure Authority and the Local Government Commission will receive Asset Inventory and Assessment grants from the Viable Utility Reserve, considered a vital step in planning and inventorying that can lead towns on a path to future viability:
Creswell
Denton
Morven
Ossipee
Rich Square
Snow Hill
Gates County
McDowell County
Swan Quarter Sanitary District.