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AUC Clean Water Proposal Passes State House

ARCHIVED 2002–2016: Originally distributed via the eWire press wire service. Preserved as historical record.

AUC Clean Water Proposal Passes State House

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Business, Transportation & Environment Editors

AUC Clean Water Proposal Passes State House

MICHIGAN, LANSING, Apr. 26 -/E-Wire/Business Wire/-- The goal of a statewide construction association to obtain funding to repair the state's aging and inadequate sewage and storm water systems is closer to being realized thanks to a bill package that passed the state House April 25.

AUC -- Michigan's Heavy Construction Association has been lobbying for House Bill 4625 since it was proposed last year. The bill, sponsored by Rep. Bruce Patterson, R-Canton, will place a $1 billion sewer bond ballot proposal before voters this fall if it passes the Senate. Along with supporting legislation (House Bill 5892 and 5893), Rep. Patterson's bill has been under consideration by the House for the past two months.

"The bill package now goes to the Senate, where Sen. Kenneth Sikkema, R-Grandville, has promised to give the package his immediate attention," said Bob Patzer, executive director of AUC, which represents over 500 heavy construction firms across the state, including contractors who build water and sewer systems. "We congratulate the legislators on their foresight to help protect the environment with this important package of bills."

The $1 billion bond proposal, if approved by voters, would provide funding for communities to repair and replace sewage delivery/treatment systems and failing septic systems that have been a major source of pollution to the Great Lakes.

AUC formed a coalition in 1989 to address the issue of combined storm and sanitary sewer overflow. At that time, the group's report highlighted the problem of communities discharging billions of gallons of untreated sewage and industrial wastewater each year into the state's waterways. Appropriate legislation was passed that allowed funding for separate sewer systems and construction of retention and treatment basins.

In 2000 the coalition issued another report, again funded by AUC, which found that billions of dollars would be needed over the next two decades to repair and replace sewage delivery and treatment systems, in addition to failing septic systems. The report resulted in legislation that passed and answered some of the funding problems, but did not go far enough. Other environmental and business groups have since published additional reports that have addressed the problem, but no solutions have been developed.

"House Bill 4625 is the first major piece of legislation to come along that will provide the amount of long-term, stable funding that is necessary for communities to address their individual sewer infrastructure problems," Patzer said, "and thereby prevent discharges of untreated or improperly treated sewage into our state's waterways."

AUC -- Michigan's Heavy Construction Association represents the interests of over 500 companies statewide. When AUC (Associated Underground Contractors) was founded in 1946, the majority of its members were underground contractors. Since then, the organization expanded to include many other areas of Michigan's construction industry and thus became AUC -- Michigan's Heavy Construction Association. Member companies are involved in a variety of heavy construction projects across the state in addition to water, sewer, tunnels, and mass excavation. Member companies handle road construction, paving, bridge building and painting, electrical work, utilities, demolition and dewatering. For more information, check out www.aucmi.org.

Associated Underground Contractors

Associated Underground Contractors, Bob Patzer, 517/347-8336

http://www.aucmi.org

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