The funding secured in the FY24 appropriations bill to fix the wastewater treatment plant is a positive step, but Congressman Peters is pushing to expand the IBWC construction budget to fully address this crisis. Congressman Peters led a letter calling for $278 million in the FY25 budget.
Read more about it in this May 3rd piece from Axios, posted below:
San Diego reps again request federal funds to fix beach-polluting San Ysidro sewage plant
By Andrew Keatts
May 3, 2024
Congress in March allocated $100 million to start fixing a decrepit San Ysidro wastewater plant that dumps sewage into the Pacific Ocean. Now, a group of representatives are asking to finish the job.
Why it matters: Federal officials and their Mexican counterparts have started making progress on the intractable cross-border sewage crisis, but without more resources the environmental injustice will continue.
Driving the news: A bipartisan group of 10 House members â eight in California and Texas â sent a letter to House Appropriations Committee leaders requesting next year’s spending bill include $278 million for the International Boundary and Water Commission’s construction budget.
- The IBWC is the federal agency that maintains and operates the South Bay International Wastewater Treatment Plant, along San Diego’s border with Tijuana.
- The money would include other agency needs, like building levees and dams in El Paso, Texas and repairing another wastewater facility in Nogales, Arizona.
What they’re saying: The funding would be enough to complete fixes and upgrades at the border facility, Rep. Scott Peters’ (D-San Diego) office said in a press release announcing the request.
- “(The plant) has for years failed to even meet Clean Water Act standards,” the letter said. “That plant must be brought back into compliance.”
- San Diego Democratic representatives Sara Jacobs, Mike Levin and Juan Vargas signed on, but Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Escondido) abstained. He has previously demanded IBWC further explain the plant’s cost overruns and maintenance issues.
State of play: The South Bay treatment facility is ostensibly equipped to treat 25 million gallons per day of sewage from Tijuana â but Voice of San Diego reported last year it had fallen into undisclosed disrepair and couldn’t operate at that level, violating the Clean Water Act.
- The IBWC discovered that failure while preparing to spend a $300 million, 2020 Congressional allocation meant to double the plant’s capacity to 50 million gallons of sewage per day.
- That expansion couldn’t begin until the IBWC fixed the existing plant.
Flashback: President Biden signed a spending package last month that included $100 million for the repair work, after he requested $310 million.
- The IBWC last year told San Diego’s Regional Water Control Board the overall price tag for repairs and upgrades to the facility had ballooned to over $900 million.
Zoom out: In January, Mexico broke ground on repairs to a treatment plant in Punta Bandera, from which tides carry sewage north to San Diego beaches during the summer months.
Big picture: Water quality forced Imperial Beach to close its coastline for most of 2023, but Imperial beach Mayor Paloma Aguirre has estimated that completed repairs could reduce closures by 65%.