What the Senate Infrastructure Bill Means for Local Governments

Cities have been calling on Congress to get to work on an infrastructure package since 2016, and on August 10th, the Senate delivered. They passed the bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), which includes $550 billion in new federal investments in America’s infrastructure, adding an estimated two million jobs per year to the national economy. From here, the bill will move to House, where Speaker Nancy Pelosi will decide whether to proceed to a vote or to wait for a reconciliation bill to come from the Senate as well before proceeding.

Communities across America are ready to rebuild and this bill makes significant progress toward helping them build sustainable and resilient infrastructure, with critical investments in our nation’s transportation, water and broadband infrastructure. Read NLC’s statement on the passage of this legislation here.

Here are the key programs and funding by priority area for cities, towns and villages.

Rebuild Transportation Connectivity

America’s cities, towns and villages take care of a significant portion of our nation’s expansive transportation network, and our communities are ahead of the technology curve in implementing the most forward-looking and innovative solutions. We asked Congress to invest with us and give local governments a fighting chance at new programs – for safety, bridges, technology and more – as well as to make sure that the Surface Transportation Block Grant (STBG) and other programs reached cities of all sizes. The Senate responded by providing $124B in competitive funding from USDOT programs across transportation modes, and they have added an additional population bucket of STBG ensuring communities of different sizes can more clearly see how states will spend to support them.

IIJA also provides important financing opportunities for local governments including:

Invest in Water and Climate Resilience

While IIJA includes the Senate-passed Drinking Water and Wastewater Infrastructure Act, which NLC supported and which authorizes a number of programs and grant opportunities for drinking water, wastewater and stormwater management and support for resilience, innovative technologies, workforce development and watershed/source water protection, among others, it does not provide funding for these grants.

IIJA provides important financing opportunities for local governments, including:

Climate Change and Resilience

NLC called on Congress to help local leaders build resilient communities by ensuring that our nation’s infrastructure can withstand the impacts of climate change and extreme weather events. IIJA includes provisions for energy efficiency, electric grid resilience, pre-disaster mitigation, drought and Western water resilience, and flood and wildfire mitigation. Moreover, the transportation sections of the bill invest in electric vehicles and charging infrastructure, establish a carbon reduction program to reduce transportation emissions, and establish a formula and competitive grant program to help states improve the resiliency of transportation infrastructure.

IIJA provides funding for environmental cleanup and municipal recycling programs.

Broadband Access, Digital Equity and Cybersecurity

NLC called on Congress to make federal investments to close the digital divide and provide equitable access to the internet for people in all communities. The IIJA includes the largest-ever one-time federal investment in broadband, weighing in at $65 billion, including programs for broadband infrastructure buildout, affordability and digital equity. The bill also includes historic investments in local cybersecurity through a new state and local government cybersecurity fund.

Digital Equity and Broadband Affordability