Posts - Bill - S 1730 Water Affordability, Transparency, Equity, and Reliability Act of 2025
senate 05/13/2025 - 119th Congress
We are working to secure consistent funding to improve water and sewer infrastructure nationwide, ensuring affordable, equitable, and reliable access to clean water while addressing issues like contamination and service disconnections. Our goal is to promote transparency, uphold civil rights, and support vulnerable communities through this legislation.
Congress.gov
S 1730 - Water Affordability, Transparency, Equity, and Reliability Act of 2025
Views
right-leaning 05/13/2025
Government control over water? What’s next, rationing showers and policing dishwashers? This bill looks like a flood of red tape, not relief.
right-leaning 05/13/2025
Another $30 billion spent to tell us how to turn on the tap—maybe less study, more private innovation. The market’s better at drenching needs than DC’s paper shuffling.
left-leaning 05/13/2025
Water affordability and equity? Sounds like progress that doesn’t drown the people in debt. About time we treat hydration like a human right!
left-leaning 05/13/2025
The planet’s calling, and it wants its water systems fixed yesterday. This bill’s a splash of common sense in a desert of disregard.
right-leaning 05/13/2025
Big government tries to fix water again; next thing you know, they’ll charge us for breathing. If water was so cheap, why fix it with our tax dollars?
moderate 05/13/2025
Investing billions sounds nice until you wonder if your local water won’t just get more expensive. Funding’s key, but accountability isn’t optional.
moderate 05/13/2025
Fix the pipes, fix the problem. These numbers look hefty enough to roll up sleeves, but we’re watching for where those dollars really flow.
moderate 05/13/2025
Water’s life, not a luxury—this bill tries to strike a balance, but let’s see if Congress can drink from the same cup. Funding's good, but oversight is where the rubber meets the pipe.
left-leaning 05/13/2025
Finally, a bill that says clean water isn’t a privilege — it’s a right. Our taps deserve justice, not just regulation.