Hawaii delegation wants to get money to upgrade a failing wastewater treatment plant.
WASHINGTON 鈥 Hawaii鈥檚 congressional delegation is seeking a $247 million fix to a longstanding public health problem for Windward Oahu.
Marine Corps Base Hawaii needs to upgrade its aging wastewater treatment plant after being fined nearly $250,000 last year for discharging high levels of fecal bacteria into the popular bay.
U.S. Rep. Jill Tokuda and Sens. Brian Schatz and Mazie Hirono have asked for the money to help the base’s water reclamation facility cut down on potential future discharges that put people and the environment at risk while at the same time bolstering resilience to tsunamis, cyberattacks and terrorism.
The project will also allow the base to better treat its wastewater so that it can be dedicated for other uses, such as irrigation.
The funding would come through , money that lawmakers can set aside for special projects in their district that were not originally included in the president鈥檚 budget. In general, Hawaii outperforms most states when it comes to securing these types of funds.
But whether the earmark comes through in fiscal year 2024, which starts Oct. 1, is an open question, especially as Republicans square off with Democrats over raising the debt ceiling.
GOP leaders in the House, led by Speaker Kevin McCarthy, have said they will only raise the debt limit if Democrats agree to deep spending cuts in the upcoming budget and other concessions aimed at adding additional work requirements to federal aid programs, such as Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, which provides money for groceries.
So far, President Joe Biden and Democratic leaders in the House and Senate have refused to acquiesce.
鈥淣othing is guaranteed,鈥 Schatz said. 鈥淭he optimistic scenario is that we avoid default and then we have a topline agreement that allows us to move forward on appropriations, but none of that is certain.鈥
For Hawaii鈥檚 earmark requests to go through, Schatz said Congress will need to pass a budget in the coming year. Even that is an open question, he said, given the current state of affairs in Washington.
鈥淲e have to get through this crisis first,鈥 he said.
Although Marine Corps Base Hawaii has a permit to discharge treated wastewater into Kailua Bay, it must ensure that the levels of enterococcus bacteria remain under a prescribed limit. When the Hawaii Department of Health issued its six-figure fine last year, officials said that the base exceeded those limits on 鈥渘umerous occasions鈥 between August 2020 and February 2022.
Correction: A previous version of this story incorrectly stated the Marine Corps wastewater outfall pipe was in Kaneohe Bay. It has been updated to reflect that the pipe empties into Kailua Bay.
But the state鈥檚 recent disciplinary action wasn鈥檛 the first sign of trouble.
Tokuda, who is from Kaneohe and sits on the House Armed Services Committee, said the Marine Corps base鈥檚 treatment plant has been a longstanding problem in the community as has the City and County鈥檚 own facility in Kailua, which shares the same outfall and has experienced its own discharges of fecal bacteria.
鈥淵ou grew up around Kaneohe Bay knowing never to eat the stuff you catch out there,鈥 she said. 鈥淔or many on the windward side, you just knew there were issues. You literally could smell it.鈥
According to the U.S. Government Accountability Office, the Defense Department has in deferred maintenance costs and could face up to an additional $91 billion to pay for environmental liabilities.
Tokuda said that the wastewater treatment facility is near the top of the list, at least locally, but due to competing priorities it never secured the necessary funding, which is why it鈥檚 necessary for the delegation to step in.
鈥淲e can鈥檛 wait,鈥 Tokuda said. 鈥淭he health of our water, whether it鈥檚 our drinking water or the water surrounding our islands, is critically important. This is about identifying this as a priority and fighting to push it forward.鈥
She hopes that by securing such a large investment to mitigate the military鈥檚 environmental impacts in Hawaii that it will help to rebuild public trust.
The Marine Corps base at Kaneohe Bay is not the only place where the military鈥檚 infrastructure is failing.
Military families have complained for years about the decrepit state of base housing, including at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Schofield Barracks and Marine Corps Base Hawaii.
The U.S. Navy鈥檚 World War II-era underground fuel farm at Red Hill has a long history of leakage, including one in 2021 that sickened thousands of nearby residents after petroleum seeped into the local groundwater supply.
And in 2022, the state fined the Navy $8.7 million after 鈥渞epeated discharges of untreated or partially treated sewage to state waters.鈥
Lt. Mark McDonough, a Marine Corps spokesman, said fixing the base鈥檚 wastewater treatment plant, which was first constructed in 1947, has been a local priority for almost 20 years, but that the funding has been a challenge due to the Defense Department鈥檚 maintenance backlog.
He said he understands the necessity for the department to prioritize projects, but that he鈥檚 hopeful that Hawaii鈥檚 delegation will be successful in the coming budget year.
鈥淢arine Corps Base Hawaii has been asking for this since 2005,鈥 McDonough said. 鈥淲e want this and we鈥檝e wanted this for a long time. It鈥檚 not because of a lack of asking.鈥
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Nick Grube is a reporter for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at nick@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at . You can also reach him by phone at 808-377-0246.