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Page 5 - தண்ணீர் வளங்கள் வளர்ச்சி நாடகம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Lowell Creek plan approved - Dredging Today

Problem Solvers Indicate Third Way On Infrastructure - The Waterways Journal

May 7, 2021 By Waterways Journal President Joe Biden is on a multistate tour to promote his infrastructure bill. He has signaled in recent weeks that he is ready to negotiate with Republicans, who have replied to his multitrillion-dollar infrastructure bill with a slimmed-down $568 billion proposal focusing on traditional infrastructure and proposing user fees instead of new taxes to pay for the improvements.  One of the big areas of discussion, in both Congress and the press, has been what constitutes “infrastructure.” Most members and the public understand it to mean roads, bridges, ports, broadband, railways, energy, water supply and other physical infrastructure. Since there has long been strong bipartisan support for infrastructure spending, the Biden administration is trying to include certain health-care related measures under the “infrastructure” rubric. A fact sheet published by the White House in ad

Former Lock And Dam 52 Property To Be Conveyed To Metropolis-Massac Port Authority

May 7, 2021 By Shelley Byrne Former Ohio River Lock and Dam 52 property near Brookport, Ill., is being conveyed to the Metropolis-Massac Port Authority later this year. The provision was written into the Water Resources Development Act of 2020 with the support of legislators on both the Illinois and Kentucky sides of the river. The deed conveyance will take place once the final government contract for demolishing the former Dam 52 is completed. “We’ve had our eye on the Dam 52 property for a long time,” Metropolis-Massac Executive Director Scott Garrett said. Section 356 of WRDA gives the port authority “all right, title and interest of the United States in and to any real property located north of the south bank of the Ohio River in Massac County, Ill., that is associated with the Ohio River Lock and Dam 52.”

Northeast Ohio Congress members seek big money for local projects through earmarks

Northeast Ohio Congress members seek big money for local projects through earmarks Sabrina Eaton, cleveland.com © Gus Chan/The Plain Dealer The new west tower at the Summa Health System s Akron Campus was part of Phase 1 of the system s master facility plan. The system announced plans for Phase 2 on Wednesday. (Gus Chan / The Plain Dealer) The Plain Dealer WASHINGTON, D.C. - Earmarks are back, and Northeast Ohio members of Congress want to use them to fund everything from local sewer improvements to police communication centers to a park. The earmarking process lets members of Congress seek money for specific projects in yearly funding bills. Earmark advocates say Congress members are more familiar with deserving local projects than bureaucrats at federal agencies who would otherwise allot federal dollars. Critics argue earmarks enable corruption, as in the case of former California GOP Rep. Randy “Duke” Cunningham, who took payoffs in exchange for direct

Midwestern members of Congress urge Corps to put flood control first

U.S. Senator Roy Blunt (Mo.), along with U.S. Representatives Sam Graves (Mo.) and Emanuel Cleaver II (Mo.), led a bipartisan, bicameral letter urging the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) to quickly and fully utilize the tools and resources Congress provided in the Water Resources Development Act (WRDA) of 2020 and the FY2020 Energy and Water appropriations bill to reduce flood risk and improve flood protection along the Lower Missouri River. In addition to Blunt, Graves, and Cleaver, the letter is signed by congressional members from the Lower Missouri River Basin states, including U.S. Senators Chuck Grassley (Iowa), Deb Fischer

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