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		DCEO announces $18.2 million in infrastructure grants for 34 rural 
		communities
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		[April 08, 2021] 
		By GRACE BARBICCapitol News Illinois
 gbarbic@capitolnewsillinois.com
 
 
  SPRINGFIELD – The Illinois Department of 
		Commerce and Economic Opportunity announced a total of $18.2 million in 
		grants will be awarded to 34 downstate and rural communities facing 
		threats to health and safety because of infrastructure issues. 
 The Community Development Block Grant program for 2020, funded by the 
		U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, is estimated to 
		benefit around 113,266 Illinois residents by funding water and sewer 
		upgrades and repairs in low-income, rural communities.
 
 The repairs must be made to shared water and sewer infrastructure with 
		the intent of enhancing safety and quality of life for those within the 
		eligible cities and towns.
 
 “Every community deserves clean water and reliable sewer service,” Gov. 
		JB Pritzker said in a news release. “The 2020 Public Infrastructure 
		grants program will...invest in the community, create jobs, and lay the 
		groundwork for even more revitalization down the road.”
 
 Last year the program received 50 percent more applications than it did 
		the previous year, which DCEO Acting Director Sylvia Garcia said speaks 
		to the program's necessity.
 
 “I think there’s a backlog of infrastructure investment across the 
		country when we look at things, but I think in particular in downstate 
		and rural communities,” Garcia said in an interview. “There’s a lot of 
		critical life safety projects out there that really need to be funded.”
 
 Village of Tampico Mayor Kristine Hill, a grantee of the program, said 
		her community is facing major issues with its infrastructure, 
		specifically its storm sewer system.
 
 “Our system is quite old to begin with, but then during the flooding of 
		2019, the groundwater infiltrated our storm source and overloaded our 
		system which caused us to have emergency pumps running and backing up 
		into people’s homes,” Hill said in a phone interview. “It was just quite 
		a mess for many of our residents.”
 
		
		 
		
 According to Hill, the issue has been a burden on residents of Tampico, 
		a village of less than 800 residents which Hill said does not have 
		surplus tax revenue to address the problem. The sewer back up, she said, 
		could potentially cause more damage to homes if the problem continues to 
		go unresolved.
 
 “Coming out of a pandemic, a lot of people have lost their jobs, we 
		can’t turn to them and raise the utility costs to try and cover this at 
		this time,” Hill said. “Without this help, we couldn’t move forward and 
		help our community.”
 
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			Acting Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic 
			Opportunity Director Sylvia Garcia speaks at a news conference 
			Wednesday in Rockford. (Credit: Illinois.gov) 
            
			 
            Tampico received the maximum grant amount of $550,000 which will go 
			toward the rehabilitation of its sanitary sewer system, as well as 
			protective lining for storm sewers and manholes. 
            Metropolitan areas, such as Chicago, suburban Cook County, the Metro 
			East and Peoria, typically receive a direct allocation of federal 
			funds for these types of projects because they are in “entitlement” 
			areas. Most downstate communities do not receive this funding from 
			the federal government, and typically receive these types of funds 
			through the state.
 The block grant program prioritizes projects in rural and 
			underserved communities or opportunity zones, which are 
			economically-distressed communities that may qualify for tax 
			deferment, with 51 percent or more low-to-moderate income 
			residencies.
 
            
			 
            
 Some of the other grantees include Canton, Toluca, Verona, 
			Broughton, Elliott and Ottawa.
 
 These projects are designed to eliminate conditions detrimental to 
			public health, safety and welfare.
 
 “We’re seeing on the federal level a discussion about a large 
			infrastructure bill and I think the type of improvements that we’re 
			able to see in communities across Illinois through this project is 
			exactly why an infrastructure bill is needed,” Garcia said.
 
 President Joe Biden’s administration recently unveiled a $2 trillion 
			infrastructure plan, known as the American Jobs Plan, that the 
			Washington Post reported aims to tackle climate change, decaying 
			water systems and “the nation’s crumbling infrastructure.”
 
 Applications for the 2021 program are open now with another $18 
			million available for public infrastructure projects. The deadline 
			for communities to apply is Aug. 3, 2021. More information can be 
			found on DCEO's website.
 
 Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan 
			news service covering state government and distributed to more than 
			400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois 
			Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
 
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