The Trump administration is distributing billions in federal funding for clean drinking water while framing the effort as part of the Make America Healthy Again initiative. The money stems from a 2021 law passed under the previous administration.
The Environmental Protection Agency announced last month a $1 billion commitment to address PFAS contamination in drinking water. Two days later, it released $2.9 billion to replace lead pipes nationwide. EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin stated that the Trump EPA is committed to Make America Healthy Again by ensuring clean air, land, and water and taking on PFAS. Assistant Administrator Jess Kramer said the funds will help protect current and future generations by accelerating efforts to find and replace toxic lead pipes. Both funding streams originate from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act passed by Congress in 2021. The law allocated more than $50 billion over five years for water infrastructure, including $15 billion specifically for lead service line removal. The Trump administration initially delayed the $2.9 billion disbursement for 2025 before releasing it following pressure from Illinois lawmakers. Congress repurposed $125 million from this year's lead pipe funds for wildfire prevention.