Fifth Annual Value of Water Index finds 84 percent want the federal government to invest in water infrastructure; infrastructure should be one of the top priorities for federal government action according to voters.
WASHINGTON, DC – A new poll by the Value of Water Campaign released today shows that 84 percent of American voters want state and federal leaders to invest in water infrastructure. The near-unanimous support amid the COVID-19 pandemic reveals that voters value water and want elected officials to prioritize investing in infrastructure – specifically, drinking water and wastewater infrastructure.
For the fifth year in a row, the Value of Water Campaign poll surveyed over 1,000 American voters for the annual Value of Water Index. The poll asked voters how the nation should solve infrastructural issues and which priorities it should meet. Support for water infrastructure investment cuts across demographic, political, and geographic divisions.
Key poll findings include:
• Eighty-four percent of Americans support (with 47 percent strongly supporting) increasing federal investment to rebuild the nation’s water infrastructure.
• Eighty percent say rebuilding America’s infrastructure is extremely or very important. Americans support rebuilding the nation’s infrastructure more than most other issues today, including reforming the healthcare system, expanding early childhood education, and ending the opioid crisis. It ranked similarly to strengthening the economy.
• Seventy-three percent of Americans support investing in water infrastructure to increase resilience to climate change, even when told it could cost $1.27 trillion.
• Seventy percent of Americans want the president and congress to develop a plan to rebuild water infrastructure.
• More than three in four democrats (94 percent), republicans (77 percent), and independents (76 percent) broadly support increasing federal investment. Support also cuts across gender, age group and income.
Dave Metz, partner and president of Fairbank, Maslin, Maullin, Metz, and Associates (FM3), who helped to conduct the poll, said: “The COVID-19 crisis only sharpened public opinion about the need to keep people safe and healthy. Investments in water infrastructure that benefit public health are seen as critically important in this environment. The public also tends to see them as ‘shovel-ready’ investments that can create jobs and strengthen the economy.”
Lori Weigel, principal of New Bridge Strategy, who was the other partner on the poll, said: “In the face of COVID-19, the public is thinking hard about needs versus wants. Needs, such as food, shelter, and water, are perceived as fundamental and worth investing in right now. That perception is shared by people across ideological and geographic lines.”
Radhika Fox, CEO of the US Water Alliance and Director of the Value of Water Campaign, said: “Water utilities provide an essential service, protect public health, and help communities to thrive. These systems have operated continually for decades and need repairs. There is a huge gap between the investment our water systems need and what we actually spend each year, meanwhile the federal government’s contribution to water infrastructure has plummeted for the last several decades. Investing in water is the smart thing to do for public health and for the economy. Voters are sending a clear message to state and federal leaders that investing in water must be a top priority.”
A bipartisan research team FM3 (D) and New Bridge Strategy (R) conducted the poll, seeking voters’ opinions on the nation’s water infrastructure. The team fielded the poll from March 7-18, during a time when the COVID-19 pandemic begun to unfold in the United States and command public attention. See the full poll results here.
More at: www.thevalueofwater.org.
The Value of Water Campaign educates and inspires the nation about how water is essential, invaluable, and in need of investment. Spearheaded by top leaders in the water industry, the Value of Water Campaign is building public and political will for investment in America’s water infrastructure.
Last modified: April 28, 2020