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Rouzer Opening Statement from WRDA Hearing2167 Rayburn House Office BuildingWashington, D.C. – Opening remarks, as prepared, of Water Resources and Environment Subcommittee Chairman David Rouzer (R-NC) from today’s hearing, entitled, “Water Resources Development Acts: Status of Past Provisions and Future Needs”: I’d like to first thank our witnesses, Assistant Secretary Connor and Lieutenant General Spellmon, for joining us today as we begin work on the 2024 Water Resources Development Act (WRDA). It’s helpful for the Committee to hear directly from the Army Corps at the beginning of the WRDA process because these bills are the primary way Congress guides the Corps’ projects and priorities. As we all know, the Corps is the federal government’s lead water resource development and management agency. Next year will mark the bicentennial anniversary of its first civil works mission, which was to improve the safety and navigability of the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers. Over the last 200 years, the Corps has expanded its primary missions to include flood mitigation, coastal protection, emergency response, and ecosystem restoration. Whether urban or rural, inland or coastal, meeting the water resource needs in communities across the country is vital to our security, safety, and economic stability. Well-functioning and reliable navigation systems allow for the movement of more than two billion tons of cargo each year, levees and dams help protect communities and critical industries from flooding, and coastal restoration projects address erosion and minimize the impacts of storm damage on seaside communities, which is particularly important for my constituents in North Carolina’s Seventh Congressional District. For example, in Brunswick County, the Corps is undertaking a study to address beach nourishment needs for the next 50 years in Oak Island and Holden Beach. In Wrightsville Beach, the renourishment project is set to finally move forward in November thanks to the Corps’ emergency exception allowing them to use the historic Masonboro Inlet borrow site. Additionally, the Town of Surf City anticipates receiving its overdue beach nourishment upon Corps approval of funding. By authorizing projects and studies, and providing direction on programmatic changes, WRDAs better enable the Corps to continue working to achieve its key civil works missions. Since 2014, Congress has enacted a WRDA bill every two years with strong bipartisan support. This consistency over the last decade has allowed Congress to respond to local water resource needs more effectively. It also imparts confidence that we can address water infrastructure needs that may arise in the future, regardless of partisan discord in Washington. Through these bipartisan bills, Congress has authorized new projects and studies across the country. We’ve also streamlined processes at the Corps, improved project delivery, expanded opportunities for non-federal project sponsors to develop and execute water resource projects, and enhanced the Corps’ ability to respond to emergencies and disasters, to name a few. For my district, in WRDA 2022, we were able to authorize the North Carolina National Coastal Mapping Study to map inland and coastal waterways and identify potential hazards, such as debris and sedimentation, which can lead to increased flood risk. This study will lead the way in a larger nationwide effort to invest in flood resilience, and I am pleased funding for such was included in the House Energy and Water Appropriations bill. Additionally, it’s important to emphasize that the success of previous WRDAs is due in large part to the strong participation from Democrat and Republican member offices, coordination with the Corps, and constructive feedback from non-federal partners and other stakeholders. I am proud to have played a role in many of those bills and look forward to continuing this bipartisan tradition with WRDA 2024. In that spirit, we are very pleased to have Assistant Secretary Connor and Lieutenant General Spellmon here before the Subcommittee today to discuss their efforts to implement WRDA 2022 and other priorities as we move towards WRDA 2024. Click here for more information from today’s hearing, including video and witness testimony. |