State & Local News
New Orleans SWBNO Launches Water System Overhaul
March 17, 2026
The Sewerage and Water Board of New Orleans (SWBNO) has initiated a comprehensive water system overhaul plan addressing critical infrastructure challenges in the city's aging water distribution network. The plan includes immediate repairs to eight high-risk transmission mains with a budget of approximately $27.5 million (of which $10 million is currently available), pilot testing of century-old pipes near the Carrollton Water Treatment Plant with a $1 million allocation, and a forthcoming Request for Information (RFI) scheduled for April 2026 to explore emerging technologies for pipeline condition assessment and rehabilitation. The long-term replacement program is projected to cost up to $2 billion over 20-30 years, with funding strategies involving general obligation bonds, federal grants, and leveraging tourism-related bond revenues. This phased approach reflects significant funding challenges and prioritizes urgent infrastructure stabilization while planning for extensive modernization.
- Procurement professionals should prepare for upcoming solicitations related to pipeline assessment technologies and rehabilitation services following the April 2026 RFI.
- The immediate repair contracts and pilot projects indicate near-term contracting opportunities in water infrastructure repair and testing.
- Funding mechanisms involving municipal bonds and federal grants suggest potential collaboration with financial and legal advisory services specializing in public infrastructure funding.
- Contractors with expertise in water main rehabilitation, condition assessment technologies, and long-term infrastructure replacement programs should evaluate participation strategies aligned with SWBNO's phased plan.
Require probably some general obligation bonds for voters to pass, which is backed by the taxing power in combination, probably with some intergovernmental transfers, primarily federal grants, because we’re talking some serious money here in terms of fixing the problem.
— Ed Chervenak, Professor, University of New Orleans
They get millions of dollars every year, and the possibility of bonding out a portion of that money that could potentially bring in anywhere between $150 and $175 (million), potentially up to $200 million, so that we can move these projects forward.
— Helena Moreno, Mayor, City of New Orleans
I’ve lived in the same house since 1995. This is a third water break. In the meantime, we still have these bills we have to pay. Allowing us to pay a minimum payment of $50 a month until we all figure it out or fix whatever the issue is on our street would be very helpful.
— New Orleans resident
Agencies
Sewerage and Water Board of New Orleans, City of New Orleans, City Council of New Orleans
Contracts
$27.5 million, $1 million,