Federal News
Congress Advances Western Water Infrastructure Legislation
March 24, 2026
Congressional leaders including Senators John Hickenlooper, Steve Daines, Michael Bennet, and Representatives Juan Ciscomani, Lauren Boebert, and Jeff Hurd have introduced and advocated for bipartisan legislation to reauthorize and increase funding for the Cooperative Watershed Management Program (CWMP) through 2031 and to complete the Arkansas Valley Conduit water infrastructure project in southeastern Colorado. The CWMP reauthorization aims to support local and tribal water management efforts to enhance drought resilience and ecosystem health in Western states, while the Arkansas Valley Conduit Act seeks to adjust financing terms to finalize a critical water infrastructure project addressing contaminated groundwater affecting over 50,000 residents. These legislative efforts reflect a federal commitment to improving water security, infrastructure, and environmental stewardship in drought-prone regions.
- Key agencies involved: Bureau of Reclamation under the Department of the Interior is central to CWMP funding and Arkansas Valley Conduit project execution.
- Why this matters: Procurement professionals should anticipate increased federal funding and contracting opportunities related to water infrastructure, watershed management, and drought resilience projects in Western states, particularly Colorado, Montana, Arizona, and New Mexico.
- Actionable insights: Companies specializing in water infrastructure construction, environmental consulting, and watershed management services should prepare for upcoming solicitations and contract awards linked to these programs.
- Stakeholder engagement: Bipartisan support and involvement of regional stakeholders indicate sustained federal investment and potential for multi-year contract vehicles supporting water security initiatives.
We need to empower local communities to solve our evolving water issues. The federal government is not the solution. When Coloradans work together to manage our water challenges, we protect watershed health and strengthen resilience against drought and floods.
— John Hickenlooper, U.S. Senator
The National Audubon Society supports the Cooperative Watershed Management Program Reauthorization Act, which will extend this crucial program and improve funding accessibility to boost watershed health. This program has proven successful on the ground in Arizona, including along the Lower Gila River, in building local capacity to identify and implement projects that address local water security needs.
— Haley Paul, Senior Policy Director, National Audubon Society, Southwest
The Cooperative Watershed Management Program fills a critical funding need: building the capacity of the small, rural organizations across the West who are making our watersheds more resilient to drought and wildfire, ensuring our water remains clean, and sustaining fish and wildlife valued by hunters and anglers.
— Alex Funk, Director of Water Resources, Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership
Agencies
United States Senate, Bureau of Reclamation, U.S. House of Representatives, Department of the Interior, Environment and Public Works Committee
Contracts
, $500 million total, including $250 million, $90 million, $100 million, and $60 million in various years
Locations
Sources
- Daines, Hickenlooper Introduce Bill to Protect Water Access, Reauthorize CWMP - Senator Steve Daines · Daines Senate · Mar 17
- Hickenlooper, Daines Introduce Bipartisan Bill to Improve Water Access, Protect Clean Water | Senator John Hickenlooper · Hickenlooper Senate · Mar 18
- Daines Urges Colleagues to Support His Bills Protecting Montana’s Water Security and Infrastructure - Senator Steve Daines · Daines Senate · Mar 17
- Ciscomani Leads Bipartisan Effort to Support Western Water Management and Combat Drought | Representative Ciscomani · Ciscomani · Mar 19
- Hickenlooper, Bennet, Boebert, Hurd Push for AVC Completion | Senator John Hickenlooper · Hickenlooper Senate · Mar 24