Becoming a Sponsor of a Corps' Civil Works Project
WHO CAN BE A SPONSOR: A Sponsor can be a Tribe, State, county, city, town, or any other political subpart of a State or group of States. A sponsor can also be an interstate agency or port authority that: (1) is established under a compact entered into between two or more States with consent of Congress under Section 15 of Article I of the Constitution, and (2) has the legal and financial authority and capability to provide the cash and real property requirements needed for a project. Section 221 of the 1970 Flood Control Act defines a local sponsor for a Corps water resources project as a non-Federal interest that is "...a legally constituted public body with full authority and capability to perform the terms of its agreements and to pay damages, if necessary, in the event of failure to perform."
FIRST STEPS TOWARDS A PROJECT: All Corps projects originate with a
request from a local community for assistance.
1.A local community, or some element of a community, perceives or
experiences a water resources problem that is beyond their ability to solve.
Examples of such problems include major floods, and hazardous or inadequate
navigation conditions in a harbor or waterway.
2.Community representatives, who often may be members of the possible
sponsoring agency, meet with their local Corps District staff to discuss avenues
of assistance, including Federal programs. Before the Corps becomes involved in
providing assistance, two types of Congressional authority are required: study
authority and budget authority. A study authority approves the conduct of an
investigation into the identified problems. Once a study authority is available,
a bud-et authority to spend Federal funds for the study can be provided in an
annual Appropriations Act. In certain cases, the Corps can provide technical
assistance or relief through some smaller studies or projects without further
Congressional authorization.
3.If there is no available authority for the Corps to investigate the
problem, the community representatives may contact their Congressional
delegation to request a study authority.
4. A member of Congress may then ask the Senate or House of
Representatives Public Works Committee for an authority for the Corps to study
the problem. If previous investigations and reports concerning water resource
problems exist for the area, the Committee may adopt a study resolution to
provide the necessary authority to take another look at the area and review the
earlier study. If no previous studies exist, legislation containing a study
authorization is usually required. The local Corps District staff has examples
of previous study authorities and may, upon request, help draft language that
will provide the desired authority.
5.Once a Congressional study authority is available, the study will be
assigned to the local Corps District. The District may then, through the normal
Federal budget process, ask for money to conduct the first phase of the study,
called the reconnaissance. When Federal funds to conduct the reconnaissance
study are included in an annual Energy and Water Development Appropriations Act,
the local District may begin the Corps study of the community's water resource
problems.