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US Army Corps of Engineers IIJA Construction Projects

Department of Defense – Army Corps of Engineers

This program offers the Army Corps of Engineers funding to reduce coastal storm and flood damage and improve federal waterways in ways that improve commercial navigation, ecosystem restoration, and the utility of ports and harbors . The money can go toward the operation and maintenance of authorized US Army Corps of Engineers projects that fall under five different federal program categories: Coastal Storm Risk Management, Hurricane, and Storm Damage Reduction; Inland Flood Risk Management; Inland Waterways; Aquatic Ecosystem Restoration; and Major Rehabilitation for Rivers and Harbors. Learn more at www.nab.usace.army.mil.

Where Is Funding Distributed?

Compare funding distribution by state

$7,289,574,736

  • Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act

Formula

Competitive

How equitably were funds distributed?

To explore how programs distribute funding compared with community characteristics, we developed several equity measures:

A concentration measure, which shows how much of a program’s funding is distributed to jurisdictions with the greatest share of a selected community characteristic. Scores range from −1 to 3.

Distribution measures

A variability measure, which demonstrates how evenly a program’s funding is distributed across the country on a per capita basis. We only display this score, which starts at 0, for state-level, formula-funded programs.

A disadvantage measure, which shows the share of funding a program allocates to counties that experience disproportionate environmental or socioeconomic burden.

A persistent poverty measure, which shows the share of funding a program allocates to counties with a poverty rate of 20 percent or higher for three decades.

Select an equity measure

Concentration measure
indicator Equity score
Population share who are people of color visualization of equity score

-0.44

Poverty rate visualization of equity score

-0.06

Median household income visualization of equity score

0.05

Population density visualization of equity score

0.33

Environmental staff capacity visualization of equity score

0.75

Diesel exhaust concentration visualization of equity score

0.36

Superfund site exposure visualization of equity score

0.33

Energy cost per household visualization of equity score

0.19

Water system violations visualization of equity score

0.05

Air quality visualization of equity score

0.04

Energy grid disturbances visualization of equity score

-0.06

Contaminated site exposure visualization of equity score

-0.06

Inland waterways visualization of equity score

-0.12

Greenhouse gas exposure visualization of equity score

-0.34

Ozone concentration visualization of equity score

-0.54

Electric power generation visualization of equity score

-0.82

How Is Funding Distributed by Community Characteristic?

For each program, we’ve analyzed how funding is distributed along different community characteristics. For counties, we show these distributions of funding by quintiles, and for states, we show these distributions by quartiles.

Population share who are people of color

Funding is on average similar for states with a higher population share who are people of color than for states with a lower population share who are people of color compared with the national average.

Average program funding per 1,000 residents

$0 $10,000 $20,000 $30,000 $40,000 $50,000 $60,000 $70,000 0.0%-19.4% 19.4%-26.6% 26.6%-43.6% 43.6%+

Population share who are people of color by state

Project Credits

This data tool was funded by a grant from the Melville Charitable Trust as part of the Partnership for Equitable and Resilient Communities Initiative. We are grateful to them and to all our funders, who make it possible for Urban to advance its mission. The views expressed are those of the authors and should not be attributed to the Urban Institute, its trustees, or its funders. Funders do not determine research findings or the insights and recommendations of our experts. More information on our funding principles is available here. Read our terms of service here.