Learn About Water System Partnerships

Drinking water systems across the country face unique challenges to provide safe drinking water and operate often with limited resources. Specific issues with the water system’s technical, managerial, and financial (TMF) capacity could become a catalyst for beginning a water system partnership. Water system partnerships are a problem-solving and program enhancing tool to address the multi-faceted challenges water systems face. The impact of water system partnerships encompasses a broad range of issues and requires collaboration across a wide spectrum of stakeholders to address and provide solutions. This increases the capacity and enables systems to sustainably provide safe and affordable water to their communities.

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What are Water System Partnerships?

A Water System Partnership is an umbrella term that is defined as any informal or formal relationship or agreement that two or more water systems engage in to overcome similar challenges through solutions that are beneficial for all. This can encompass a range of opportunities for water systems to work together to sustainably provide water services, from sharing equipment to transferring ownership of a system through consolidation.

Water System Partnerships are a cross-program, problem solving tool for building TMF capacity and addressing unique challenges, especially those of small systems. In addition to improving a system's capacity, partnerships can also help improve regulatory compliance and public health by providing safe, reliable, affordable, and accessible drinking water.

Benefits of Partnerships

Partnerships can provide immediate and long-term benefits for the water system, state water programs, and water system customers.

Types of Partnerships

Water system partnerships are as unique as the individual water systems involved and as flexible as needed to address a broad range of technical, managerial, and financial challenges. Potential partners can be systems that are close in proximity that can form cooperative agreements, share services, or join under a common management. However, systems with common needs that are geographically separated can also enter partnerships through sharing services and operations remotely, such as billing and customer services.

Water system partnerships can be categorized as one of four types: informal cooperation, contractual assistance, joint power agency, or ownership transfer.

Finding and Building Support for Water System Partnerships

Finding and building support is essential for a partnership to be successful. This allows for trust to be built between the water system, key stakeholders, and the communities served. Support for water system partnerships can be split into three categories:

Partnerships Resources