Millions for Water and Sewage in Three Municipalities
Three Lublin municipalities receive funding for water and sewage upgrades under Poland’s National Recovery Plan, improving rural services and resilience.
Regional authorities signed agreements to fund water and sewage upgrades in three rural municipalities under Poland’s National Recovery and Resilience Plan. Consequently, officials expect faster construction and improved services for thousands of residents.
Why the water and sewage funding matters
The regional government awarded grants to Rejowiec, Bełżec and Janów Lubelski. Moreover, the money comes from the Krajowy Plan Odbudowy i Zwiększenia Odporności, the Polish National Recovery and Resilience Plan. Therefore, the projects will benefit from EU-linked recovery funding. In addition, the grants can cover up to 100 percent of eligible costs, and the maximum grant reached 5 million zł per project.
Project details and local impact
Rejowiec secured more than 4.4 million zł. As a result, the municipality will build 2.69 km of sewer network and 103 household sewer connections. Bełżec obtained nearly 3.2 million zł. Consequently, it will build 6.88 km of water mains and 94 household water connections in Brzeziny, Chyże and Bełżec. The municipal utility in Janów Lubelski won 5 million zł. Therefore, it will add 1.58 km of water lines, 1.22 km of sewer lines and 83 new household connections in Borownica.
What this means for residents and local services
The voivodeship already reached about 86 percent piped water coverage. However, sewer coverage still lags in many villages. Moreover, officials stressed the short implementation deadlines for projects. Therefore, municipalities that prepared plans early benefited first. As a result, construction should start quickly. Furthermore, projects will improve public health and reduce contamination risks.
Local leaders pointed to near complete sewerisation around Janów town. In addition, they expect property values to rise after networks arrive. However, residents will face short-term disruption during trenching and construction. Consequently, municipalities usually plan detours and temporary water supplies.
Finally, the funding rules set a minimum grant of 1 million zł and a maximum of 5 million zł. Moreover, the support focused on rural areas with ready project plans. Therefore, this round of awards prioritised municipalities that prepared early documentation.
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