County seeks state low‑interest loans for water projects; Highlands work may require a special tax district
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Calvert County presented an application to the Maryland Water Infrastructure Financing Administration for low- or zero‑interest loans for drinking-water and water‑quality projects; officials said an ongoing Highlands project lacks a final cost estimate and will likely require a split and creation of a special tax district.
Unidentified Speaker, host of 'Commissioner's Corner,' said the Department of Public Works presented an application to the Maryland Water Infrastructure Financing Administration on Feb. 10, 2026, seeking capital project financial assistance for drinking-water and water-quality projects. The program offers loans with interest rates from low to zero percent, the synopsis said.
Why it matters: Low‑interest state loans are a common funding approach for local water-infrastructure upgrades; securing such financing can reduce the local financing burden for capital projects. The speaker said one ongoing Highlands project has an incomplete cost estimate and an uncertain share of potential grant funding, which will require a split and the likely creation of a special tax district to assign costs.
Key details: The synopsis did not specify the project's total estimated cost, the loan amount requested or the share the grant would cover. The speaker characterized the application as an important procedural step toward addressing water and sewer infrastructure needs.
Next steps: County staff will continue to refine project cost estimates and proceed with whatever special-tax-district processes are required; the meeting materials and video were offered as the sources for full details.
