This year, the Public Works Board (PWB) marks its 40th year of serving Washington’s local governments, big and small, with vital assistance for their infrastructure projects. Since its founding in 1985, the PWB has awarded more than $3.6 billion in loans and grants to over 2,200 infrastructure projects across the state.
Use this occasion as an opportunity to spread the word about the important support cities receive from the Public Works Assistance Account (PWAA) and advocate for ongoing, full funding for the account.
This session, the PWAA is at risk of losing over $100 million to the state’s general fund. We cannot let this happen. Find your legislators in AWC’s legislator directory and incorporate these talking points when communicating with them:
- If the PWB has funded a project in your community, share the details and explain how PWAA dollars made a difference.
- Express how critical this funding is for cities of all sizes.
- Cities and towns all over the state are struggling with infrastructure needs.
- In the latest AWC City Conditions Survey, approximately 75% of cities reported infrastructure funding as a priority
- The PWAA is a reliable source of grants and low-interest loans for locals that keep costs down for residents.
- It has never had a loan default in 40 years.
- The PWB awards about 60% of its funding to cities and towns.
- The PWAA is instrumental to promoting economic development.
- Every $1 invested from the account generates an additional $5 in economic activity.
- The account is already subject to more than $160 million in existing diversions. It cannot afford to lose more funding.
- Loss of investments now will reduce the loan repayment revenue stream to the account, resulting in compounded reductions over time.
Statewide distribution of PWB-funded projects in FYs 2022-2025
$631 million project awards to 262 local projects
Source: Washington’s Infrastructure System Improvement Team (SYNC) dashboard, 2025
For more information, refer to AWC’s 2025 infrastructure investment fact sheet or the PWB’s fact sheet for your legislative district.
Source: Public Works Board, 2025