By D.M.Livingston|The Waterbury Times|Published Feb 19, 2026
The Claim
Congresswoman Jahana Hayes says that since taking office, nearly $90 million in federal awards have come to Waterbury — with an additional $165.7 million in American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funding.
Waterbury Gets 1.7% of $10Million from Congresswoman Jahana Hayes ( Don’t worry we did the math for you )
At first glance, that sounds like over $250 million delivered.
But a closer look shows those numbers combine three very different types of funding — and only one of them is directly controlled by a member of Congress.
🔍 The Three Buckets of Federal Money
To understand what’s real impact vs. political framing, you have to separate the funding into three categories:
1️⃣ Directly Secured by Congress (Earmarks)
These are the funds a member of Congress personally requests and secures in federal spending bills.
👉 This is the clearest measure of direct action.
✔️ Hayes’ Total Earmarks for Waterbury:
roughly-
➡️ $7,562,000
Examples:
- Fulton Park Pool Replacement — $4,000,000
- Hamilton Park Safety & Streetscape — $850,000
- Waterbury PAL Youth Programming — $175,000 + $172,000
- Food Pantry Program — $100,000
Watchdog takeaway:
This is the most direct and verifiable funding Hayes can claim responsibility for.
Competitive Federal Grants (Shared Credit)
These are funds where:
- The city or a local organization applies
- Federal agencies award the money
- Congressional offices may support the application
Major examples cited:
- $23.1M RAISE Grant (W.A.T.E.R project)
- Brownfield cleanup funds
- Workforce and environmental training grants
- Health program funding to Staywell and Health360
📊 Watchdog takeaway:
Hayes can support and advocate, but she does not control who wins these grants.
Credit is shared between:
- City officials
- State partners
- Federal agencies
- Congressional support
3️⃣ Formula Funding (Automatic Money)
This is where the biggest numbers come from — and also where political messaging can be most misleading.
🚨 ARPA (American Rescue Plan Act)
- $165.7 million to Waterbury
- Passed by Congress during COVID
- Distributed automatically based on population and need
No application.
No competition.
No earmark.
Every qualifying city in America received funds.
📊 Watchdog takeaway:
While Hayes voted for ARPA, she did not individually deliver this money to Waterbury.
It came as part of a nationwide federal formula.
📊 The Reality Behind the Headline Numbers
( roughly numbers as provided by Hayes sites)
Let’s put everything in perspective:
Hayes Earmarks $7.56M✔️ Hayes directly
Competitive Grants Tens of millions Shared credit
Automatic ARPA Funding$165.7M Federal formula law
Total Claimed Impact$250M+Mixed sources
⚖️ Why This Matters for Waterbury Residents
When residents hear “$90 million secured”, it creates the impression that all of that money was:
- personally negotiated
- individually delivered
- or uniquely brought home by one elected official
That is not how federal funding works.
🧠 The Bottom Line
✔️ Congresswoman Hayes has secured real funding for Waterbury, particularly through $7.56 million in earmarks
✔️ She has also supported and advocated for major grant applications
❗ But the largest portion of money cited — ARPA and formula funds — would have come to Waterbury regardless of who held the seat in Congress
🗣️ The Watchdog Standard
At The Waterbury Times, our responsibility is simple:
Separate political messaging from financial reality.
Waterbury residents deserve to know:
- what was fought for
- what was applied for
- and what was automatically allocated
Because in an era of big numbers and bigger headlines…


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