EPA
Chief calls Pennsylvania’s Lagging Bay Cleanup “discouraging”
Environmental
Protection Agency Administrator Gina McCarthy acknowledged this week that
Pennsylvania had not done enough to control pollution flowing into the
Chesapeake Bay, and said that her agency needed to coordinate with agriculture
officials to change the course.
Pennsylvania’s
lack of progress is “discouraging at the very least,” McCarthy told hundreds of
environmental activists, government officials and foundation leaders attending
the Choose Clean Water Coalition conference in Annapolis. “I need to talk to
the USDA as well,” she added, to applause, “because there is work that needs to
be done.”
EPA
officials and the states involved in the Bay cleanup have known for years that
Pennsylvania lagged behind. But a report released last June showed the Keystone
State would need to double the number of farm acres under nutrient management
and plant seven times as many acres of forest and grass buffers as it did in
2014 to meet its interim reduction targets under EPA’s Total Maximum Daily Load
pollution diet.
Pennsylvania
contributes a large share of the pollution loads to the Chesapeake Bay, and
agriculture is the bulk of that. The state has 35,000 farms in the Potomac and
Susquehanna watersheds, according to Richard Batiuk, associate director of
science, analysis and implementation for the Chesapeake Bay Program. Many of
these farms are small dairy farms, exempt from the Clean Water Act regulations
of animal farms because they are too small to meet the thresholds. Some are
also Amish and Old Order Mennonite operations, and those farmers are hesitant
to take government funds to modernize their operations to control pollution.
Pennsylvania
officials unveiled earlier this year a plan to “reboot” the state’s lagging Bay
cleanup effort by vastly increasing farm inspections and finding new sources of
funding.
For the rest of the story click here.
Small
woodlots are a big deal to the Chesapeake’s restoration
The
commencement of spring is always a significant moment in our Chesapeake
forests. Buds swell, ready to break dormancy and add the first of the year’s
growth to the canopy while green hues begin to emerge from the forest floor.
It
is also significant for forest enthusiasts who, themselves, are breaking from
the wintertime’s stupor. For me, spring always provokes an eagerness to get out
into the woods just to be there.
It
is no wonder that there are many springtime events honoring trees, from maple
syrup festivals and the National Cherry Blossom Festival that recognize
specific attributes of particular species to Arbor Day, which simply celebrates
all of the services that trees and forests provide: cleaning our air, creating
habitat, contributing to our economy and providing recreation.
There
is little debate as to how crucial forest functions are to the quality of our
streams, rivers and the Bay. The Chesapeake Bay Program model estimates that
our woodlands prevent more than 180 million pounds of nitrogen from reaching
the Chesapeake each year. Around 80 percent of these forests are owned by more
than 900,000 private landowners or entities.
Since
the 1980s, the region has been losing forest land at a rate of 100 acres per
day to development. The forests that remain are more fragmented than ever and
face new pressures: invasive plants and pests, diseases, browsing by deer,
high-grade harvesting (cut the best and leave the rest) and air pollution. All
of these reduce our forests’ ability to provide the vital ecosystem services we
depend on to help us restore the Chesapeake.
For the rest of the story click here.
No comments:
Post a Comment