Pennsylvania, Bay States Set New Milestones for Accelerated Cleanup of Chesapeake Bay
Posted on: Thursday, 14 May 2009, 10:27 CDT
Presidential Executive Order Makes Restoration of Bay a National Priority
Hanger represented
"The Chesapeake Executive Council has established clearly-defined, attainable goals for reducing nitrogen and phosphorus pollution in the bay and restoring the health of this vital estuary," Hanger said. "Creating a series of two-year milestones that will demand real action from all states, along with President Obama's executive order, clearly show that all jurisdictions have committed to accelerating the pace of bay restoration."
The Executive Council announced a series of two-year milestones for reductions in nitrogen and phosphorus pollution that cause murky water and algae blooms that block sunlight from reaching bay grasses and dramatically reduce oxygen levels for aquatic life.
In the past, states had established deadlines for reduction in nutrients and sediments but had not set specific benchmarks or realistic deadlines. As a result, although progress was being made, the deadlines were moved to accommodate shortcomings in pollution reduction efforts and improved science for setting reduction goals.
Under the milestone agreement announced Tuesday,
The ultimate goal is to have pollution reduction processes in place by 2025 that will reduce
"
The action by the Executive Council was further enhanced when President
The secretary noted that
To further reduce pollutants that damage
- Promoting wider use of riparian forest buffers and grass buffers to reduce urban and agricultural runoff, reduce sediment and nutrient loading and improve habitat for aquatic life;
- Creating the Resource Enhancement and Protection Program (REAP) to assist and encourage farmers to use no-till farming which greatly reduces nutrient and sediment-laden runoff from agricultural lands;
- Implementing a new anti-idling law to help to reduce atmospheric deposition of nitrous oxide emissions from diesel exhaust. Nitrogen deposition is responsible for approximately one-third of the nitrogen entering the Chesapeake Bay from
Pennsylvania's waterways; - Awarding Growing Greener grants to assist with installation of agricultural and stormwater best management practices and the development of nutrient Management plans and conservation planning practices at
Pennsylvania farms.Pennsylvania was the first state in the Chesapeake Bay watershed to require farms to have some form of nutrient control. - Directing money from the H2OPA fund, the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act and the Clean Water Referendum through PENNVEST to finance projects that will improve the operation of municipal wastewater facilities in the Susquehanna River watershed.
"
The Chesapeake Bay is the nation's largest estuary. The 64,000 square mile bay watershed is home to 17 million people in
For more information, visit www.depweb.state.pa.us, keyword: Chesapeake Bay.
CONTACT: Tom Rathbun (717) 787-1323SOURCE Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection
Source: PR Newswire
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