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PEC, CBF-PA: Lack Of Funding, Focus Critically Harming PA Environmental Programs
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Davitt Woodwell, President and CEO of the PA Environmental Council, and Harry Campbell, Executive Director of the Pennsylvania Office of the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, issued the following statement in response to Gov. Tom Wolf’s budget address Tuesday:

Today Gov. Wolf delivered his 2016 budget address, despite the fact that Pennsylvania still does not have a complete operating budget in place for the current fiscal year. While the state government’s failure to deliver a budget has adverse ramifications across the Commonwealth, it is particularly ominous for Pennsylvania’s environment.

Against the backdrop of over a decade of cuts to environmental programs and agencies, the stark reality is that Pennsylvania is losing control over its environmental future. Today’s budget address unfortunately proposed little more than additional steps down that same path.

The Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) alone has seen a 22 percent cut in staffover 700 positions — between 2002-03 and 2015-16. And, in the latest round of “freezing” positions, DEP is not allowed to fill necessary positions in a number of high profile regulatory programs.

These cuts in resources have been made without regard for their impact on reviewing and issuing permits, conducting compliance inspections, and taking enforcement actions. They are cuts the agencies are just expected to live with.

There has been no corresponding decrease in the laws they have to enforce, the projects they are told to undertake, the mandates they must meet, and the emergencies they have to respond to in order to protect public health and the environment. Those responsibilities have only increased in the last decade.

Remarkably, the one thing that hasn’t changed over the years is the dedication and hard work of agency employees trying to hold everything together and make it all work in spite of the lack of support they get.

One of Pennsylvania’s most pressing obligations – cleaning of roughly 19,000 miles of polluted streams in Pennsylvania and the Chesapeake Bay Watershed cleanup – is now squarely in the crosshairs with Pennsylvania projecting a significant shortfall of 2017 pollution reduction targets.

While the departments of Environmental Protection, Agriculture, and Conservation & Natural Resources announced a much-needed reboot of the Chesapeake Bay Program on January 21, DEP Secretary John Quigley was not shy in saying getting additional resources was critical to implementing the plan– funding and staff. We have not seen those resources in the Governor’s 2016-17 budget proposal.

For more than a decade, the state, and both political parties, have failed to make adequate investment in its resource protection agencies, as well as programs designed to address ongoing pollution challenges from the past. The ongoing stalemate is deepening costs and unintended consequences for the Commonwealth.

Without a meaningful renewal of our environmental investments, the Commonwealth faces not only failure to meet federal and court-imposed mandates, it could lose control of its very own programs. The state currently maintains primacy for a number of environmental programs from water quality protection, mining, air quality control, and others. But federal agencies have increasingly signaled that the state’s ongoing refusal to adequately staff and support these programs could result in the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and federal Office of Surface Mining assuming direct control of oversight and enforcement in Pennsylvania.

The Chesapeake Bay Foundation and Pennsylvania Environmental Council will be providing examples of these deficiency findings ahead of budget hearings in the General Assembly starting later this month.

It’s past time for Pennsylvania to own up to its constitutional responsibility to protect its citizens and environment and provide strong leadership. The Governor and General Assembly have no choice but to make the decisions and commitments necessary, lest they want the federal government, or even worse, the courts to make those decisions for them.

For more information on programs, initiatives and special events, visit the PA Environmental Council website, visit the PEC Blog, follow PEC on Twitter or Like PEC on FacebookClick Here to receive regular updates on PEC programs, activities and special events.)

For more on Chesapeake Bay-related issues in Pennsylvania, visit the CBF-PA webpage.  Click Here to sign up for Pennsylvania updates (bottom of left column).  Click Here for a copy of CBF-PA’s most recent newsletter.

Related Stories:

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PEC, CBF-PA: Lack Of Funding, Focus Is Critically Harming Pennsylvania’s Environmental Programs

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Wolf Budget Proposes To Raise, Expand State Waste Disposal Fees To $9.00/Ton

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Senate, House Had $100.3 Million Reserve As Of June 2015

Wolf Shrinks DEP’s Staff By Another 200, Even Though DEP Has More Money

Op-Ed: Pennsylvania Must Invest In Its New Clean Water Plan

Drilling Impact Fees Drop By $5,000 Per Well In 2015, Loss Could Be $34 Million

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CBF-PA: PA Releases New Strategy For Meeting Chesapeake Bay Cleanup Commitments

DEP: Pennsylvania Not Meeting Chesapeake Bay Cleanup Commitments

Analysis: PA Isn’t Cleaning Up Our Rivers, Abandoned Mines Quickly Enough


2/15/2016

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