DEP To Review Compliance Of Selected Farms In Chesapeake Bay Watershed
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Continuing efforts to reduce annual loading of nitrogen, phosphorous and sediment entering the Chesapeake Bay, the Department of Environmental Protection has notified a selection of farmers in the Bay Watershed that officials will be visiting farms soon to verify and review the operation’s manure management and agricultural erosion and sediment control plans. “It is important that we identify good practices and become aware of gaps in having these mandated plans,” said Acting DEP Secretary Patrick McDonnell. “These visits will help us document compliance with state requirements, and direct resources where they are needed most.” Initially, visits will be in high-priority areas of the watershed, to reduce nitrogen, phosphorus and sediment runoff as quickly as possible. The value, McDonnell said, is as important nearby as it is further downstream. “Farmers’ plans control erosion and manage manure, which directly helps improve local water quality,” he said. Approximately 2,000 of the 33,000 Pennsylvania farmers in the bay watershed were selected at random for notification by letter this week. The letter notes that DEP is responsible for ensuring that the nutrient and sediment loads are reduced enough to meet federally mandated allocations by 2025, and that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has determined that the urban stormwater and agricultural sectors are not making sufficient progress toward achieving these allocations. The visits will allow DEP and County Conservation District staff to ensure compliance with basic requirements to have and implement written plans to: -- Properly handle, store and land-apply animal manure and agricultural process wastewater on the farm consistent with the nutrient needs of growing crops (commonly referred to as a manure management plan); and -- Properly manage risks of erosion and runoff from agricultural plowing or tilling operations and animal heavy use areas (commonly referred to as an agricultural erosion and sediment control plan, or Ag E&S Plan). For more information on Bay-related efforts, visit DEP’s Chesapeake Bay webpage. NewsClips: Acting DEP Secretary Addresses Challenges In Chesapeake Cleanup Crable: Lancaster County Farms Face State Inspections DEP Moves To Enforce Farms’ Manure Plans DEP Visiting Farms To Determine Environmental Compliance Farmers In Chesapeake Bay Watershed To Get Visits From DEP PA Farmers Surveyed About Conservation Efforts For Chesapeake Bay PA Waterways Show Serious Spikes In Bacteria Studies Show Creeks, Susquehanna River Show Highest Bacteria Levels After Rain Study Finds Pollution In Dauphin, Cumberland Streams Latest From The Chesapeake Bay Journal Click Here to subscribe to the Chesapeake Bay Journal Follow Chesapeake Bay Journal On Twitter Like Chesapeake Bay Journal On Facebook Related Stories: CBF-PA: Testing Finds Bacteria At Up To 10 Times Limits In Cumberland, Dauphin Streams Chesapeake Bay Stewardship Fund Awards $9.9 Million For 13 Projects In PA Alliance For Chesapeake Bay Receives Grant To Restore Octoraro Reservoir In Lancaster DCNR, Nonprofits, Universities Win NFWF Grant For Precision Farm Conservation PA’s Chesapeake Bay Reboot Strategy To Improve Water Quality May Need Kick-Start DEP Lists Lower Susquehanna As Impaired For Recreation, Not Aquatic Uses 4,267 More Miles Of Streams Listed As Impaired By DEP, Lower Susquehanna Not Listed |
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8/29/2016 |
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