Harrisburg Unveils Draft Green Infrastructure Plan To Cleanup Water Pollution Dec. 15
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Capital Region Water will unveil its draft Community Greening Plan, an approach to reducing water pollution stormwater runoff and combined sewer overflows through developing green infrastructure, at a public meeting on December 15 in Harrisburg. After a year of listening to hundreds of city residents, businesses, and community organizations Capital Region Water developed the plan that focuses on identifying areas of opportunity for green infrastructure and assessing the feasibility of implementation in Harrisburg. A green infrastructure system uses natural filtration to reduce runoff thereby reducing flooding and pollution caused by runoff and sewer overflows and creating multiple community, economic and environmental benefits with a single investment. A public meeting will be held on the plan December 15 at the Lincoln School, 1601 State Street in Harrisburg from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. If you need an additional incentive, there will be free food offered. As with other water utilities serving older, industrialized cities, Capital Region Water has entered into a partial consent decree with the U.S. Department of Justice to address water quality issues related to discharges from the combined sewer and municipal separate storm sewer systems that it manages. The partial consent decree requires Capital Region Water to develop a plan to reduce runoff pollution entering the Susquehanna River and Paxton Creek, employ operation and controls for the system, and implement early action projects to ensure that the city becomes compliant with the federal Clean Water Act and the state Clean Streams Law. While the main purpose of green infrastructure is to manage stormwater, the transformative nature cannot be ignored. Not only are the region’s waterways poised to benefit from a green stormwater infrastructure master plan, but so are the residents, businesses, and visitors of Harrisburg. Click Here to watch a short video about this new approach. For more information and to provide comments, visit the Capital Region Water’s Community Greening Plan webpage. Find out more about using green infrastructure to solve water quality problems by examples in Philadelphia, Lancaster, Pittsburgh and Lycoming, Monroe and York counties. And through the experience of the Western PA Conversancy, LandStudies and the Chesapeake Bay Foundation-PA. NewsClips: Chester County Presents 2016 Agricultural Awards Trump’s Infrastructure Plan: Political Opportunities, Policy Perils Editorial: Infrastructure Plan Even A Conservative Could Love Related Stories: Analysis: 2017 PA Environmental Policy Initiatives In 140 Characters Or Less Feature: Conowingo Dam No Longer Holds Back PA Nutrients Going To Chesapeake Bay Smallmouth Bass Show Signs Of Improvement In Lower Susquehanna, Caution Advised DEP Presents National Mine Land Reclamation Award To Amerikohl For Beaver County Quarry Draft Plan To Reduce Phosphorus In Lake Erie Focus Of Dec. 12 Forum In Erie Susquehanna River Basin Commission OKs Penalties On Natural Gas Power Plants High Resolution Landscape Data Now Available In Chesapeake Bay Watershed, Webinars Set Growing PA’s Organic Farms Conference, Proven Organic Growing Techniques Dec. 13-14 Nominate Your Water System For The AWWA Exemplary Source Water Protection Award Call For Presenters - 2017 PA Groundwater Symposium May 3 In State College Penn State Extension Releases New LearnNow Video On Protecting Water Wells Archived Webinar: Helping Delaware River Communities Prepare For Climate Change SBA: How Nonprofits Can Apply For Flood Disaster Assistance In 4 Midstate Counties Dec. 5 Watershed Winds Newsletter Now Available From Penn State Extension [Posted Dec. 6, 2016] |
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12/13/2016 |
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