CBF: Cut To EPA Chesapeake Bay Funding Not Consistent With President’s Statements
Photo

Following reports in the Washington Post Thursday of the federal Office of Management and Budget proposal to cut U.S. Environmental Protection Agency funding in support of the Chesapeake Bay Clean Water Blueprint, Chesapeake Bay Foundation President William C. Baker issued the following statement.

The OMB proposal reduces funding for the Chesapeake Bay Program from about $73 million annually to $5 million in the next fiscal year. EPA’s Chesapeake Bay Program coordinates science, research, and modeling to implement the Blueprint, as well as grants to state and local governments and others to help reduce pollution.

“Reducing funding for the successful Chesapeake Bay clean-up, begun by Ronald Reagan, seems inconsistent with the President’s remarks about clean water.

“The proposed reduction in federal investment in Chesapeake Bay would reverse restoration successes. The EPA role in the cleanup of the Chesapeake is nothing less than fundamental. It’s not just important, it’s critical.

“Restoration efforts are working. There is measurable progress in restoring local rivers, streams, and the Chesapeake Bay. Crabs and oysters are rebounding, the dead zone is getting smaller, and Bay grasses are at their highest levels in decades. The progress is the result of the federal and state partnership implementing the Clean Water Blueprint, as well as the work of citizens, business, farmers, and local governments all doing their share to reduce pollution.

“The Blueprint has bipartisan support, as was recently demonstrated in a letter led by Chesapeake Bay Task Force co-chairs Congressmen Bobby Scott, Rob Wittman, Andy Harris, and John Sarbanes from seventeen members of Congress to President Trump, calling on his administration to continue full funding of Bay restoration efforts.

“We urge all local partners—residents, businesses, watershed groups, universities, and state and local governments—to let their voices be heard.

“The OMB proposal is only the first step in developing EPA’s budget, and we hope that Administrator Pruitt will want to take advantage of a program that’s successful, bi-partisan, and non-controversial.  It works.”

For more on Chesapeake Bay-related issues in Pennsylvania, visit the Chesapeake Bay Foundation-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.

(Photo: Susquehanna River at Harrisburg.  The Susquehanna River provides 50 percent of the freshwater entering the Chesapeake Bay and almost half of Pennsylvania lies in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed.)

NewsClips:

McKelvey: Will Trump’s EPA Let PA Off The Hook For Chesapeake Bay Cleanup?

AP: Members Of Congress Ask Trump To Back Chesapeake Bay Cleanup Effort

Report: Proposed Cut To Slash EPA’s Chesapeake Bay Funds 93%

Proposed EPA Cuts Could Devastate Chesapeake Bay Cleanup Plan

Trump Eyes Plan To Cut EPA Staff 20%, Cut Grants To States 30%

Here Are 42 Of Trump’s Proposed EPA Budget Cuts

Trump Takes Hatchet To EPA

Trump To Propose 24 Percent Cut In EPA Spending

Op-Ed: Stand Up For Clean Water

Letter: Federal Farm Bill Programs Deserve Support

Letter: Congress Should Prioritize Farm Bill Conservation Funding

Crable: Lancaster Farmers Applaud Trump For Returning Water Protection To States

Crable: Add This Holtwood No-Till Farmer To Famous Names From Lancaster County

Latest From The Chesapeake Bay Journal

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CBF-PA: Wolf’s Budget Lacks Adequate Investments To Meet PA’s Clean Water Commitments

House DEP Budget Hearing Focuses On Safe Drinking Water, Permitting, Pipelines, Chesapeake Bay

Op-Ed: Budget Season Is Time For Residents, Legislators To Step Up For Clean Water

Chesapeake Bay - PA In The Balance Conference Report Now Available From Penn State

Trump Considering 30% Cut In State EPA Grants, 20% Cut To EPA Staff

[Posted: March 2, 2017]


3/6/2017

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