Chesapeake Bay Foundation Receives NFWF Grant To Expand Rotational Grazing
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On December 3, the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation announced the Chesapeake Bay Foundation will receive more than $850,000 to promote rotational grazing (also known as prescribed grazing) in Maryland, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Virginia. Rotational grazing enhances soil health, protects and improves water quality, and contributes to a farm’s economic viability. The grant will be matched by $850,000 in partner funding. In Pennsylvania, Adams, Cumberland, Franklin, Lancaster, Lebanon, and York counties will be targeted under the grant. Partners in the Pennsylvania include Capital Resource Conservation and Development Area Council, the PA Grazing Lands Coalition, PA Association for Sustainable Agriculture, Penn State University, and the Natural Resource Conservation Service. Regionally, the goal of the grant is to transition 30 farms, including 1,700 acres of farmland, to grazing. This would reduce more than 82,000 pounds of nitrogen, more than 7,000 pounds of phosphorus, and 656 tons of sediment pollution annually. In addition, the grant includes the formation of a steering committee of project partners to strengthen the partnership and facilitate information exchange, expanding opportunities for peer-to-peer dialog, and developing outreach materials that highlight the economic and soil health benefits of grazing. Following the announcement, Beth McGee, CBF’s Director of Science and Agricultural Policy issued this statement. “CBF has been involved with rotational grazing for more than 30 years. It has been demonstrated to reduce polluted runoff, reduce a farm’s feed and labor costs, and significantly benefit soil health. Improved soil health makes the farm more resilient to extreme weather as well as helping capture carbon that otherwise would contribute to climate change. “Converting farms to rotational grazing is a significant part of the Chesapeake Clean Water Blueprint, and the Bay states have only achieved 18 percent of the 2025 goals.” 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 to support their work. To learn more about how Pennsylvania plans to meet Chesapeake Bay pollution reduction requirements, visit DEP’s Chesapeake Bay Watershed Implementation Plan webpage. NewsClips: CBF-PA: Farm Conservation Plans Are Important, But Farmers Struggle To Implement Those Plans Lancaster Farming: Can PA Meet Chesapeake Bay Cleanup Goals? Bay Journal: Multifunction Stream Buffers Offer Food For Thought For PA Farms Chesapeake Bay Foundation Receives NFWF Grant To Expand Rotational Grazing Thompson: Project To Limit Harmful Run-Off From Turkey Hill Supplier Farms Gets Boost Crable: Farmers, Groups, Turkey Hill To Get $6.5M In Water Quality Funding Stream Buffer Project Completed In Blair County By Trout Unlimited, Conservation District Volunteers Lancaster Farming: Stream Buffers Make Financial Sense Alliance For The Chesapeake Bay, Partners Plant 14.81 Acres Of Forest Buffer In PA DEP Blog: Healthy Waters, Healthy Communities: Lancaster County’s Watershed Planning Who’s Responsible For Plastic Tree Tubes Along Lancaster County Creek? Months After Storms, Chesapeake Bay Debris Cleanup Presses On Latest From The Chesapeake Bay Journal Related Stories: NFWF Announces $13.1 Million In Chesapeake Bay Stewardship Fund Grants, Including PA CBF-PA: Farm Conservation Plans Are Important, But Farmers Struggle To Implement Those Plans DEP Blog: Healthy Waters, Healthy Communities: Lancaster County's Watershed Planning Bay Journal: Multifunction Stream Buffers Offer Food For Thought For PA Farms EDF Blog: New Resource Available To Help Dairy Industry Clean Up Local Watersheds [Posted: Dec. 4, 2018] |
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12/10/2018 |
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