Draft PA Chesapeake Bay Watershed Implementation Plan To Be Released For Public Comment April 12
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The draft Phase III PA Chesapeake Bay Watershed Implementation Plan is scheduled to be released for public comment on April 12 with a comment period running until June 7, according to DEP’s April report to the Citizens Advisory Council (page 15). The Plan will describe how Pennsylvania intends to move forward and accelerate progress towards meeting the nutrient reduction targets established by the Chesapeake Bay Partnership for the improvement of local water quality and the restoration of the Chesapeake Bay with the goal of having all practices in place by 2025. The Plan will be available on DEP’s Chesapeake Bay Watershed Implementation Plan webpage. Resource Needs A key element of the draft Plan will be an outline of the resources Pennsylvania needs to implement the Plan. On March 22, the Funding Workgroup estimated an annual funding gap of $244.5 million over at least the next 6 years totaling $1.467 billion to implement practices needed to meet Pennsylvania’s Bay cleanup obligations. If Pennsylvania continued with just its existing programs and resources, it would miss the 2025 nitrogen reduction goal by at least 19 years (2044). Click Here for more on the Funding Workgroup recommendations. Other Workgroups Recommendations Several other Workgroups gave recommendations to the PA Chesapeake Bay Watershed Planning Steering Committee over the last 6 months-- Many of these recommendations could be incorporated into the draft plan or changed. County Plans On March 8, the Steering Committee adopted a schedule for the 43 counties in the Pennsylvania portion of the Bay Watershed to complete the county-level clean water planning process to develop detailed plans for meeting county nutrient reduction goals. The final draft Watershed Implementation Plans will build on the recommendations made by the counties. Four pilot counties-- Adams, Franklin, Lancaster and York-- have completed or nearly completed their plans. Lancaster and York, however, account for 25 percent of the reductions needed to meet Pennsylvania’s total reduction obligation. The remainder of the 7 counties in DEP’s Tier 1 list of counties is responsible for 50 percent of the state’s Chesapeake Bay water pollution reduction goal would start the planning process in July and complete planning by February. The planning process for the remaining 36 counties in Tiers 2, 3 and 4 responsible for the other half of the reductions would start in October and be due in late 2020. Click Here for more on this county planning schedule. Next Steering Committee Meeting The next scheduled meeting of the Steering Committee is April 24 in Room 105 of the Rachel Carson Building from 1:00 to 4:00 p.m. Click Here to attend the meeting by webinar. Participants will also need to call in 1-650-479-3208, PASSCODE: 644 234 728 For more information and copies of available handouts, visit the PA Chesapeake Bay Watershed Implementation Plan Steering Committee webpage. Related Stories: Latest Chesapeake Bay Barometer Tells Cautionary Success Story About Bay Restoration Manure Applications Changes With Winter Crop Can Cut Nitrogen Loss, Boost Profits For Dairy Farmers Help Wanted: Keystone 10 Million Trees Partnership Data Management Specialist NewsClips: Governors Of PA, VR, DE, MD Asking For More Federal Chesapeake Bay Funding Conowingo Dam Battle: Sides Look For Alternative As Fight Drags On Bay Journal: Chesapeake Bay Health Reports Shows Slow, Steady Improvement We’ve Got An Unfunded Federal Mandate To Fix Stormwater In Luzerne, What Now? Luzerne County Facing Own Stormwater Requirements In Addition To New Fee Stormwater Fee Payers Learn More About Potential Litigation Luzerne Residents Bring In Legal Counsel To Fight Stormwater Fee Lehman Twp. Resident Trying To Raise $45K To Challenge Stormwater Fee In Luzerne Latest From The Chesapeake Bay Journal [Posted: April 3, 2019] |
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4/8/2019 |
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