POWR: DEP Presentation On Draft Integrated Water Quality Report Showing 40% Of Streams Impaired June 4 In Harrisburg
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On May 24, the PA Organization for Watersheds and Rivers announced DEP will hold a presentation on the draft PA Integrated Water Quality Monitoring and Assessment Report on June 4 from 10:30 to Noon in the Auditorium of the Rachel Carson Building in Harrisburg. Over all, about 40 percent of Pennsylvania’s rivers and streams have impaired water quality for one or more reasons. On April 18, the Department of Environmental Protection released its 2018 Integrated Water Quality Monitoring and Assessment Report, the biennial comprehensive analysis of the water quality status of the more than 86,000 miles of streams and rivers and more than 160,000 acres of lakes in Pennsylvania required by the federal Clean Water Act. The report evaluates whether waterbodies across Pennsylvania are achieving the water standards that protect clean water. Streams, lakes, rivers, and other water resources are evaluated on how well each waterway is meeting its assessed use, such as drinking water supply, aquatic life, recreation, and fish consumption. The report shows agriculture, abandoned mines and stormwater runoff remain the most significant sources of pollution causing the impairment of water quality for aquatic life, the same sources of pollution as in the last assessment in 2016. Agricultural runoff impairs 5,741 miles of streams (6,421 miles in 2016); abandoned mine runoff impairs 5,576 miles (5,595 miles in 2016); and stormwater runoff impairs 3,066 miles (2,902 miles in 2016). DEP is accepting public comments on the report until June 4. Click Here to submit comments through DEP’s eComment webpage or email comments to: ecomment@pa.gov. Written comments can be mailed to DEP Policy Office, Rachel Carson Office Building, PO Box 2063, Harrisburg, PA 17105. (formal notice) For more information on programs, initiatives, other upcoming events and how you can get involved, visit the PA Organization for Watersheds and Rivers website. (Photo: Red is bad.) NewsClips: Chesapeake Bay Recovery Took A Hit Amid Extreme Rain In 2018, But Retains C Grade Chesapeake Bay Health Dips, But Still Rates A C In Annual Report Card Downpours, Runoff Lead To Decline In Chesapeake Bay’s Health Bay Journal: University Of Maryland Report: Low Health Scores Rain On Chesapeake Bay’s Recovery Proposed Federal Budget Includes Funds For Chesapeake Bay Cleanup Local Officials In Blair County Weigh Stormwater Fees Luzerne Anti-Stormwater Fee Group Starts Sign Campaign Cong. Meuser Still Wants Answer From EPA On Stormwater Management Cong. Cartwright Backs Federal Stormwater Pollution Reduction Funding Boost Six Pittsburgh Restaurants Recycle Oyster Shells To Help Chesapeake Bay Pittsburgh Joins Oyster Shell Recycling Program to Help Restore Chesapeake Bay Op-Ed: Rolling Back Clean Water Rules Would devastate The Potomac, Chesapeake Bay Latest From The Chesapeake Bay Journal Click Here to subscribe to the free Chesapeake Bay Journal Related Stories This Week: Chesapeake Bay Oyster Recovery Partnership Expands Shell Recycling Program To Pittsburgh Chesapeake Bay Sustainable Landscape Professional Certification Course June 20-21 In State College CBF: Congress Understands The Value Of Restoring The Chesapeake Bay Related Stories: Draft PA Chesapeake Bay Watershed Implementation Plan Now Available For Public Comment Bay Journal: Pennsylvania's New Chesapeake Bay Plan Falls Well Short Of Cleanup Goals Take Action! [Posted: May 24, 2019] |
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5/27/2019 |
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