Senate Environmental Committee Sets Sept. 11 Hearing On MS4 Stormwater Program; General Assembly Fails To Give Communities The Help They Need
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The Senate Environmental Resources and Energy Committee is scheduled to hold a hearing on the federal MS4 Stormwater Water Pollution Reduction Program September 11 in Greencastle, Franklin County.

Greencastle Borough and Antrim Township have been considering the adoption of stormwater management fees as have most communities required to implement the MS4 Stormwater Water Pollution Reduction Program.

The fees would pay for local stormwater management projects designed to reduce flooding and cleanup stormwater runoff.

Sen. Judy Ward (R) represents the Borough and Township.

The hearing will start at 1:00 p.m. at the Antrim Township Municipal Building, 10655 Antrim Church Road in Greencastle.  Click Here to check to see if an agenda is posted.

No Help From State

The local fees are necessary because the General Assembly has failed to adopt any new funding initiatives to help communities pay for these costs.

At a June 19 hearing by the House Environmental Resources and Energy and Local Government Committees on the MS4 Program, local government associations again asked the General Assembly to provide additional financial support for their stormwater pollution reduction and flood reduction efforts. 

That help did not come, in fact the FY 2019-20 state budget cut $16 million in funding that could have helped them.

In March, the stakeholder-driven PA Chesapeake Bay Watershed Planning Steering Committee reported communities and farmers needed an estimated $1.467 billion over the next 6 years in new funding to meet the Bay water cleanup requirements, starting with a $257 million down payment in the FY 2019-20 budget.

The cost of the final draft Chesapeake Bay Implementation Plan presented August 16 by DEP went up to an estimated $324.2 million annually over the next 7 years.

Without the additional funding, the 43 counties in Pennsylvania that are part of the Chesapeake Bay Watershed would not meet the 2025 pollution reduction goals until 2044-- 19 years late.

That help, obviously, did not come.

More than two and a half years ago-- January 24, 2017-- the bipartisan Pennsylvania members of the Chesapeake Bay Commission dramatically wrote to all members of the Senate and House to spotlight the need for many more resources to address water pollution cleanup obligations across the state.

They highlighted the need for a dedicated Clean Water Fund.

The letter was signed by Sen. Gene Yaw (R-Lycoming), Majority Chair of the Senate Environmental Resources and Energy Committee, Sen. Rich Alloway (R-Franklin)- now retired, Rep. Garth Everett (R-Lycoming), Rep. Keith Gillespie (R-York) and Rep. Mike Sturla (D-Lancaster).

What happened?  Nothing.

These failures by the General Assembly fly in the face of overwhelming public support for funding green infrastructure projects designed to reduce water pollution, flood damage and cleanup Pennsylvania’s rivers and streams.

So what were Senate and House members proud of in the FY 2019-20 budget?  They were proud they passed an on time budget... but meanwhile in the real world it continues to rain, continues to flood and our streams are polluted.

Sen. Gene Yaw (R-Lycoming) serves as Majority Chair of the Senate Environmental Committee and can be contacted by calling 717-787-3280 or sending email to: gyaw@pasen.gov.   Sen. John Yudichak (D-Luzerne) serves as Minority Chair and can be contacted by calling 717-787-7105 or sending email to: yudichak@pasenate.com.

Take Action!

Find Your House and Senate Member And Tell Them What You Think!

NewsClips:

Berks County Mennonite Farmers Making A Difference In Water Quality

Op-Ed: Time’s Running Out To Meet Chesapeake Bay Cleanup Goals, Especially In PA - Chesapeake Bay Foundation

Bay Journal: High Flows To Chesapeake Bay Continued In July

Chesapeake Bay Water Quality Is Improving After Years Of Work

Latest From The Chesapeake Bay Journal

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Click Here for All Environment & Energy NewsClips From Last Week

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Op-Ed: It's Time To Farm (And Eat!) Like The World Depended On It

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Related Articles - State Budget:

Major Environmental Priorities Not Addressed In FY 2019-20 State Budget, Shell Game Continues

Politicians In Harrisburg Are Proud Of Their New State Budget! -- Meanwhile In The Real World…

“Do Unto Those Downstream As You Would Have Those Upstream Do Unto You"

Growing Greener Coalition: Cuts Made To Environmental Stewardship (Growing Greener) Funding Could Have Planted 32,000 Acres of Stream Buffers

Growing Greener Coalition: Lawmakers Name Hellbender Clean Water Ambassador, Then Cut $16 Million For Clean Water Projects

CBF: PA Elected Leaders Failed To Show The Will, Leadership To Restore Pennsylvania's Rivers And Streams

CBF: State Needs To Step Up Support For Those Working Hard To Cleanup PA's Rivers And Streams - Harry Campbell

Op-Ed: Conservation Efforts Lose Out In State Budget - Len Lichvar

New Poll Shows Overwhelming Public Support For Restore PA Infrastructure Plan; When Will It Translate Into Legislative Votes?

[Posted: August 15, 2019]


8/19/2019

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