(C) Pennsylvania Capital-Star
This story was originally published by Pennsylvania Capital-Star and is unaltered.
. . . . . . . . . .
Pa. awards more than $12M in Chesapeake Bay cleanup grants to counties [1]
['Cassie Miller', 'More From Author', '- December']
Date: 2022-12-14 21:10:36+00:00
Nearly three-dozen counties across Pennsylvania were awarded millions of dollars in grant funding this week to clean up local waterways that flow into the Chesapeake Bay, despite federal officials rejecting the commonwealth’s clean-up plan last month.
On Wednesday, the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) announced that it had awarded $12.2 million in 2023 Countywide Action Plan (CAP) Implementation Grants to 34 counties to reduce sediment and nutrient pollution in local waterways that flow into the Chesapeake Bay.
Pennsylvania is part of a multi-state effort to reduce sediment and nutrient pollution in waterways throughout watershed states, such as Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, New York, and West Virginia, as well as Washington D.C. The plan requires Pennsylvania to reduce nitrogen levels in its Bay-bound waterways by 32.5 million pounds, and phosphorus by 850,000 pounds by 2025.
Acting DEP Secretary Ramez Ziadeh said the CAP grants are a “key component” of Pennsylvania’s Phase III Watershed Improvement Plan (WIP), which was rejected by federal environmental officials in November.
While DEP said that Phase 3 of its WIP “takes a Healthy Waters, Healthy Communities approach, inviting county teams to take control of local water quality improvement, with state and other partners providing as much data, technical assistance, funding, and other support as possible,” federal environmental officials said then that the plan did not “fully demonstrate” how the commonwealth will meet its 2025 bay restoration goals.
All or some of 43 of Pennsylvania’s 67 counties are located within the commonwealth’s portion of the Chesapeake Bay Watershed, which includes more than 12,000 miles of polluted streams and rivers, according to DEP.
“In every county, local leaders and partners in agriculture, conservation, and other areas are carrying out measures they’ve determined will have the biggest impact in reducing pollution and bringing the benefits of a healthy watershed to their communities,” Ziadeh said. “DEP is committed to doing everything it can to support this unprecedented grassroots action and progress.”
Grant funds were awarded to 34 counties in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed:
Adams County Conservation District: $318,149
Bedford County Conservation District: $392,424
Berks County Conservation District: $104,511
Blair County Conservation District: $95,706
Bradford County Conservation District: $276,306
Cambria County Conservation District: $85,860
Centre County Government: $389,876
Chester County Conservation District: $281,527
Clearfield County Conservation District: $117,404
Clinton County Commissioners: $188,817
Cumberland County Commissioners: $570,360
Franklin County Conservation District: $1,035,542
Fulton County Conservation District: $241,854
Huntingdon County Conservation District: $175,445
Lackawanna County Conservation District: $225,162
Lancaster County Conservation District: $3,066,264
Lebanon County Conservation District: $451,234
Luzerne Conservation District: $45,557
Lycoming County Commissioners: $306,407
Montour County Conservation District: $436,064 for Montour, Columbia, and Sullivan counties
Northumberland County Conservation District: $297,556
Potter County Conservation District: $63,534
Schuylkill Conservation District: $181,753
Snyder County Conservation District: $556,219 for Snyder and Union counties
Susquehanna County: $129,535
Tioga County Conservation District: $185,807
Tri-County Regional Planning Commission: $1,036,915 for Dauphin, Perry, Juniata, and Mifflin counties
York County Planning Commission: $1,042,938
Funding for the grants comes from several sources, including the state Environmental Stewardship Fund and $2.9 million from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
The grants will “enable teams to build on their previous years’ successes and launch new projects, accelerating Pennsylvania’s Phase 3 Watershed Implementation Plan,” Ziadeh said.
[END]
---
[1] Url:
https://www.penncapital-star.com/government-politics/pa-awards-more-than-12m-in-chesapeake-bay-cleanup-grants-to-counties/
Published and (C) by Pennsylvania Capital-Star
Content appears here under this condition or license: Creative Commons CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.
via Magical.Fish Gopher News Feeds:
gopher://magical.fish/1/feeds/news/penncapitalstar/