New Online Storymap Shares Tips, Shows Benefits Of Improving Water Quality In PA's Part Of Chesapeake Bay Watershed
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As part of Chesapeake Bay Watershed Awareness Week June 6 - 14, the Department of Environmental Protection launched a new storymap, Healthy Waters, Healthy Communities, that shares tips for reducing nutrient and sediment runoff pollution and shows the benefits of improving water quality in Pennsylvania’s part of the watershed.

All or part of 43 counties are in the watershed.

“Reducing runoff is a challenge for everyone, everywhere. This is pollution that runs off farm fields, overfertilized turf, and roads and other hard surfaces—things that are prevalent in our modern lives—and goes directly into our waters,” said DEP Secretary Patrick McDonnell. “Although the challenge is great, communities, farmers, businesses, organizations, and state government partners are taking action and making exciting progress across the watershed. The storymap shares some of this passion and work, and shows Pennsylvanians the many ways they can help.”

Over 12,000 miles of streams and rivers in the watershed have been degraded by nutrient and sediment runoff pollution.

Actions to reduce runoff will help foster a healthy watershed with benefits to all aspects of Pennsylvanians’ lives, from providing safe drinking water to protecting soil quality for better crop yield, reducing flooding, and providing outdoor recreation enjoyment and jobs.

Healthy Waters, Healthy Communities highlights numerous success stories, including a Lycoming County farmer who saw his cattle benefit from stream bank buffers, eleven Blair County municipalities partnering on stormwater management projects, and a York County homeowner who turned his entire one-acre suburban yard into a bioswale and raingarden.

Information appears throughout the storymap on DEP, Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, and Department of Agriculture programs that offer funding and technical support.

“This storymap is yet another invaluable tool in helping us all help the Chesapeake Bay Watershed,” said DCNR Secretary Cindy Adams Dunn. “It will enable us to better focus on increasing resources and technical assistance, reinvigorate partnerships and create a culture of compliance in protecting Pennsylvania’s water quality and, by virtue of that, the quality of the Chesapeake Bay.”

“Improving water quality in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed is both a requirement and a responsibility for us all,” Agriculture Secretary Russell Redding said. “The only way Pennsylvania will meet the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s reduction targets by 2025 is if we all do our part. Farmers make their living off clean soil and water, that is why they are the original stewards of the land. Much has been asked of farmers, and they’ve responded to the call to improve water quality.”

Top tips and printable one-page handouts show what farmers, municipal leaders, business owners, and residents can do to reduce runoff, from installing fences and planting vegetation on a stream bank to joining their Countywide Action Plan.

Meaningful Watershed Education Experiences and other tools for teachers are included, and a Northeastern School District science teacher talks about how planting a stream bank buffer is meaningful for students.

“Deep dives” explore topics such as the contributions that outdoor recreation and agriculture make to Pennsylvania’s economy, the positive impacts that green infrastructure has on business, and the vital connection between trees and water quality. Like shelter for humans, trees are essential to healthy streams and rivers.

Healthy Waters, Healthy Communities also shares the natural wonders of the watershed. “Test Your Water Smarts” invites storymap visitors to see if they’re as smart about water quality as the eastern hellbender, the Pennsylvania state amphibian. Hellbenders seek the healthiest waters to live.

Learn more about Chesapeake Bay Watershed Awareness Week June 6 to 14.

For more information on how Pennsylvania plans to meet its Chesapeake Bay cleanup obligations, visit DEP’s PA’s Phase 3 Watershed Implementation Plan webpage.

Related Article This Week:

--Water Science Institute Storymap Shows How Old Mill Dams, Land Use & Legacy Sediments In Lancaster County Affect Water Quality

-- Farmers: Enrollment Opening Soon For CLEAR30 Conservation Program In Chesapeake Bay, Great Lakes Watersheds

Related Articles:

-- Chesapeake Bay Foundation, Other States Give Notice To EPA Of Intent To Sue Over Failure To Hold PA, NY Accountable For Meeting Bay Cleanup Milestones

-- PA Chesapeake Bay Phase III WIP State Team Hears Implementation Off To Fast Start [Before COVID-19]

-- Senate Environmental Committee Puts Spotlight On Funding Needed To Implement PA Clean Water Plan At Chesapeake Bay Briefing

-- Report: Sen. Yaw: Raising Enough Money To Implement PA’s Chesapeake Bay Clean Water Plan-- Isn't Going To Happen [Before COVID-19]

-- Growing Greener Coalition: Tremendous Backlog Of Environmental Infrastructure Needs Demand Much Higher Levels Of Investment By State

-- House Republicans Pass Bill To Freeze Funding For County Conservation Districts, Local Parks, Farm Conservation, Watershed Restoration Projects; Will Hurt Local Economies

-- Lancaster Clean Water Partners: Proposed Environmental Funding Freeze Would Be ‘Devastating’ To Lancaster’s Economy, Clean Water Efforts

-- Analysis: Where Did The $2.93 Billion In Environmental Funding The General Assembly Diverted Or Cut Go?

-- Analysis: 2020 Is A Make Or Break Year For Environmental Funding

[Posted: June 8, 2020]


6/15/2020

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