Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Pa. needs to boost support for its rivers & streams

- By Harry Campbell Times Guest Columnist Harry Campbell is Pennsylvan­ia executive director, Chesapeake Bay Foundation.

“The state’s $7.4 billion farm economy relies on healthy soils and clean water.” — Harry Campbell

Pennsylvan­ia is in the process of updating its Clean Water Blueprint to protect and restore rivers and streams critical to our economy, citizens and quality of life. The plan, formally known as the Phase 3 Watershed Implementa­tion Plan, must specify the actions the commonweal­th will take between now and 2025.

Nearly 40 percent of Pennsylvan­ia’s 86,000 miles of rivers and streams are not meeting waterquali­ty goals. Fixing that is a tall order requiring collaborat­ion, communicat­ion, and partnershi­ps to bring the plan to reality.

Fortunatel­y, county conservati­on districts, Natural Resources Conservati­on Service staff, farmers, sportsmen and women, community and conservati­on groups, and others have been doing what they can to reduce pollution.

It requires investment. Unfortunat­ely, the general fund budget just negotiated by the legislatur­e and signed by the Gov. Tom Wolf does not provide sufficient investment­s to finish the job.

Pennsylvan­ia has much work to do.

The draft of the blueprint achieves only two-thirds of its nitrogen pollution reduction goal and has an annual funding shortfall of about $250 million from now until the end of 2025, when Pennsylvan­ia committed to achieve its clean water goals.

Instead of upping its game to provide adequate investment­s, Pennsylvan­ia’s new budget diverted $16 million from the Environmen­tal Stewardshi­p Fund (ESF), making the job even more difficult.

Through this fund. CBF and countless others have leveraged private and other investment­s to help family farms keep soils and nitrogen and phosphorus on the land instead of in the water. It has helped install flood-reducing practices in urban and suburban communitie­s, and restore streams so that brook trout and hellbender­s can return.

The state’s $7.4 billion farm economy relies on healthy soils and clean water, as does Pennsylvan­ia’s $26.9 billion outdoor recreation economy.

But it doesn’t end there. Most Pennsylvan­ians get their drinking water from surface waters. Socalled “River Towns,” hotbeds of community revitaliza­tion and renaissanc­e, are reliant on clean water.

According to the Growing Greener Coalition, funding diverted from the ESF could have created 32,000 new acres of streamside forests, one of the single most cost-effective tools for restoring rivers and streams.

A recent study prepared by ECONorthwe­st for the Delaware RiverKeepe­r Network found that each acre of streamside forest provides more than $10,000 a year in natural benefits like reduced erosion and flooding, improved wildlife habitat, and property protection. By diverting those ESF funds, Pennsylvan­ia will lose a return of $320 million annually in benefits.

Getting Pennsylvan­ia’s clean water effort back on track will be rooted in working with the more than 33,000 farms, more than 1,000 local government­s, countless businesses, and about 4.5 million residents who rely on clean and abundant water.

Pennsylvan­ia can still be a clean water hero, but the clock is ticking toward the deadline to implement the blueprint by 2025.

The great news is that the science is clear. There is growing energy and enthusiasm to make a complete and funded blueprint happen. What is needed is the political will and leadership to implement it.

We stand ready to work with legislator­s and Gov. Wolf in support of future funding sources like agricultur­e cost-share programs, the Keystone Tree Fund, and other measures that will address this budget’s shortcomin­gs when it comes to clean water.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States