To save the Chesapeake Bay, we must end forest destruction
The destruction of the Chesapeake Bay ecosystembeganmore than 400 years ago with the clearing of forests and later, the filling and draining of wetlands.
About 66% of our tidal and freshwater wetlands were destroyed, including thousands of acres drained with federal and state funds to create farmland. The Eastern Shore is covered with networks of public ditches — 821 miles of ditches in just five Maryland counties. Fortunately, laws were enacted to stop wetland destruction.
In 1970, tidalwetlandswere given strict protection. In 1989, I managed The
Nontidal Wetlands Act to passage in the state Senate stopping the loss of 1,600 freshwater wetland acres annually. Both were no net loss laws.
Since colonization, 56% of our forests are gone. These woodlands were destroyed for agriculture and later for development. Unfortunately, this forest loss continues. Until 1989, no laws protected forests except in the Critical Area, a 1,000-foot belt inland fromtidalwetlands.
In 1989, I developed and gained enactment of the Maryland Reforestation Law that requires forest clearing minimization in state-funded highway construction and 100% forest replacement.
More than 2,500 acres of forest have been replanted to cover the 2,250 acres cleared. In preparing this article, I found a similar one I wrote in The Capital that
year:“WeMustSave ourForests toSaveOur Bay.”
Maryland lost 8,300 forest acres annually from 1973-2002, (249,000 acres), mostly from low-density residential sprawl development. Anne Arundel County lost 42,000 acres (33% of its forest) from1986-1999.
In 1990 I convinced Senate Minority Leader Jack Cade, R-SevernaPark, to be the lead sponsor of the Forest Conservation Act. Cade was a brilliant legislator with enormous power for a minority legislator. We gained Senate passage of the bill but House Speaker Clay Mitchell deliberately held theHouse-passed bill killing the bill.
In 1991, Gov. William Donald Schaefer’s administration introducedaweaker version based on our bill. Jack and I supported it and I managed it to passage. The law minimizes but does not stop, the loss of Maryland’s forests from land development.
By making the delineation and protection of forests an integral part in local development site planning processes, and by requiring reforestation for certain clearing, tens of thousands of acres of forest have been saved.
I still regret that Jack and I could not succeed in making the law require replanting100% of forest cleared. Efforts to achieve this in the Legislature have failed over the last decade. Such a law is critical for the Chesapeake Bay. The Legislature is remiss
in not doing so as thousands of acres of forest are cleared and fragmented.
The City of Annapolis enacted a true no net loss lawin2018. Kudos to AldermanRob Savidge, Mayor Gavn Buckley and other aldermen.
I was greatly disappointed that County Executive Steuart Pittman’s administration gave up on such legislation and its emaciated bill allows for continued forest destruction in the county despite a 2,356 acre County forest loss from2013-2017.
Frederick County recently adopted a true no net loss bill. But with its bill and other local forest conservation laws, a giant
loophole allows developers to escape replanting forests.
Developers may make payment-in-lieuof replanting as low as 30.6 cents per sq. ft. of forest cleared. That’s only $13,286 per acre—little incentive to reduce forest clearing. Howard County dictates $18,731an acre.
Annapolis wisely adopted a $10 per square foot ($435,600 an acre) charge which assures saving most of its forest. Pending plans for the Village at Providence Point lower forest clearing from46 acres to 27 acresand100% mustbe replantedonsite. If this project were in our county, zero forestwould need to be replanted.
Why are forests so vitally important? Forests act like giant sponges, greatly reducing stormwater runoff and absorbing up to 90% of nutrients, stabilizing soils and preventing sediment and toxic chemicals from washing into waterways. During a one-inch rainfall event, a one-acre forest releases 750 gallons of runoff; a parking lot releases 27,000 gallons!
Forests produce oxygen and absorb global warming carbon dioxide—one acre produces four tons of oxygen and absorbs six tons ofCO2. Tree cover lowers summertime temperatures in urban areas and in steams, buffering against noise pollution.
Forests provide habitat for many critters. Leaf litter and other plantmaterials fall into streams and form the foundation of freshwater food chains.
Forests generate billions of dollars annually supplying wood and paper products. Forestry isMaryland’s fifth-largest industry. Forests increase property values, lower residential and commercial energy use, improve physical and mental health, and foster outdoor recreation.
Let’s stop forest destruction and begin reforesting. With Covid19, you can’t hug your kids or grandkids, so get out into a forest and hug a tree— and thank it for all it does for you!