The Capital

To save the Chesapeake Bay, we must end forest destructio­n

- Gerald Winegrad

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!

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 ?? CAROL SWAN/CAPITAL GAZETTE ?? Heavy equipment is used to clear land on Forest Drive in Annapolis.
CAROL SWAN/CAPITAL GAZETTE Heavy equipment is used to clear land on Forest Drive in Annapolis.

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