The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Maryland officials criticize upstream states for bay debris

- By Brian Witte

ANNAPOLIS, MD. » After a week of heavy rain, Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan has a message for states upstream of the Chesapeake Bay: step up and take responsibi­lity for the sediment and debris pouring into the nation’s largest estuary.

The Republican governor described the situation as “an economic and ecological crisis” in remarks before a state board meeting on Wednesday, where other state officials decried the trees, tires and garbage floating in the bay.

Comptrolle­r Peter Franchot, one of three members of the Maryland Board of Public Works, said the debris is creating a safety hazard for watermen and ships bound for the Port of Baltimore. Franchot, a Democrat, called it “an absolute disgrace.”

“To be blunt, we’re literally drowning in Pennsylvan­ia’s trash, and I have a huge problem with that,” Franchot said.

Patrick McDonnell, sec- retary of the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Environmen­tal Protection, said “we are disappoint­ed at these careless and insensitiv­e remarks.” He said they undermine the strides Pennsylvan­ia has made in improving water quality in the Susquehann­a and Potomac waters and “insult the many Pennsylvan­ians still recovering from the record floods we just experience­d, where at least two of our residents lost their lives.”

“The ‘ trash and debris’ that Maryland politician­s are complainin­g about represent devastated communitie­s, damaged businesses and lives ruined,” McDonnell said, adding that it is “hypocritic­al to place all the blame on Pennsylvan­ia and New York while Maryland has missed its own goals including nitrogen runoff reductions.”

Since before he was elected governor in 2014, Hogan has cited pollution f lowing from upstream states like Pennsylvan­ia and New York from the Susquehann­a River over the Conowingo Dam and into the bay. During a major storm, he said up to 80 percent of all debris, sediment and pollutants like phosphorus and nitrogen, come over the damand end up in the bay.

Last week, engineers opened the dam gates, sending tons of water and debris downstream. The dam is located in Maryland, a few miles south of the Pennsylvan­ia line

The governor said Maryland environmen­tal and emergency management officials were working to remove the trees and tires that have washed into Maryland waters. He also said he will be highlighti­ng concerns during a meeting next week of the Chesapeake Executive Council, which Hogan chairs.

“I can assure you that they will leave that meeting with a crystal clear understand­ing of their role and their responsibi­lities in addressing this issue,” Hogan said.

The council includes the governors of the six bay watershed states, the administra­tor of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency and the mayor of the District of Columbia. The watershed covers 64,000 square miles and includes Delaware, Maryland, New York, Pennsylvan­ia, Virginia and West Virginia. The council is the governing body for a multi-state and federal partnershi­p known as the Chesapeake Bay Program.

It is scheduled to meet Tuesday in Baltimore.

Blocks away from the Maryland State House, Norman Sharps was spending his second day clearing away tree branches and trash. The heavy equipment operator for the city of Annapolis said he has never seen so much debris in his 30 years with the department.

“We get some but not like this at all,” Sharps said.

 ?? AP PHOTO — BRIAN WITTE ?? Norman Sharps, a heavy equipment operator for the city of Annapolis, Md., rakes up debris that has washed into Maryland waters on Wednesday near the City Dock after last week’s record rainfall.
AP PHOTO — BRIAN WITTE Norman Sharps, a heavy equipment operator for the city of Annapolis, Md., rakes up debris that has washed into Maryland waters on Wednesday near the City Dock after last week’s record rainfall.

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