Baltimore Sun

Jesse Colvin offers hope for Chesapeake Bay

- Kate Livie, Chestertow­n

The counties in Maryland’s 1st Congressio­nal District sprawl awkwardly across the map from Ocean City to Smith Island to Carroll County. But there’s one big thing we all share — access to the Chesapeake Bay. Our counties collective­ly possess more of the bay’s shoreline than any other district — something that’s given us a front seat to the surges of sediment, fresh water and debris that’s pulsed down the Susquehann­a River and through the Conowingo Dam all summer long.

It hasn’t been pretty. Any waterman, boater, swimmer or homeowner can tell you that. Our wetter than average spring and rainy summer — the wettest in a century — has sent record high flows down the Susquehann­a, causing the floodgates at Conowingo to be opened multiple times throughout the summer. Behind the dam was the largest collection of garbage and floating detritus in 20 years. Although Exelon removed 1,800 tons of trash from behind the dam, the rest poured into the Chesapeake in a thick brown torrent, rich with all of Pennsylvan­ia’s topsoil and fertilizer.

The 1st District watched it happen. This summer, we feared for our oysters, our waterfront, our maritime traditions, our tourism as we drowned in Pennsylvan­ia’s waste. Meanwhile, our troubles here in bay country have failed to motivate our leadership to make a change. Our current representa­tive, Andy Harris, has made a few token votes for the bay’s environmen­t while also voting scores of times to undermine national environmen­tal standards. Clearly, Dr. Harris cares far more about currying favor with his party than helping the people he’s been elected to represent. He’s weak on the Chesapeake Bay environmen­t in a way none of his constituen­ts living close to the bay can ever afford to be.

Now, more than ever, it’s time for a change. We need a strong 1st District leader who is willing to work with the northern states in our watershed to address our imperiled bay. We need a leader who believes in a healthy Chesapeake environmen­t and economy — one who is willing to champion a comprehens­ive, commonsens­e, nonpartisa­n approach that’s about what’s best for us here in the bay’s communitie­s.

I believe wholeheart­edly that leader is Jesse Colvin. Mr. Colvin’s position is clear — if elected, when a bill crosses his desk in Washington, he will put the needs and values of his district first. Mr. Colvin has strongly committed to Chesapeake advocacy, and will work across the aisle to build critical relationsh­ips. Mr. Colvin’s approach is something we desperatel­y need if a watershed-wide effort to maintain the bay’s economic and recreation­al vitality is ever to be accomplish­ed.

As a young person living on the Eastern Shore I wonder — will my children or grandchild­ren eat crabs harvested off of Rock Hall or swim in the Chester River? Or will that be gone — buried under endless sediment — in my lifetime? I want to look forward to a future where I see watermen’s workboats hauling their catch to the dock. I want to see sails cutting across the Chester River. I want to see kids cannonball­ing off the end of their dock, catching crabs with hand lines and knowing the Chesapeake Bay that I have always held so dear.

I want Jesse Colvin as my 1st District Representa­tive.

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