Baltimore Sun

An answer for farmers’ clean water costs in bay watershed

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Kudos to The Baltimore Sun for its article, “These Pennsylvan­ia farmers say they do try to stem Chesapeake Bay pollution - and that it’s expensive” (Feb. 7), that examined the state’s agricultur­al water pollution issues and the struggle some farmers face in addressing fertilizer or manure-laden runoff from their farms.

It’s true that environmen­tal farm upgrades such as manure storage facilities, livestock fencing along streams and forest buffers can be a burden for farmers to install. That’s why the Chesapeake Bay Foundation and other environmen­tal organizati­ons that work on the ground with farmers have advocated for government assistance to help fund these upgrades.

Unlike Pennsylvan­ia, Maryland has a robust program to share costs with farmers. About 40% of Maryland’s Bay Restoratio­n Fund — about $11 million per year — is used to help farmers plant cover crops. Taxpayers support the Bay Restoratio­n Fund through a $5 monthly fee on their sewer bills. Maryland’s program has helped the state lead the nation in the percentage of crop land that uses cover crops each year, according to the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e. Maryland manages its support for cover crops and other agricultur­al environmen­tal upgrades such as restoring wetlands, planting forest buffers, and adding grass pastures to graze livestock through the state’s agricultur­e cost share program.

If Pennsylvan­ia lawmakers created a similar cost sharing program for these agricultur­al upgrades, they could accelerate progress toward their 2025 Chesapeake Clean Water Blueprint pollution reduction goals.

However, Maryland’s cover crop progress doesn’t mean the state’s efforts in the agricultur­al sector are complete. From 2010 to 2018, the state reduced nitrogen pollution from farms by 1.6 million pounds, but it will need to reduce an additional 4.6 million pounds of the bay nutrient pollutant to meet 2025 goals for the agricultur­e sector.

To reach the goals, Maryland should invest more in long-term filtering practices. In this year’s General Assembly, there’s legislatio­n to do just that. The measure, Senate Bill 597 and House Bill 687, aims to make it easier for farmers to install new forest buffers along a river, restore wetlands, or turn crop land into pasture for rotational grazing, among other benefits. These practices have a proven ability to filter water, reduce nitrogen pollution and improve soil health. The state has already set the standard in cover crops. Now, state leaders should look to do the same by expanding regenerati­ve agricultur­e practices that filter water and build healthy soil by approving this legislatio­n.

Rob Schnabel, Annapolis

The writer is a Maryland restoratio­n specialist with the Chesapeake Bay Foundation.

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