The Capital

It’s time for state leaders to double down on Chesapeake Bay support

- Alison Prost Alison Prost is the vice president for Environmen­tal Protection and Restoratio­n at the Annapolis- based Chesapeake Bay Foundation.

For the past four years, the watershed- wide cleanup has stagnated. Lastweek, we released our latest State of the Bay report, the Chesapeake Bay Foundation’s biennial check- in on the estuary’s health. For the second time in four years, the overall health score decreased, and the grade remains aD+.

It may be easy forMarylan­ders to blame Pennsylvan­ia or the anti- environmen­tal administra­tion ofPresiden­t Donald Trump for the recent lack of cleanup progress. Both are deserving.

Pennsylvan­ia’s legislatur­e has failed to fund pollution reduction practices such as forested buffers and healthy soil programs on agricultur­al land. The EPA has failed to offer any kind of significan­t federal aid to support Pennsylvan­ia’s cleanup. The Trump administra­tion has rolled back federal regulation­s that protected seasonal waterways and limited automobile emissions.

However, one of the major reasons the 2020 State of the Bay score declined in the latest report was due to a significan­t decline in the rockfish population.

CBF scientists evaluate key indicators in these categories such as nitrogen pollution, underwater grasses, and in the fisheries section — rockfish. The Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission’s recent stock assessment of the rockfish population found female rockfish biomass dropped 40 percent from 2010 to 2018. These trends are worrisome and a sign that strong, swift action is needed to stem the decline.

In 2020, each Atlantic state took action to begin to rebuild the rockfish population. Virginia started early, closing its spring trophy season in 2019 and 2020 to help protect large female rockfish capable of spawning at high rates. The state also closed the rockfish season during July and August.

Maryland, however, kept a shortened trophy season, continued to allow fishing during most of the summer, and issued a series of different regulation­s for various groups. We believe the state should simplify its rockfish regulation­s, consider shutting down the fishery for longer periods during the hottest portions of the summer, and end the trophy season to allowthe species to recover.

Maryland is also at a crossroads in its efforts to meet pollution reduction goals in time for the 2025 bay cleanup deadline. The state has made significan­t progress reducing nitrogen and phosphorus by upgrading itswastewa­ter treatment plants. However, thatwork is largely completed.

Now, we’re urging state leaders to accelerate investment­s in natural filters — trees, forested buffers, wetlands, green infrastruc­ture, and other long- term environmen­tal improvemen­ts. Doing so will reduce runoff from cities, suburban areas, andagricul­tural land. Thework will benefit rockfish as well by helping to reduce low oxygen dead zones in the bay.

The 2021Genera­l Assembly provides an opportunit­y to kickstart this work. The Climate SolutionsN­owAct, a proposed bill, calls for the state to plant 5million trees by 2030. Trees do the hard work of filtering our air and water for free as well as reducing carbon emissions. Planting more of them fights climate change and beautifies our communitie­s. We hope legislator­s will support the bill.

The General Assembly should also prioritize funding other environmen­tal improvemen­ts. This year legislator­s will face tough budget decisions due to the pandemic and education priorities.

However, addressing those issues should not come at the cost of the environmen­t as climate change begins to bear down on the state. Failing to invest in permanent, natural improvemen­tsnowwillm­eanmore tidal flooding, saltwater intrusion on farmland, and loss of coastal communitie­s in the future.

There are models already in Maryland that show how we can complete the work needed to reach the 2025 pollution reduction goals. Counties such as Frederick, Howard, and Anne Arundel increased forest protection­s to preserve more trees. On the Eastern Shore, rural jurisdicti­ons worked together to plant trees, shrubs, and other environmen­tal improvemen­ts on public lands. More and more farmers across the state are evaluating their soil health and working to improve it by using rotational grazing, cover crops, and forested buffers.

Let’s celebrate these efforts by replicatin­g and investing in them. Time is running out to finish the bay cleanup. Maryland can do its part and, hopefully, in a way that serves as an example to the rest of thewatersh­ed and theworld.

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