actually clean up the bay instead of cutting funds:
the federal gov't is cutting funding"It seems like there's a rollback a day in the EPA," said Sue Brown, executive director of the Maryland League of Conservation Voters. "That is not going to mean good things for our health and cleaning up Chesapeake Bay."
The fiscal 2004 federal budget unveiled this week cuts funding for wastewater treatment plant upgrades in Maryland to $20 million, down from about $32 million in fiscal 2002. Another $30 million was cut for Virginia and Pennsylvania.
"We're going to be witnessing some serious setbacks in our ongoing efforts to restore the Chesapeake Bay watershed if these funding cuts are implemented," said Jesse Jacobs, a spokesman for Sen. Paul Sarbanes, D-Md.
Larry Simms, president of the Maryland Watermen's Association, said the proposal suggests the administration is "not being serious about cutting pollution in the Chesapeake Bay."
Theresa Pierno, Maryland executive director for the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, said the cut places the state further behind in its drive to reduce nitrogen pollution.
http://tools.mdlcv.org/objects/view.acs?object_id=2263and the state is chipping in to make sure the bay stays pollutedBIG CHICKEN AND THE BAY
June 20, 2003
Washington Post
Page A24
Editorial
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A14733-2003Jun19.htmlAny state-stumping politician in Maryland knows, according to this
editorial, the photo-op appeal and importance of paying homage to the
Chesapeake Bay. As candidate and now governor, Republican Robert L. Ehrlich
Jr. has extolled the virtues of its waterways, dutifully adding the standard
call for continued cleanup efforts. Mr. Ehrlich also knows that on the
Delmarva peninsula, chickens -- about a billion of them at any given time --
are big business, not eager for tight controls.
During his campaign for governor, Mr. Ehrlich was cited as noting his
sponsorship in Congress of legislation to fund sewage system upgrades,
stating that as governor he would make this issue a priority.
He also said
he would seek to ease rules that have been holding the big poultry companies
accountable at least in part for pollution caused by chicken waste flowing
into the bay. Last Friday the governor delivered on one of those pledges: He
announced that he is getting rid of the requirements aimed at requiring the
companies to deal with the ecological damage that this industry inflicts on
the bay. Instead, he said he will look for "innovative" voluntary measures
or economic incentives to curb the flow of millions of pounds of phosphorous
and nitrogen into the bay and the waters flowing into it.
http://131.104.232.9/animalnet/2003/6-2003/animalnet_june_20.htm