Underfunded and Polluted: Solutions to Fund Clean Water in Pennsylvania and the Chesapeake Bay Watershed
On April 8, 2021, PennFuture released a report designed to get Pennsylvania back on track toward funding clean water goals here at home and in the Chesapeake Bay. This report describes the pollution problems Pennsylvania faces in the Susquehanna and Potomac River basins and explores the history of restoration efforts.
Pennsylvania's role in Chesapeake Bay restoration efforts began in earnest 38 years ago when Governor Dick Thornburgh participated as a signatory to the first multistate Chesapeake Bay Agreement. While some progress has been made since that agreement in 1983, many obstacles still remain. The most persistent is the need for more state funding to achieve $521 million in annual projects to cut water pollution in Pennsylvania's portion of the Chesapeake Bay watershed - a goal state policymakers have chronically missed by at least $325 million a year, and often by more.
Specifically, the report puts forth a legislative agenda that achieves the $521 million funding need while also meeting the Commonwealth's Chesapeake Bay TMDL goals. The policy recommendations in this report fall under six categories:
- Funding for State Agency and Technical Assistance Staffing
- Policies to Reduce Nutrient Pollution from the Agriculture Sector
- Policies to Reduce Pollution from Stormwater Runoff
- Policies to Reduce Nutrient Pollution from Forestry-Related Practices
- Funding Pilot County Practices
- Funding the Remaining Reductions in the Wastewater Sector
To read the report, please click here.