The EPA, between
late April and mid-May, 2010, has been unveiling a new federal strategy for the
Chesapeake region. The program will affect about 64,000-square-miles of watershed
and industries surrounding it in Virginia and Maryland. The strategy includes
using rigorous regulations and conservation practices on 4 million acres of
farms, conserving 2 million acres of undeveloped land and rebuilding oysters in
20 tributaries of the bay. Federal agencies plan to establish milestones every
two years for actions to make progress toward measurable environmental goals.
A lawsuit brought
against the agency (during the last administration) for dereliction of duty in
the watershed was a contributory impetus for this action. According to court
documents for that case, the EPA must implement the Chesapeake total maximum
daily load (TMDL) by
Dec. 31,
2010, expand regulation of urban and suburban stormwater and
concentrated animal feeding operations, and increase enforcement activities and
funding for state regulatory programs.
The "Strategy
for Protecting and Restoring the Chesapeake Bay Watershed" (available
here)
was developed under the executive order issued by President Obama in May 2009,
which declared the Chesapeake Bay a national treasure and ushered in a new era
of shared federal leadership, action and accountability.
According to the
EPA, agencies will be "dedicating unprecedented resources, targeting
actions where they can have the most impact, ensuring that federal lands and
facilities lead by example in environmental stewardship and taking a
comprehensive, ecosystem-wide approach to restoration." In addition, the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers will launch a bay-wide oyster restoration strategy. A map tracking
enforcement actions in the region is available
clicking
here.
SOURCES: EPA Press releases on May 10, 2010 and
April 28, 2010, plus press release from District Court of the District of
Columbia.