EPA Announces Historic Funding for Chesapeake Bay Restoration Programs

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has announced that $206 million will be allocated to projects that restore the Chesapeake Bay.
The historic levels of funding reflect the Biden administration’s increased investments in environmental programs and infrastructure projects.
“For a long time, the EPA’s budget has been so small, roughly about $10 billion a year,” EPA Assistant Deputy Administrator Mark Rupp said during a ceremony in Arlington, Va. “Between the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and the Inflation Reduction Act, there’s now over $100 billion flowing through our agency, and it really has been a game changer.”
With $96 million coming from President Joe Biden’s “Investing in America” agenda, the announcement marks the largest single contribution to the Chesapeake Bay Program in its 41-year history.
Maryland is expected to receive over $14 million from the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation’s share of the funds, which in turn makes up 40 individual grant projects.
“Agendas matter, elected officials matter, vision matters,” Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-Va.) said. “For the sake of the country, thank God we have the 117th Congress and Joe Biden to sign those bills into law.”
Attending the ceremony were federal officials, members of Congress, and legislators from state and local governments around the Chesapeake Bay.
The NFWF will give $1 million to farmers in Maryland, Virginia, and West Virginia to implement high-priority water quality conservation practices.
“There are 40,000 farms in Pennsylvania, and many of them contribute nutrients and sediment to the bay,” Rep. Don Beyer (D-Va.) said. “So, anything we can do to get Pennsylvania on board with Maryland, Virginia, and Delaware will be incredibly important.”
The Chesapeake Bay Trust, another non-profit grant-making organization, will receive $13 million from the EPA to assist local organizations improve the bay.
This could include providing computers and other hardware or funding employee training and professional development.
“We have to do better on agricultural runoff, and we have to do better on stormwater runoff. We do well on sewage treatment and on other point source pollution,” Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) told Capital News Service. “This $200 million is going to be heavily focused on grants that focus on non-point sources, and we should continue to see significant improvements.”
Capital News Service is a student-powered news organization run by the University of Maryland Philip Merrill College of Journalism. For 26 years, they have provided deeply reported, award-winning coverage of issues of import to Marylanders.
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