Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Chesapeake Bay improving, but gets D+

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - The Chesapeake Bay is showing encouraging signs of improvement but remains afflicted with dead zones, fish kills and pollution, the Chesapeake Bay Foundation said Tuesday in its "State of the Bay Report."

The report notes improvements since the last report in 2008 in eight of 13 indicators, including a rebounding blue crab population and flourishing underwater grasses, a key habitat for crabs and other marine species.

Using a grading system, the bay's overall grade was a "D-plus," up slightly from the 2008 grade of "D."

"The good news is the Chesapeake Bay is getting better," William C. Baker, president of the foundation, said in an interview. "The bad news is it's still a system out of balance."

The report was released as the Environmental Protection Agency prepares this week to establish mandatory pollution limits for six states and the District of Columbia, which comprise the 64,000 square-mile watershed. The TDMLs - or total daily maximum loads - are aimed at reducing the bay's nitrogen and phosphorous levels by one-quarter by 2025.

"We are at a tipping point," Baker said. "If the EPA stands firm, and the states deliver on their commitments, the bay will become resilient and bountiful. At the same time, reducing pollution will create jobs and improve local economies."

In the foundation's report card, nitrogen and phosphorus levels remain well above recommended limits to restore the bay. The sources are primarily stormwater pollution, urban and agricultural runoff, and detergents.

Fed by this pollution, algae blooms suck oxygen from the bay, creating vast dead zones where no marine life exists.

The foundation measured the bay's health by using 13 indicators. They included marine life such as oysters, shad and striped bass; buffering factors such as forests and wetlands; and water clarity, toxics and dissolved oxygen.

Fisheries such as rockfish and crabs ranked among the highest, although the report raises concerns about striped bass spawning numbers, which were below average for the third year in a row. The bay's blue crab population more than doubled since 2008, to an estimated 315 million.

Management efforts by Maryland and Virginia have been key to their recovery. The states set catch limits, tinkered with the seasons and bought licenses back from watermen, all to ease pressure on the crab.

"The good news there is that a formula was followed," Baker said. "That formula is: use science to set a limit. It's a terrific development."

Under the pollution category, grades were in the "F'' and "D'' range, although water clarity and the toxics category showed improvement since 2008.

Using another measure, the foundation puts the bay's health at 31 out of 100 - with the top measure being the unspoiled ecosystem described by Capt. John Smith during the first European exploration of the bay.

"Our belief is a 50 would be a stable Chesapeake Bay system and a 70 would be restored," Baker said. "We very much believe that a 50 really should be achievable by 2025."

The report also pointed to a new threat to the bay: drilling in a vast natural gas deposit called Marcellus shale, which lies beneath portions of upstate New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia.

The gas is obtained through a process called hydraulic fracking, which uses water, abrasives and chemicals to drill through layers of shale for the gas. The EPA is studying the process to see what risks it poses to water supplies.

___

Online:

Chesapeake Bay Foundation: www.cbf.org


Friday, December 3, 2010

Hearing concludes on water rates

December 3, 2010 - By Matt Armstrong Journal Staff Writer

RANSON - After the conclusion of a two-day public hearing regarding a proposed water rate increase for Jefferson Utility Inc. customers, those involved will have to wait possibly until January for a decision from the West Virginia Public Service Commission.

The public hearing was called, in part, because a number of JUI customers, as well as the Jefferson County Commission, filed for intervenor status with the PSC to protest JUI's most recent rate increase request, which was in excess of a 70 percent increase to current water rates.

JUI owner Lee Snyder, who also owns Snyder Environmental Services, has said the rate increases are needed because JUI, a privately owned company, has continued to lose money over the past several years.

JUI's water rate is $63.60 per 4,000 gallons of water per month, which makes more than 2,000 JUI customers pay the third-highest rate for water in West Virginia, according to a PSC Sewer Utility Cost Ranking from Nov. 26.

The public hearing was presided over by Sunya Anderson, an administrative law judge with the PSC, and Ron Robertson was the PSC staff attorney assigned to the case.

Jefferson County Assistant Prosecuting Attorney James Casimiro was the County Commission's attorney in the case, and attorney Sam Hanna represented Citizens for Fair Water, another intervenor group. Charles Town attorney Dan McDonald represented JUI.

One of the issues raised during the hearing was JUI's financial relationship and debt to JUI, and Snyder admitted that JUI's losses have been dragging SES down since JUI was founded. In an e-mail sent after Thursday's hearing, Casimiro said, "SES is the real utility," and, "JUI is a utility on paper only."

"The evidence showed that the financial arrangements between SES and JUI are so purposefully convoluted that JUI can continue to claim it is losing hundreds of thousands of dollars a year," he said. "Meanwhile, SES's balance sheets remain confidential and hidden from public scrutiny."

Another issue raised by Hanna and Casimiro involved alleged "double billing" that JUI enacts on its customers, which Snyder denied after the hearing.

"There's no double billing, and (Casimiro) knows that," Snyder said. "(Hanna) just wanted to try to make it sound like there was some deception here, but that's clearly not the case. There's certainly no double billing, and we would never be so unfair to even suggest something like that."

Citizens for Fair Water President Craig Daniel said that while he was frustrated with parts of the hearing, he believed good things came out of the proceedings.

"A lot of information that needed to come out has come out, but at the same time, I think until these two companies (JUI and SES) are split and all the convoluted interminglings of the two companies are split, we're never going to be able to truly understand what's happening," Daniel said. "The rate I'm being charged, I don't know any more about it now than I did before."

Jefferson County resident Chris Cody, also with Citizens for Fair Water, said he's "cautiously optimistic" about the decision the PSC will make in the case.

"I think that the Public Service Commission is finally starting to work on the side of the citizens of Jefferson County and the citizens that are paying Jefferson Utilities," Cody said. "I think that they're finally starting to realize that ... the way this is all accounted for is so convoluted that the accountants can't even figure it out. Snyder's own comptroller couldn't figure out how he came up with some of his numbers."

Snyder acknowledged the accounting complexities involved in the hearing and said it was easy for numbers to be misrepresented.

"Unfortunately it's a complicated hearing, there are a lot of accounting complexities and it's easy to misrepresent things inside of that," Snyder said. "And that's what I think we saw at the end of the hearing."

Now that the public hearing has concluded, Anderson must file a brief with her recommendations no later than Dec. 17, and any reply briefs will have to be filed by Dec. 23. The PSC will issue a decision on the case no later than Jan. 7.


Sunday, November 14, 2010

Potomac River report cites farms and forests

By Darryl Fears
Washington Post Staff Writer
November 11, 2010

Here's what the troubled Potomac River needs to get healthy, according to a report released Thursday by a group devoted to protecting it: more forests and farmland to filter toxic rainwater.

But the forests started being stripped long ago, in part to make way for farms. And now farms are being paved over by urban sprawl and asphalt, allowing rain to flow more rapidly to the river, according to the Potomac Conservancy's fourth annual report on the Potomac region.

Even existing farms contribute to the problem, the report said. They're studded with pesticides, nutrients, other chemicals and manure that wash into the river, which is the source of the region's drinking water.

The report called on Potomac region governments, including the District, Virginia and Maryland, and the Environmental Protection Agency, to protect the river from sprawl by preserving more forest and purchasing farmland to slow sprawl.

The report, the "State of the Nation's River 2010," further called on governments to strengthen inspections of farms where livestock produce tons of manure. The waste contains hormones that contaminate fish and nutrients that cause vegetation to grow abnormally.

"Simply put, when it comes to protecting water quality and providing drinking water, farms and forests matter," said Hedrick Belin, president of the Conservancy.

The Conservancy's report comes two weeks before Chesapeake Bay states are expected to submit plans to reduce the bay's diet of pollution, as required by the EPA.

Two of the states, Virginia and Pennsylvania, support a clean river but disagree with the EPA's approach. From the EPA's perspective, the District and Maryland worked harder to meet its requirements.

An organization that represents farmers opposes the Conservancy's report. "We don't agree with groups that propose higher regulations on farms," said Valerie Connelly, a spokeswoman for theMaryland Farm Bureau. "Here in Maryland, we think we're doing a good job."

Connelly said the state has had a plan to limit nutrients that flow into the river system from farms for decades. She said environmental groups too often promote solutions one year, only to say they don't work the next.

"We need to figure out what actually gets the job done" when it comes to cleaning the Potomac, Connelly said. "If it costs 10 times as much for our farmers to operate farms as other states, our farmers can't compete."

The report blamed sprawl for erasing more than three-quarters of a million acres of forests in 30 years.

More than half of the land in the Potomac River basin is forested. But for excellent health, the river basin's tree cover should be about 65 percent, the report said.

"The bay has not improved in the last 26 years," said Ed Merrifield, president of Potomac Riverkeeper. "The water we drink comes from all those areas upstream that produce all that pollution, and that includes agriculture."



Thursday, November 4, 2010

Pollution control requirements draw criticism

November 4, 2010 - By John McVey, Journal staff writer

MARTINSBURG - Jefferson County farmer Cam Tabb disagrees with the way the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has arrived at how much pollution is generated in the Eastern Panhandle by agriculture operations.

"I have a problem with computer-generated models based on estimates," he told representatives of the EPA Wednesday evening during a public meeting about the Chesapeake Bay Restoration program. "I don't have a problem with actual tests, but I have a problem with models."

About 60 farmers, environmental advocacy group members, water and sewer professionals, local government officials and a few members of the general public listened Wednesday evening at the Comfort Inn on Edwin Miller Boulevard in Martinsburg to presentations by EPA and West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection representatives about the Chesapeake Bay Restoration program's impact on the Eastern Panhandle.

The program would place limits on the amount of nutrients, that is nitrogen and phosphorus, and sediments that can get into the Chesapeake Bay through its tributaries, like the Potomac River.

One of the targets of those limits is agriculture operations, which produce nutrient runoff that is transported via rivers, streams and creeks up stream from the bay.

Limits on the amount of pollution getting into the bay from storm water runoff and waste water treatment plants are the other two main targets of the program.

The Chesapeake Bay watershed includes the eight-county Eastern Panhandle and all or part of Delaware, the District of Columbia, Maryland, New York, Pennsylvania and Virginia. A very small part of Monroe County in southern West Virginia also is part of the Chesapeake Bay watershed area.

The Chesapeake Bay restoration program was initiated through an executive order by President Barack Obama in May 2009 that in effect forced the EPA to develop an enhanced strategy to reduce pollution in the bay by setting very strict limits, or total maximum daily loads, on nutrient and sediment pollution.

Those TMDLs, referred to as a pollution diet, were released in early July and placed limits on nutrient and sediment loads that can be allowed by each state.

According to information provided by the EPA, West Virginia's new limit on nitrogen pollution under the Chesapeake Bay Restoration program is about 4.7 million pounds per year. In 2009, according to EPA information, West Virginia's nitrogen load was 5.75 million pounds per year.

For phosphorus, West Virginia's new TMDL has been set at 740,000 pounds per year. The 2009 level was 830,000 pounds per year.

West Virginia's limit for sediment under the new TMDL is 264.8 million pounds per year. The 2009 level was 375.1 million pounds for year.

Agriculture operations are called non-point discharge sources, meaning pollution from most farms comes through runoff of fertilizers, manure or other byproducts of farming into waterways, making the amount of nutrient pollution more difficult to measure.

"I have yet to see a pipe run from a farm into a creek," said Tabb, whose family has been farming in Jefferson County for several generations. "These benchmarks are unreasonably high. How are we going to meet these unreasonable increases? We're already doing a good job."

On the other hand, wastewater treatment plant discharges are easy to measure because sewer treatment facilities, in effect, do have a pipe and therefore are easier to put pressure on to comply with the new, more stringent requirements to lower nutrients getting into the bay's tributaries.

"We can't meet those requirements," Jane Arnett, Charles Town's utilities manager, explained after the meeting, adding that the city's treatment plant would have to be upgraded to achieve the strict levels placed on it by the EPA.

"We have a proposal for a 20-year upgrade that would be a $20 million to $30 million project," she said. "(The EPA requirements) would significantly increase the costs."

Officials with Martinsburg have said it could cost that city as much as $45 million to upgrade its sewer treatment plant to meet the new nutrient control requirements, and officials with the Berkeley County Public Service Sewer District have said it would cost that PSD as much as $40 million to meet the new requirements.

It would cost an estimated $180 million to $240 million to bring all the wastewater treatment plants in the greater, eight-county Panhandle into compliance with the new TMDLs, officials said.

However, Arnett said discussions between all the vested parties are moving in a positive direction.

"We're optimistic things can be worked out," she said.

- Staff writer John McVey can be reached at 304-263-3381, ext. 128, or jmcvey@journal-news.net

Monday, October 25, 2010

Commission hears update on Chesapeake Bay plan

October 23, 2010 - By Matt Armstrong Journal Staff Writer

CHARLES TOWN - The Jefferson County Commission received an update on the Environmental Protection Agency's evaluation of the West Virginia Watershed Implementation Plan at the commission's meeting Thursday afternoon.

The Watershed Implementation Plan is part of the EPA's Chesapeake Bay Total Maximum Daily Load, which is a "pollution diet" with the intention of cleaning up the Chesapeake Bay by curbing the amount of pollutants in the bay's tributaries.

The TMDL involves parts of West Virginia, New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Delaware, Virginia and Washington, D.C.

Alana Hartman, the eastern bay coordinator with the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection, submitted a draft WIP earlier this year, and she spoke to the commission about the EPA's evaluation of the draft and what can be done going forward.

"On Sept. 24, the EPA got back to us about our draft WIP and said that it was deficient, and they have all these suggestions for how we should improve it by Nov. 29," Hartman said. "If we don't there's a backstop TMDL that they will put into place."

Some of the deficiencies the EPA found in West Virginia's draft WIP included relying on "existing, largely voluntary programs with little discussion of how to increase participation" and reduce pollutants.

The evaluation also stated that the WIP lacked action plans, specific milestones or strategies to secure additional funding and resources, and that the WIP should consider how increased funding from the Chesapeake Bay Regulatory and Accountability grant could be used to fill gaps in the program.

"At this point, I don't think it's a question of a county complying. We don't really have a nutrient reduction goal or a sediment reduction goal for each county at this point," Hartman said. "What we do have are permits the DEP handles that are being made more strict, and the county seems to bear the responsibility of raising more funds to implement these more strict permits."

The DEP has until Nov. 29 to resubmit a draft WIP that will pass an EPA evaluation, and until the DEP knows what affected counties in West Virginia need to do to comply with the Chesapeake Bay TMDL, the cost is unknown, Hartman said.

"For example, wastewater treatment plants having to treat the waste more, that costs money, and normally it's the ratepayers and the types of grants that communities can get that kind of overall pay for those things," she said. "The county has a responsibility, but it's kind of broad ... it's not really a certain suite of actions that they must do by a certain time."

Sen. Herb Snyder, D-Jefferson, attended the County Commission's meeting to provide information regarding the state's willingness or ability to help fund the project to make affected counties compliant.

"There's no state funding available, targeted for this Chesapeake Bay (project)," Snyder said. "There's $70 million sitting in Charleston right now in revolving fund money that could be used for this, but they're not meeting certain criteria. I need to tweak that criteria to make the Chesapeake Bay region a priority."

Following the meeting, County Commissioner Lyn Widmyer said she was concerned with how much of the financial brunt Jefferson County would have to pay in the future to be compliant with the TMDL, and what the federal government would do if the county is unable to comply.

"I think they would put a moratorium on all growth and development until such time as we meet their standards," Widmyer said.

Even though she expressed concerns, Widmyer views the project as important for both the Chesapeake Bay and local water sources.

"We're cleaning up the Chesapeake Bay by cleaning up all our local streams and waters," she said. "The Chesapeake Bay is very important, but for me living in Jefferson County, the fact that we're going to clean up our own local waters, that's a great outcome. The question is, how do we pay for it?"

Hartman said she came away from the meeting having learned about some of the local concerns in Jefferson County.

"The goal was to bring everyone up to date and for them to bring me up to date on local concerns, and I think that's exactly what happened," Hartman said. "The knowledge that local people do send letters to the County Commission about their utility bills already, and to have to increase that would be painful, those are the kinds of local things that I don't hear sitting in my office. That was valuable."

Staff writer Matt Armstrong can be reached at 304-725-6581, ormarmstrong@journal-news.net

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Zoning proposal draws public comments

By Tricia Lynn Strader, Special to The Journal

POSTED: July 6, 2010

Article Photos

Journal photo by Tricia Lynn Strader
Citizens examine maps that show proposed districts in the Morgan County Zoning Ordinance during a recent public meeting.

BERKELEY SPRINGS - As Morgan County commissioners continue to work on a proposed zoning ordinance, residents have been eager to share their comments and concerns.

Citizens got that opportunity during a public hearing last week on the proposed 75-page Morgan County Zoning Ordinance. The session attracted about 90 people to what was called an educational public information meeting, where county leaders could listen to public comments and discuss any changes needed.

A debate developed over whether the county should enact the ordinance at all, how it affects some residents or business owners and what legal issues are regarding certain portions of the document.

County Commission President Brenda Hutchinson reiterated to residents that the commission does not plan to enact the ordinance without approval from voters. The commission plans to place it on the ballot come November.

Commissioner Tommy Swaim has said he is against zoning. If it does not pass, Commissioners Brenda Hutchinson and Stacy Dugan have said they do not plan to reintroduce the zoning ordinance in the near future.

The ordinance was drafted by joint cooperation of the Morgan County Planning Commission Land Use Subcommittee and a six-member commissioner-appointed Citizens Advisory Group.

Zoning advocates believe zoning is needed to control development, and to protect the area's natural beauty, waterways and natural resources. They also want to implement impact fees, which cannot be charged without a zoning ordinance.

David Schwartz, George Farnham, Bert Lustig, of the Rural Water Committee, and Bob Rayner are among the zoning advocates.

"I moved here from a densely populated area up north to adopt this county," Rayner said during Thursday's hearing. "I am impressed with the forward-thinking nature. No plan is perfect. You can add and subtract."

Reuben Darby opposes zoning but served on the land use subcommittee. He was worried about too much restriction on industry.

"Industry pays more taxes," Darby said.

Others agreed there should be encouragement of business to take tax burden off residents.

Larry Lower thought it was a modest proposal that allows for changes in the future, which he said is critical. "We need to look at the future. But I'd like to see a fairly intensive education program between now and an election. People may not search out the answers themselves."

Some said many of the ordinance sections were too vague and open to too much interpretation by the County Commission.

Attorney Jerry Berman said he generally supports zoning to keep the area's rural character.

"I grew up in Hawaii. My people didn't want zoning, just two hotels. Now you can't see the beaches. I've read the comprehensive plan, the subdivision ordinance, and this ordinance. They're not easy to understand."

He said those who drafted the ordinance should have an educational seminar to explain what they intended to do about rural character, density and commercialism.

"That's called the legislative intent. Not just maps or overlays. I need more information," he said.

Darby countered the county should not educate at taxpayer expense.

"We had that in Berkeley County, and it was propaganda. If pro-zoners want to educate, that's what the First Amendment is all about. As far as the county educating, this document is perfect, not taking one side or the other," he said.

County Commission candidate Bradley Close said the $34,000 spent on the zoning study and ordinance could have been better spent elsewhere.

"Please read the entire ordinance carefully," he said. "Now, think about three things. We need jobs. Let's invest this time and money in creating jobs. Second, the best use of any property is best determined by those who have a vested interest in that property. And the County Commission and Planning Commission already have various ordinances in place (like the subdivision ordinance). With those and the free market, we can grow without any other restrictions."

Critics including Jim DuPont challenged a 1 percent rule within the ordinance, which says 1 percent of eligible voters need to place an amendment on the ballot. As it stands now, the ordinance says substantive changes to the zoning map or text can be changed by the County Commission enacting the amendment, placing the amendment on the ballot, or placing the proposal on the ballot if petitioned to do so by at least 1percent of affected eligible voters.

Section 8A-7-8 of the West Virginia Code stipulates amendments can be placed on the ballot if petitioned by at least 10 percent of eligible voters.

If the ordinance passes, he said, "the issue will be taken to court. I'll wager $1,000 with anyone on the panel willing to take that bet."

Many citizens said it does not comply with state law and the one percent clause is illegal.

Former Commissioner Bob Ford spoke on behalf of PROMOTE, a property rights advocacy group. He challenged the commissioners to a debate on zoning to air local radio, funded by PROMOTE.

"Seeing the County Commission put their legislative hats on," he said, "I believe we need to stick by the state code. Fifty thousand dollars to $60,000 has been spent in attorney fees defending the county. Many issues in this ordinance are bogus. And the 1 percent rule will be overturned. That number is so low, it could harm a citizen trying to get relief. A few people could stop something."

Delegate Daryl Cowles, R-Morgan, once served on the Planning Commission and was involved in drafting the comprehensive plan. He is also a builder. Speaking as a citizen, he said there already are enough ordinances on the books that could be amended.

"There's harm in impact fees," Cowles said. "A building permit could cost $13,000 for a doublewide on two acres. That could be a first-time homebuyer, or your son or daughter. Under this ordinance, Unger's Store could not reopen. An antique shop in Greenwood would not be allowed. And it's hurtful to farmers."

Zoning advocates countered that impact fees would be charged to builders. While saying they wanted to protect against overdevelopment and did not want to pay the bill for added infrastructure, anti-zoning advocates said fees will be added to home prices and passed to taxpayers.

The most criticism by many was the cost to taxpayers for the zoning study and implementation/enforcement of the controversial ordinance.

Todd Farris and others asked how the county will pay for a full-time zoning administrator or court costs if challenges are made, and Hutchinson said it is not in the budget yet.

Cowles said costs could ultimately be in the hundreds of thousands for staff, attorney fees, and enforcement.

Meanwhile, David Schwartz said zoning is necessary to protect the water supply, environment and to promote clean air. "The developers overwhelmed Martinsburg. We need to keep our small-town quality. You have provided a provision for non-conforming uses, so there is flexibility," he said.

Fifth-generation farmer Phil Harmison explained the trials of farming with existing federal, county and state regulations.

"We just don't need more regulations," he said.

Lynn Morton has a business on 80 acres in the western part of the county, and she is worried that the proposed zoning restrictions would prevent her from expanding.

"I might be stifled by the size restriction," she said. "We are a quarter-mile from our neighbor. How would that hurt anybody? I was told to move to light industrial area. Why move somewhere when I have 80 acres? What do I do now? Do I move my business to the back 40 acres I have in Hampshire County? That would eliminate jobs here."

During the public meeting, Hutchinson gave a presentation describing what a zoning ordinance is and how it would be enacted. There would be five zoning districts, three overlay districts and allowances or restrictions for each district. Supplemental or conditional uses would be approved by a zoning board of appeals, made of five appointees. A zoning administrator would be hired at a possible salary of $50,000.

Copies of the Morgan County Zoning Ordinance are available at commission offices, public libraries and www.morgancountywv.gov. Written comments may be submitted via e-mail by Wednesday tobhutchinson@morgancountywv.gov, tswaim@morgancountywv.gov, or sdugan@morgancountywv.gov.

Friday, July 2, 2010

In Your Backyard: Native Plants

With increased development, deforestation, loss of habitat, and extensive lawns, the Chesapeake Bay watershed has lost much of the diversity and genetic heritage of its native plants. Local wildlife, such as birds, insects, and mammals are also critically dependent on native plant communities (the zebra swallowtail butterfly, for example, feeds almost exclusively on pawpaw trees during its larval stage).


Native plants are plants that are indigenous to a specific region (eg. The Mid-Atlantic) or area (eg. the county where you live). They are adapted to local conditions of moisture, soil, and seasonal temperatures. While native plants are not maintenance-free, they require much less water, fertilizer, and care than non-native plants.

How to Choose Native Plants for Your Landscape

When restoring forests, wetlands, meadows, and shoreline buffers or creating formal landscape beds in a city or suburban garden, make a conscious choice to select natives instead of non-native plants.

Where to Find Native Plants

If possible, purchase native plants from local growers (see Native Plant suppliers below). Do not dig up plants from the wild; many natives have become threatened or endangered species due to this practice. Some plants require specific soil fungi and will not survive when transplanted in your garden. Urge your local nurseries to carry true native plants.

Non-Native Invasive Plants

A major reason for the loss of native plants in our landscapes is that their habitat has been taken over by non-native invasive plants. While not all non-natives are invasive (spreading aggressively with no natural controls), some species have done great harm to local ecosystems. Commonly found examples include purple loosestrife, kudzu, multiflora rose, English ivy, Tree of Heaven (Ailanthus) and Bradford Pear. Control of invasive plants can be difficult, expensive and time-consuming. If you have any non-native invasive plants in your landscape, consider removing them and replacing them with native plants.

  • Norway maples are invasive and shade out native groundcovers, choose a red maple instead.
  • Bradford pears are invasive and overused in the landscape; choose an American serviceberry instead, which provides food for wildlife and beautiful white flowers.

Non-Native Resources

National Park Service Publication
"Plant Invaders of Mid-Atlantic Nature Areas."

Maryland Native Plant Society
Information on controlling non-natives, with lists of native plant alternatives.
P.O. Box 4877, Silver Spring, MD 20914

The Nature Conservancy, Maryland Chapter
Information on chemical and non-chemical methods for removing specific non-native invasive plants.
5410 Grosvenor Lane, Suite 100, Bethesda, MD 20814
301/897-8570

Native Plants Resources

General information:
Delaware Native Plant Society
302/674-5187

National Arboretum
3501 New York Avenue NE, Washington, DC 20002
202/245-2726

Maryland Native Plant Society
P.O. Box 4877, Silver Spring, MD 20914.

Maryland Department of National Resources,
State Forest Tree Nursery
800.TREESMD.

Pennsylvania Native Plant Society
P.O. Box 281, State College, PA 16804-0281

Virginia Native Plant Society
540/837-1600

USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service.

US Fish and Wildlife Service
Maryland native plant lists to download



Native Plant Suppliers

Anne Arundel County Planning and Zoning, Annapolis, MD.
Will provide free marsh grasses (Spartina alterniflora) after application and site visit is complete to Anne Arundel County residents.
410/222-7441

Biohabitats, Inc.
15 W. Aylesbury Road, Timonium, MD 21093
410/337-3659

Chesapeake Native Nursery
Native plants propagated from indigenous seed sources. Mail order, nursery location in Riva, MD.
326 Boyd Avenue # 2, Takoma Park, MD 20912

Clear Ridge Nursery
Native trees and shrubs for conservation.
217 Clear Ridge Road, Union Bridge, MD 21791
888/226-9226

Environmental Concern
Retail nursery for riparian trees and wetland shrubs, education and research facility.
P.O. Box P, St. Michaels, MD 21663
410/745-9620

Ernst Conservation Seeds
Seeds of native grasses, wildflowers, wetland plants and shrubs; live stakes for streambank restoration.
9006 Mercer Pike, Meadville, PA 16335.
800/873-3321

Lower Marlboro Nursery
Native perennials, wildflowers, shrubs. Open by appointment.
P.O. Box 1013, Dunkirk, MD 20754
301/812-0808

Octoraro Native Plant Nursery
Native trees, shrubs, and herbaceous plants for reforestation and streambank restoration.
6126 Street Road, Kirkwood, PA 17536-9647
717/529-4099

Pinelands Nursery, Inc.
Wetland trees, shrubs, herbaceous plants.
323 Island Road, Columbus, New Jersey, 08022
800/667-2729

Sylva Native Nursery and Seed Co.
Native trees and shrubs.
1683 Sieling Farm Road, New Freedom, PA 17349.
717/227-0486

Treessentials
Tree tubes and deer repellent for tree seedlings.
800/248-8239


In Your Backyard: Lawns

Green, manicured lawns are better at slowing runoff and reducing erosion than hard paved surfaces but they are usually achieved at a high environmental cost. Consider reducing or eliminating your lawn. Bay friendly landscaping helps create filters and habitats to slow runoff and keep sediment and nutrients out of waterways.

CBF's lawncare brochure (pdf) will walk you through eight key steps to ensuring a healthy, beautiful yard and clean rivers and streams. Here is a summary:

  1. Test your Soil
    Find out what your lawn actually needs to thrive, and find organic, local materials to protect it.
  2. Feed the Soil to Feed the Lawn:
    Fertilizers and Compost Choose natural, organic fertilizers, or create your own organic compost to give your lawn the nutrients -- and only those nutrients -- it needs. The best alternative to water-soluble chemical fertilizers for your lawn and garden is compost. You can make your own from food waste, grass clippings, yard waste, and other natural ingredients, or purchase it from garden centers. Nutrient and mineral-rich compost:
    • Improves the productivity and health of the soil,
    • Increases rainfall and runoff absorption, and
      slowly releases nitrogen to your plants (and not the Bay) where it is needed the most.
    • A compost “bin” can be as simple as a pile of leaves left to decompose in a corner of your yard or it can be a purchased container made to speed up the decomposition process. The best compost is a mix of:
      • Two (2) parts “green” material: vegetable peelings, coffee grounds, egg shells, wilted flowers, and grass clippings (do not use animal products such as meat or fats); and
      • One (1) part “brown” material: raked leaves, grass clippings, straw, hay, sawdus
      • Add water if necessary to keep the pile from drying out, but don’t let it get soggy. Turn it every now and then to circulate the material, add oxygen, and speed up decomposition.
  3. Mow High
    Don't cut your grass too short. Taller grasses help prevent weeds, allow roots to reach deeper and reduce runoff, and stay green longer during drought. A height of 2 1/2 to 3 inches is ideal.
  4. Pick the Right Grass Seed
    Do your research (or use CBF's guide) to select the best grass for your lawn.
  5. Water Thoughtfully
    Don't overwater your lawn. In fact, excess water can cause disease. During the hot summer, it is normal for the grass to go dormant, and the tops of grass blades to go brown.
  6. Deal with Lawn Problems Safely
    Weeds can be removed by hand, or with natural products like corn gluten or vinegar. Most insects and "nuisance" animals, like moles, aerate the soil and are actually good for your lawn!
    • Use a weed-popper or trowel to remove individual weeds
    • Spray full strength vinegar on young leaves (works especially well on a hot day)
    • Burn weeds with a propane torch
    • Pour boiling water over weeds
    • Feed lawn with compost or organic fertilizers, so grasses outcompete the weeds
    • Learn to live with a dandelion or two
  7. Minimize Pollution from Lawn Equipment
    A gas-powered push mover used for one hour produces as much air pollution as ten cars driven the same amount of time.
  8. Reduce your Lawn
    Great expanses of grass are not your only option. Consider enlarging flower beds, planting native shrubs under large trees, letting fallen leaves serve as compost, and creating a rain (or wetland) garden in wet areas. Smaller lawns need less water, maintenance (mowing, watering, and fertilizing), and toxic chemicals.
    • Determine how much of your lawn you actually use (for a play area, paths and walkways, access to the mailbox, or utility areas).
    • Plant alternatives to lawn area, such as islands of trees and shrubs or a no-mow meadow.
    • Bring the edge of your property closer by densely planting a mixture of native trees and shrubs. The result in a short time is a wooded area that you don’t have to mow and provides many wildlife benefits.

In Your Backyard: Wildlife


More than three million acres in the Chesapeake Bay watershed are covered with lawn and turf grasses. By converting a small portion of your lawn to a more diverse habitat, you can provide wildlife with food, water, shelter, and cover for nesting, while adding beauty and interest to your landscape.

Birds (resident and migratory species), insects (including butterflies), amphibians (frogs, toads, salamanders), reptiles (box turtles, snakes), and mammals (foxes, opossums, raccoons, squirrels, deer) will all benefit from diverse trees, grasses, and shrubs.

To Welcome Wildlife:

  • Choose native plants when restoring forests, wetlands, meadows, and shoreline buffers or creating formal landscape beds in a city or suburban garden. Most wildlife is dependent on native plants for food and cover.
  • Plant a variety of native vegetation and choose plants with different heights at maturity. For example, tall oaks at the back of your property can be underplanted with smaller trees, (such as redbud), shrubs (such as high bush blueberry) and a groundcover (white wood asters). This type of "edge habitat" is actually preferred by many kinds of wildlife, since it provides food and cover at various levels.
  • Do not deadhead flowers or seed heads; they are important nectar and food sources.
  • Provide the necessary food, water, and cover components for wildlife.

Food Plants for Wildlife:

  • Nut and acorn trees (oaks, hickories)
  • Plants for all seasons (spring and summer flowers, late blooming fall asters and goldenrods, and winter plants that retain their seeds).
  • Hummingbird plants (native honeysuckle, trumpet creeper)
  • Plants for butterflies and other pollinators
  • Grasses and legumes
  • Conifers
  • Dead trees or snags
  • Hedgerows

Water Sources:

  • Natural puddles that don't drain or drain slowly
  • Streams, creeks
  • Bird baths
  • Man-made ponds

Cover for Resting and Nesting:

  • Brush and rock piles
  • Dead trees or snags
  • A mix of cover at all canopy levels: trees, shrubs, and groundcovers
  • A no-mow meadow
  • Bird nest boxes
  • Hedgerows
  • Evergreens (pines, holly)

Plant a Butterfly or Pollinator Garden

  • Choose a sunny, sheltered location with average soil for a butterfly garden. The garden will feed butterflies but also other important pollinators, such as moths, wasps, bees, and beetles.
  • Plant a mix of host plants (where eggs are laid and that caterpillars feed on) and nectar plants (that adult butterflies and moths feed on).
  • Choose single flowered plants, not doubles that are hard for pollinators to access.
  • Do not use pesticides or BT (Bacillus thurigiensis, used for controlling Japanese beetle grubs) on plants or your lawn; these are toxic to insects, including butterflies and caterpillars.

Wildlife Habitat Resources

National Wildlife Federation, Backyard Habitat Certification Program

Maryland Department of Natural Resources, Wild Acres Program

WindStar Wildlife Institute has a certification and internet course with emphasis on creating habitat for wildlife with native plants.

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Open Citizens Mtg. Thursday July 15th 7 pm


The Blue Ridge Mountain Communities Area Watershed Plan Citizens Committee along with the Jefferson County Department of Planning & Zoning would like to invite you to attend a series of meetings to gather citizen input related to the Blue Ridge Mountain, the next one will be held on Thursday July 15th at 7:00 p.m. – Blue Ridge Mountain Fire Co.

NCTC Event: Sep 8 Ned Tillman on Chesapeake Watershed

The Chesapeake Watershed: A Sense of Place and a Call to Action presentation by author Ned Tillman Wednesday September 8, 2010 at 7:00 pm Co-sponsored by the Potomac Valley Audubon Society

The Book - The Chesapeake Watershed helps create a Sense of Place in the reader and offers them a Call to Action to help save the Bay and our planet from a range of human impacts, including global warming. It is a timely book. Blending natural history and personal narrative, the author takes the reader into the murky shallows of the Bay to chase crabs, onto the Eastern Shore to hunt quail, and into the Piedmont to paddle through white water. At the end of each chapter, there are suggestions the reader can pursue to become a better steward of the watershed and our planet.

Ned Tillman website: The Chesapeake Watershed Info@TheChesapeakeWatershed.com




Sunday, June 20, 2010

Experts question spill preparedness in Chesapeake

Quick-fire response teams needed, scientists and environmentalists say

By Sharon Behn

June 17, 2010




As Congress hears testimony about the handling of the Gulf of Mexico spill, scientists and environmentalists question how prepared the government is to respond if a ship or barge were to leak oil into the Chesapeake Bay.

Experts say a quick-fire response is needed to stop oil from spreading in the shallow bay and reaching the shores.

"There is no functioning [emergency response] system on the Bay in the terms of what we call operational. …," said William C. Boicourt, an expert in physical oceanographic processes at the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science at Horn Point. He said the center has been working on an early warning system for wind and oil patterns, but such a system is at least two years away.

"We don't know of any detailed plans and response scenarios that are in place that have been practiced that are ready to go at a moment's notice," William C. Baker, president of the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, said. "Clearly the states and the Coast Guard ought to do more planning."

Coast Guard Lt. Cmdr. Michael J. DaPonte said there are area contingency plans — collective efforts by federal, state and local agencies and industry representatives — to respond to water-related disasters on the bay. But primary responsibility for cleaning any oil spill is the party responsible for the spill and the contractors it hires to do that work, DaPonte said.

He added the Coast Guard is not meant to stand by "like the fire department." If there is an oil spill, the Coast Guard "does not jump to the response – it's the responsible party that has to do that."

But given the narrowness of the bay — it is six to 10 miles at some points — and its shallow bottom — 160 feet at the deepest point — an early warning system would be essential to saving fragile marshes and grasses that are vital to the already pollution-impaired waters, Boicourt said.

While there is no oil drilling on the Chesapeake, container ships and cruise ships carrying large fuel loads constantly traverse the bay, along with fuel-oil-carrying barges and tugs. If a ship or a barge were to hit the Bay Bridge and cause a spill — even one smaller than the BP accident in the Gulf — "you could have a devastating effect" on the large but shallow estuary, Baker said.

The Coast Guard is required to hold area-level, full-scale drills where boom actually splashes water every three years, said Lt. Kristen Preble, chief of the contingency preparedness branch within the Contingency Preparedness and Force Readiness Office at Hampton Roads. The contingency plans cover everything from oil spills to terrorist threats, she said.

The last full-scale drill the Coast Guard conducted in the upper Chesapeake's watershed was three years ago, on the Potomac River, said Coast Guard Lt. Bryan A. Naranjo. That drill was on coping with a scenario of a barge spilling its load of fuel oil destined for delivery to Andrews Air Force base, he said.

A full-scale exercise scheduled for August was postponed until next spring because of the number of personnel and equipment being directed to the Gulf oil disaster, Naranjo said.

Shaun Adamec, a spokesman for Gov. Martin O'Malley, said full-scale first-response exercises beyond scenario discussions would be an "unnecessary use of resources," given that there are no major oil tankers or drilling in the bay, and because of the pressures created by the Gulf spill. He added that equipment exists to deal with oil spills.

The governor has directed his cabinet members who focus on bay issues to insure that the necessary equipment is properly maintained, Adamec said.

Jay Apperson, spokesman for the Maryland Department of the Environment, which Adamec said is charged with maintaining equipment, said it is "prepared and equipped to clean up oil spills."

Apperson said MDE has conducted small water-related spill drills. One drill two years ago on the Susquehanna River and another last month on the Wicomico River were open-water drills.

Another involving the bay itself and another planned for this September off the coast of Delmarva are "table-top" exercises: "Basically people get their plans out and tell each other what they would do in the case of a spill," Apperson said. "It helps make sure the information is up to date."

Fred Millar, an emergency preparedness and homeland security expert, cautioned against the over-reliance on plans that local communities do not understand.

"Plans are plans. If they sit on a shelf and bear no relation to reality and are not communicated to the public, then that means they are useless," said the former member of D.C.'s local emergency planning committee. "One way to make sure that plans are useful is to do drills very frequently, where you run a simulation in a full-scale drill."

But drills cost money, and emergency services across the country are underfunded and under-resourced, he said. For the Coast Guard to hold a full-scale drill on the Chesapeake only every three years, Millar said, reflects how starved it was of resources and personnel.

Boicourt said quick-response teams need to be in place. "My sense is that if things were in place, then it would not necessarily be a disaster. But there are no quickly deployable" teams, he said.

And "when they talk about quickly deployable, that means not to just call up Baltimore, but have things distributed around the Bay and come out, like fire trucks."

MDE's Apperson said the department has trailers with more than 11,000 feet of boom, five spill response vessels and equipment deployed in different places throughout the state. It handles about 400 incidents a year on land and about 30 on water, he said.

The seven-person emergency response team trains regularly, he said. "A few times a year, we train other people," he said. "We are at an advanced level."

In training, a hypothetical spill is designed, wind and tide are considered, and a boom is deployed, he said.

Dr. Beth McGee, a senior water quality scientist with the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, said the last large-scale oil spill in the bay region involved a pipeline break at Pepco's Chalk Point power plant on the Patuxent River in April 2000 and involved roughly 150,000 gallons.

"For the Patuxent, it was a big spill," said McGee, who at the time was working for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, a leader in that clean-up effort. A significant amount of marshes and beaches in the Swanson Creek Marsh were oiled in the incident.

Local, state and federal services reacted promptly to the emergency, she said, but Pepco's contractor in the incident failed to boom off a particular creek that had been identified as sensitive because its "boom was dry rotted and wouldn't work," McGee said.

Lawmakers, business leaders and environmental advocates have slammed British Petroleum for its inadequate plans as well as its slow and largely ineffective response to the oil spill in the Gulf. BP's Deepwater Horizon rig caught fire and sank off the coast of Louisiana on April 22, freeing hundreds of millions of gallons of oil into the Gulf of Mexico.

The Coast Guard has become the lead player in the federal government's response to the Gulf spill, coordinating between BP and state and local officials.

According to the Center for Public Integrity, the U.S. government had conducted four major drills over the last eight years to prepare for such a massive oil spill – all of which "foreshadowed the weaknesses in coordination, communication, expertise, and technology that have plagued the federal response" to the BP disaster.

President Obama in March proposed opening up parts of the Virginia coast near the mouth of the bay to oil and gas drilling. Although action on that has been suspended pending an investigation into the Gulf incident, environmentalists and U.S. Sens. Benjamin L. Cardin and Barbara A. Mikulski (D-Md.) remain against any offshore drilling or exploration along the mid-Atlantic coast.

"The real solution is minimizing the amount of oil you handle on the water," Baker said. "Whenever oil is handled on the water, it gets into the water in some quantity. That quantity is determined only by the level of human error and technical failure."

This story was produced by the News21 team at the University of Maryland's Philip Merrill College of Journalism, in partnership with The Baltimore Sun.