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May 8, 2025

Chestertown Spy

Nonpartisan and Education-based News for Chestertown

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Ecosystem Eco Notes

State park about to be added to last Maryland county without one

February 20, 2025 by Bay Journal Leave a Comment

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The centerpiece of a proposed state park in Wicomico County is a house built in the mid-1700s, known as Long Hill. (Photo courtesy Maryland Department of Natural Resources)

All but one of Maryland’s 23 counties contains at least one state park. But that could change soon.

Wicomico County is home to more than 100,000 residents as well as the Eastern Shore’s largest city, Salisbury, but no state parks — although one appears to be in the offing after a Feb. 12 vote by the Maryland Board of Public Works.

The three-member board, which is chaired by Gov. Wes Moore (D), approved the Department of Natural Resources’ plans to purchase a 445-acre property along Wetipquin Creek for $3.3 million.

The property hosts a variety of ecosystems, including tidal marshes, oak and hickory forests, mixed pines and intertidal scrubland along the Nanticoke River tributary. But its centerpiece is a house built in the mid-1700s, known as Long Hill.

“Wetipquin Creek State Park will expand our state parks to every county in Maryland, an important milestone in our mission,” said Maryland Park Service Director Angela Crenshaw. “Once open, the new park will provide recreational and educational opportunities for visitors to immerse themselves in the outdoor world by fishing and paddling [and] exploring trails that meander through forest, wetland and meadow habitats.”

The Park Service said the proposal is still in the planning stages, and there is no time frame for the park’s opening. But officials say the property could ultimately offer interpretive and educational programs, including tours and events exploring the region’s history, the lives of enslaved people at Long Hill and the history of the area’s Indigenous people.

The acquisition is expected to be finalized later this year.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Eco Notes

The magic of frogs and forts at Pickering Creek EcoCamp

February 20, 2025 by Pickering Creek Audubon Center Leave a Comment

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Meander through mud, wallow in the wetland, and frolic in the forest at our summer EcoCamp! Our exciting, unique, and hands-on activities allow campers to engage with nature at their own pace, by providing a welcoming and safe environment to explore. Campers learn about nature and gain outdoor skills through hiking, swimming, playing games, fishing, and creating crafts. Small groups of campers will discover the wetlands, forests, creek, and pond along with an experienced counselor and EcoCamp alumni (our enthusiastic Junior Naturalists). Test your skills at spotting wildlife, playing camouflage, catching frogs, building forts, and canoeing.
Pickering Creek Audubon Center’s EcoCamp has a philosophy that campers will have rich learning experiences in a fun and safe outdoor environment. EcoCamp’s small groups and low student to instructor ratio provide for an exceptional outdoor summer camp experience. Camp leadership has significant experience leading the Center’s ever popular summer programs and this summer’s camp staff features a number of excellent returning staff.  Pickering Creek offers exceptionally well-trained and experienced instructors and leaders for all its programs.
Each camp is one week long and focuses on a unique nature-inspired theme. Pickering Creek offers camps for two groups: Fledglings (students entering K-1st next fall) and Larks and Shrikes (these groups are mix of students entering 2nd -7th grades). All camp days operate from 9:00 am – 4:00 pm.
Fledglings will get a gentle introduction to the outdoors through hikes and activities especially tailored for their abilities. Walks are shorter in length and activities vary throughout the program to keep them interested and active.  Fledglings spend some quiet time outdoors away from the older, more active campers after lunch and have an optional snack time in the afternoon.
The Larks and Shrikes campers engage nature with longer hikes, free explorations, and lessons on identifying the many animals that call Maryland home. Campers hike and play throughout the Center’s 450 acres, and seine for aquatic wildlife in Pickering Creek.  These older campers will hone their survival skills with shelter building, orienteering, canoe trips, tracking, and camouflage games.
Week 1 (June 16-18+20): Pollinator Power: The bees are buzzing, and the butterflies are fluttering! Come explore the world of pollinators as the summer flowers bloom all around us! Along with our usual camp explorations and water days, enjoy games and activities designed to help campers learn how important pollinators are to the world we live in and observe the beautiful varieties that call Pickering Creek home; from the bright Tiger Swallowtail to the bee-utiful honeybees! Note that this is a four day camp with no camp on Juneteenth.
Week 2 (June 23-27): Science Explorers: Who says science is boring? Naturalists are a kind of scientist who explore the world of nature! Campers will explore nature through experiments, observations and science-based games.  Dig through an owl pellet to decide what it ate; keep count of animals we see in our habitats and discover the biodiversity all around us.  Join us for a week of discovery and hands-on science fun!
Week 3 (July 7-11): Secret Forest: Walk where few have walked before and explore the lesser-known spaces of Pickering Creek. Campers will find spaces where the wild things are, the trees are taller, and the mud is deeper! We’ll try to spy new wildlife and use navigation skills to make maps and keep track of the places we explore. Campers will visit off-trail parts of the New Forest, yet to be explored by any camper!
Week 4 (July 14-18): Nature Ninjas: We are Nature Ninjas! This week, we’ll practice the art of camouflage and close observation. Answer questions like: What kind of wildlife lives here, how can we tell, what does it eat?   We’ll learn how to be calm, quiet, and prepared. We will be “One with Nature” and learn to activate our Quiet Mind.
Week 5 (July 21-25): Unhuggables: This week we will explore our forests in search of salamanders and bugs, our wetlands to find frogs and crayfish and our creek front in the hopes of catching fish and turtles! Join us as we celebrate all the creatures that call Pickering Creek home, including reptiles, amphibians and insects. Campers this week will have a special animal talk about reptiles and the ways they move!
Week 6 (July 28-Aug 1): Wet & Wild: It’s getting hot! Come explore the muddy freshwater wetlands, look for the little streams and puddles to play in and fish in Pickering Creek. This week campers will spend a lot of time playing water games and cooling off in all the different kinds of water at EcoCamp. Be prepared to get wet and muddy as we wade through these habitats collecting and watching wildlife, creating dams and new pools, and learning how water is the center for all habitats – big and small!
Week 7 (Aug 4-8): EcoCamp Village: Imagine a home-away-from-home for campers. If we lived at Pickering Creek, how would we live? We’ll build shelters in the forest, make baskets from vines and gather acorns and walnuts in the forest. As we seine in the creek, we will learn about all the animals that depend on the fish in the water for food. Skills like knot-tying and face-painting will abound as we learn to work together in our exploration of Pickering Creek!
Optional van transportation for a fee will be available from the Kohls parking lot in Easton to Camp each day on the following weeks:  June 23-June 27, July 14-July 18, July 28- Aug 1.
Online registration will begin on March 3, 2025 at 10:00am. Find information on transportation, registration, and scholarships at www.pickeringcreek.org. Contact Susanna Scallion, camp registrar at [email protected] for questions. Spaces will fill fast so don’t wait!

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Eco Notes

University of Maryland “The Woods in Your Backyard” online course

February 20, 2025 by University of Maryland Extension Leave a Comment

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Registration is now open for the spring 2025 of “The Woods in Your Backyard” online course from the University of Maryland Extension’s Woodland Stewardship Education program. Our self-directed, non-credit course runs 10 weeks from March 24 to June 2, 2025. The course will help landowners convert lawn to natural areas, and enhance stewardship of existing natural areas. The course provides strategies to landowners of small parcels of land (1-10 acres) that improve the stewardship of their property for personal enjoyment and environmental quality. It uses a hands-on learning approach to help participants develop and implement a plan for their property. Activities include how to map habitat areas, understand basic ecological principles about woodland and wildlife, choose and implement a few habitat management projects, and how to set a timetable and record your progress. Online discussion groups will allow participants to interact with others taking the course.  A certificate of completion is awarded when all assignments are completed.

The course costs $125.00 per person, which includes the 108-page “Woods in Your Backyard” guide, workbook, and a tree identification guide. The course is limited to 25 participants, so sign up now! Registration closes March 31st or when filled. Registration is through Eventbrite; go to https://go.umd.edu/WIYB_Spring25.

 For more information, go to https://go.umd.edu/the_course, or contact course coordinator Andrew Kling, University of Maryland Extension, [email protected], 301-226-7564.


The University of Maryland Extension programs are open to any person and will not discriminate against anyone because of race, age, sex, color, sexual orientation, physical or mental disability, religion, ancestry, national origin, marital status, genetic information, political affiliation, and gender identity or expression.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Eco Notes

New polling finds strong Eastern Shore support for offshore wind

February 20, 2025 by Spy Desk 21 Comments

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A new poll finds solid support among Eastern Shore residents for offshore wind, with strong majorities convinced wind projects will benefit jobs, improve health conditions and support American energy independence.

The poll was sponsored by Shore Progress, an Eastern Shore regional advocacy group, and conducted by Gonzales Research & Media Services, Inc., a respected polling firm based in Annapolis.

The poll found that among Eastern Shore residents, 51% support building offshore wind farms off the coast of Maryland, while 37% say they would oppose them, with 12% giving no opinion. The poll found that 54% of Shore residents support a goal of moving away from fossil fuels and toward renewable sources, such as offshore wind, with 39% opposed and 7% offering no opinion.

  • Respondents agreed by significant margins that offshore wind would have positive impacts in several areas, including 70 percent who agreed that offshore wind would have a positive benefit on jobs and 67 percent who said it would provide health benefits.
  • Agreed that offshore wind would bring benefits in five other key areas:
  • Air and water quality: 66% – 27%
  • Electricity prices: 65% – 25%
  • Energy independence: 65% – 26%
  • Electricity reliability: 61% — 31%
  • Climate change: 56% — 31%
  • On the question of whether offshore wind would have a positive impact on ocean ecosystems and marine life, respondents were evenly split; 43%-43% with 14% undecided.

“The results are clear, Eastern Shore voters strongly support building an offshore wind farm off our coast,” said Jared Schablein, Chair of Shore Progress. “The U.S. Wind project is a huge investment in our community. It will bring good-paying jobs and help us become energy independent at a time when energy bills are skyrocketing. It’s time to move forward with clean energy, lower costs, and good jobs for the Shore.”

U.S. Wind is pursuing an offshore wind farm well off the coast of Ocean City. The project would build 114 wind turbines, generating more than 2 gigawatts of clean electricity—enough to power over 718,000 Maryland homes, with zero greenhouse gas emissions. The project has secured federal and state permits and could begin construction in 2025.

The poll was conducted by Gonzales Research & Media Services, Inc. from December 27, 2024, through January 6, 2025, sampling 404 registered voters on Maryland’s Eastern Shore in Maryland Senate Districts 36, 37, and 38. The margin of error on these questions is plus or minus 5 percentage points. If the entire population in the region was surveyed, there is a 95% probability that the true numbers would fall within this range.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Eco Lead

Bay Journal: Nonprofits, states scramble as Trump administration pauses funding for many Chesapeake restoration programs

February 18, 2025 by Spy Desk Leave a Comment

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Efforts in recent years to accelerate the Chesapeake Bay restoration have run into a wall of Trump administration executive orders that halted payments for huge swaths of Bay-related work, raising doubt about the future of many projects.

Tens of millions of dollars for Bay-related work being carried out by nonprofits, farmers, churches, universities and states have been left in limbo. Some say the damage could take years to undo.

The uncertainty stems from a government-wide freeze on grant awards and contracts ordered by the Trump administration Jan. 27 intended to allow for reviews that ensure those expenditures “align federal spending and action with the will of the American people as expressed through presidential priorities.”

Initially, that impacted about $3 trillion in funding nationwide.

The administration rescinded the “pause” less than two days later, unfreezing some but not all of the grants. A suit by 22 states and the District of Columbia followed swiftly, challenging the administration’s hold on federal funds.

Yet more than two weeks later, despite several court rulings ordering an end to the funding freeze, many organizations and states in the Chesapeake Bay region say that some funding is still on hold and are not sure whether it will be restored. Some were advised to halt work.

The action has alarmed some lawmakers, including Maryland Sen. Chris Van Hollen, a Democrat, who said his office has received numerous reports that some organizations are still unable to access already-approved grant money.

“Holding these funds hostage jeopardizes countless jobs in Maryland and across the country and threatens our progress on improving the health of the Bay and our environment,” Van Hollen said.

While nongovernmental organizations were hard hit, states were not immune. On Feb. 12, Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro and several state agencies filed suit, contending that $2.1 billion in federal funding is in doubt for environmental work. Most of that funding is not directly related to Bay cleanup and restoration, but much of it is aimed at programs that more broadly address water pollution and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Maryland officials reported that large amounts of climate funding are on hold.

Ripple effects

It’s a huge setback for Bay restoration. Federal agencies are the largest funders for Chesapeake-related work, but much of it is carried out through grants and contracts. (The Bay Journal also receives some support from a federal grant.)

In recent years, with many key Bay restoration and pollution reduction goals off-track, federal agencies dramatically ramped up funding to accelerate progress, fueled by legislation passed during the Biden administration that made hundreds of millions of dollars available for work within the watershed.

Those funds are used to plant streamside forest buffers, restore wetlands, improve trout streams, build oyster reefs, reduce runoff from farms and developed lands, promote environmental education and support other efforts aimed at improving the Bay and its 64,000-square-mile watershed. The work touches Maryland, Virginia, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Delaware, New York and the District of Columbia.

While some funds have been restored since the Jan. 27 order, many grant recipients have found their funding halted. In many cases, they are not being reimbursed for expenses they’ve already incurred.

“We have funds for one more payroll. If the funds don’t start being deposited from the federal government, we will not be able to pay our staff nor our vendors,” one organization reported to the Choose Clean Water Coalition.

The coalition, which includes more than 300 mostly small nonprofits working throughout the Bay watershed, is surveying members to gauge the impact of the disruptions.

Of the first 38 responses in the on-going poll, 23 reported that grants had been paused for at least some period of time. Many of the groups receive half or more of their funding from federal sources, putting their future at risk. Many have paused work.

“It’s a very real example of what happens when this money doesn’t exist,” said Kristin Reilly, director of the coalition. “It really drives the point home about the importance of the federal partnership and the federal investment in this work. It really cannot move forward without that federal support.”

Organizations contacted by the Bay Journal reported that they get as much as 80% of their budgets from federal sources.

The Chesapeake Bay Foundation, which is the largest nonprofit Bay advocacy group, gets about 12% of its funding from federal grants that support environmental education, conservation actions on farmland and other activities. The group expressed alarm about what a pullback in federal funding would mean for it and other organizations involved in restoration work around the Bay region.

“We can’t restore the Chesapeake Bay and its rivers and streams without federal investment,” said Keisha Sedlacek, the foundation’s federal director. “These federal grants support farmers, state and local government programs, and community projects that benefit people, the economy and the environment.”

Uncertainty abounds

While some organizations have seen funding restored, at least for now, others remain in limbo. Many are frustrated by the lack of guidance about how or why decisions are made, or which programs are targeted.

“We’ve been trying to grapple with the news as it unfolds every six hours, every 12 hours,” said Meenal Harankhedkar, executive director of Interfaith Partners for the Chesapeake, which helps congregations with environmental restoration projects. “I think we’re all in the stage of monitoring and processing.”

Her group is particularly concerned because diversity, equity, inclusion and environmental justice programs were specifically targeted for elimination in the executive orders from the White House.

Interfaith Partners has long prioritized efforts that promote equity, and last year it received a $1.8 million grant for “equity enhancement.” The project’s goal is to work with faith-based institutions to install green stormwater improvements and plant nearly 2,000 trees across 50 acres of urban and suburban properties.

Despite the “equity” label, Harankhedkar said “we’re trying to make a universal impact through all these programs.” She added that she feels confident, though, that her organization can ride out any rough waters because it receives funding from a variety of nonfederal sources.

Apart from diversity programs, much of the affected funding appeared connected to the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and the Inflation Reduction Act. The latter was a major funding source for a variety of climate-related work.

Huge amounts of Inflation Reduction Act funding distributed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture —the largest financial source of conservation work in the Bay watershed — appeared stalled with no clear indication as to whether it would be restored.

The USDA did not respond to a request for comments about impacted programs. But the department had awarded roughly $1 billion for various “climate smart” agriculture projects in the Bay watershed that seek to improve soil health, store carbon, control methane emissions from farms and promote more efficient manure and fertilizer applications, among other projects.

Other USDA programs are affected as well. In some cases, it is not organizations but individual farmers who directly bear the brunt.

In December, work crews finished installing $100,000 worth of solar panels on Michael Protas’ farm in Montgomery County, MD, aimed at reducing costs for his subscription vegetable business by making it entirely solar-powered.

The project was approved under a USDA program for energy efficiency on small farms. But the grant that was to reimburse half of the cost now appears to be in jeopardy. If it doesn’t materialize, Protas said, “I’m on the hook for the whole $100,000.”

“Farmers are inherent risk takers,” he added. “There are variables you sign up for. But the one thing that was not on anybody’s bingo card was the government not paying on a contract that you already had.”

Even if the funding eventually comes through, Protas said the sudden unreliability of such grants makes it far less appealing to take that risk in the future.

Many who work on projects aimed at controlling farm runoff — the largest source of water-fouling nutrients to the Bay — worry that leaving farmers stuck with the tab will have a chilling effect on future participation that could take years to overcome.

“We work hard to build our relationships with farmers,” said Kristen Hughes Evans, executive director of Sustainable Chesapeake, which works with farmers on conservation initiatives but has seen some of its funding frozen. “Farmers can be skeptical of the government, so the ones that come in the door are often ones you’ve worked hard with to build that trust. It’s absolutely critical for our conservation programs that participating farmers have a good experience. When commitments are made to farmers, they have an expectation that those commitments are honored. When they are not, they remember.”

Reimbursements in jeopardy

A significant amount of money, especially the largest distributions, is sent directly from federal agencies to states, universities and larger organizations.

But funds for much of the Bay-specific work — especially for smaller organizations — are distributed through intermediaries such as the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation and Maryland’s Chesapeake Bay Trust.

The Bay Trust awards $20 million–$30 million annually, about a third of which comes from federal agencies. Its president, Jana Davis, said the prospect that grants awarded in previous years may not be honored leaves the trust in a bind.

It awards grants based on the assurance that the federal government will follow through on promises. But it does not get reimbursed until grantees actually spend the money and report it back to the trust for payment. “We can’t invoice the federal government until we expend the funds,” she said. “So there’s this weird moment of risk.”

The trust’s access to federal funds was restored shortly after the “pause” for all but one of the federal grants it receives. The exception is a $17.5 million grant from the U.S. Forest Service over four years to increase tree cover in disadvantaged communities.

The trust committed the first $1 million of that last year to eight groups, but invoices submitted in January for $250,000 have not been paid, Davis said. In response to its queries about when it would be paid, the trust got an email saying that “these invoices have been placed on hold due to a presidential executive order. We are currently awaiting further directions.”

Even for those grants restored after the initial hold, doubt lingers about whether they will be frozen again or possibly withdrawn altogether.

Davis said the trust has advised grantees to go ahead with the work it has already authorized and that the trust will cover the costs on its own, even if the federal money never materializes.

That’s possible because the trust has its own dedicated streams of funding from the sale of Maryland Chesapeake Bay license plants and from the state’s voluntary income tax checkoff to the Chesapeake Bay and Endangered Species Fund. But using those funds to cover unpaid federal grants comes with a cost to other programs that the trust normally supports, such as environmental education.

“It’s heartbreaking,” Davis said of the disruption and uncertainty surrounding federal funding. “This is good work. This is like churches doing green things to their parking lots.”

The National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, a congressionally created nonprofit, last year funneled more than $100 million in federal grants to dozens of organizations to support Bay-related work.

NFWF officials did not respond to a request for comments, but several grant recipients interviewed by the Bay Journal said the funding outlook for many projects was in flux. Two weeks after the Jan. 27 notice that initiated the federal freeze, NFWF emailed some grantees advising them to halt work.

“As we are unable to reimburse you for costs associated with projects that include funding from one or more frozen accounts, we are recommending you cease all activities on the relevant grant(s),” the email said.

Weighing risk amid uncertainty

Even if funding is fully restored, many grant recipients express frustration about the future. Grants often cover projects that span multiple years with money awarded one year at a time. So while the funds may be restored for now, the remainder can again be targeted in future years. That makes it difficult to decide whether to fill positions or award subcontracts for projects that may be abruptly ended.

ShoreRivers, an environmental group on Maryland’s Upper Eastern Shore gets about a quarter of its $7.5 million annual budget from various federal grants that support work with farmers, environmental education and other initiatives.

Isabel Hardesty, executive director of the organization, said that while most of its federal funding has been freed up, “we are reluctant to advance funds or continue projects that might be impacted later this year.

“This is making us reevaluate our budget. We are also spending huge amounts of staff time trying to manage and plan for the impacts of funding uncertainty, instead of working toward our mission of thriving rivers and engaged communities.”

That uncertainty seems likely to continue as the administration has thrust other uncertainties into the process. In a directive issued Feb. 6, the White House said it intended to stop funding nongovernmental organizations “that undermine the national interest.”

The two-paragraph memo tells agencies to review all funding to those groups to ensure future decisions align “with the goals and priorities of my administration, as expressed in executive actions; as otherwise determined in the judgment of the heads of agencies; and on the basis of applicable authorizing statutes, regulations, and terms.”

Further, multiple reports suggest that many agencies have been told to expect budget cuts of 30%–40% when the administration’s budget comes out in March. While Congress may reject the proposed budget, it casts more uncertainty about the future of projects that often span multiple years.

While the administration has said it is trying to improve the efficiency of programs, many say the uncertainty has the opposite effect. It delays decisions and work, and it drives up costs. Subcontractors may charge more if they are not certain they will be paid by groups that are supposed to be receiving grants.

“When there are unknowns, there’s risk, and risk costs money,” said Jay Bernas, CEO of the Hampton Roads Sanitation District, which is using federal loans to implement advanced water treatment technologies on its wastewater plants.

State and climate funding hit

States have also been affected. While Bay-specific funding to states does not seem to be impacted, huge amounts of other environmental funding are on hold, many of which would benefit streams and help combat climate change — all issues that greatly affect the Chesapeake watershed.

The Pennsylvania suit said $2.1 billion was in jeopardy, including $1.2 billion in funding that is frozen and $900 million that is on hold pending federal review.

About $750 million of the frozen funds were for acid mine drainage remediation, which is a major source of stream degradation in the state. More than $400 million flagged for review is slated to fix abandoned oil and gas wells in the state, which discharge pollutants into streams and are major sources of methane, a greenhouse gas. All of that work is funded through the infrastructure act.

Also impacted were hundreds of millions of dollars in climate-related projects funded from the Inflation Reduction Act that aimed to improve energy efficiency and other initiatives that reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Maryland likewise could be particularly hard hit. State officials are already struggling to close a projected $2.7 billion budget deficit for the coming year, and cuts in federal funding are sure to worsen the fiscal crunch.

A spokesman for the Maryland Department of the Environment said its access to $13.7 million in grants from the U.S Environmental Protection Agency has been “suspended.”

Those funds covered a variety of environmental regulatory activities, including monitoring air pollution and overseeing mine safety. Also shut down at least temporarily are two multi-state grants aimed at reducing climate pollution by expanding electric vehicle infrastructure, planting trees and restoring wetlands and coastal habitats. Maryland’s share of those grants was to total $80 million, said MDE spokesman Jay Apperson.

The holdup in already-awarded climate funding is having trickle-down effects for at least some recipients.

Edwin Luevanos, CEO of Citizen Energy, a small clean energy company based in the District of Columbia, said he already has had to lay off 3 of his 11 employees because he’s been unable to collect about $100,000 for work done last year to install electric vehicle chargers and solar panels in low-income communities nationwide.

Citizen Energy was awarded grants totaling about $10 million, one from the Department of Energy and another via the Maryland Clean Energy Center from the U.S. Department of Transportation. Half of that work was to be done in Maryland, Virginia and the District, he said, and he was planning to hire 40 or 50 people once all the approvals came in.

“I knew with the new administration there would be some changes,” Luevanos said, given Trump’s campaign attacks on renewable energy and diversity, equity and inclusion. “It’s unfortunate,” he added, “this administration took a hatchet approach versus a scalpel.”

A widespread halt in climate-related initiatives would have impacts that trickle down to Bay restoration as well.

Climate change is already impacting the Chesapeake Bay with rising water around the estuary and warmer temperatures in both the Bay and the rivers that feed it, and the changing conditions are predicted to make it even more difficult to meet pollution reduction goals.

But many of the actions aimed to reducing greenhouse gas emissions also aid Bay efforts. Projects that reduce emissions from farms can reduce nutrient-laden runoff. And programs that reduce the use of fossil fuels not only help control carbon dioxide emissions but also reduce the release of nitrogen oxides, a major source of nitrogen that feeds algal growth in the Bay and spurs creation of “dead zones.”

Recent computer modeling has shown that fully implementing the climate-related provisions in the Inflation Reduction Act would slash nitrogen deposition on the Bay and its watershed by more than 20%.

That would reduce the amount of the nutrient reaching the Bay by millions of pounds a year. It is a spiral that could ultimately put the region’s already-challenging Bay clean up goals out of reach.

 

By Chesapeake Bay Journal Staff

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Archives, Eco Lead, Eco Notes

Invasive catfish, west coast oyster shells fueling Chesapeake renaissance

February 10, 2025 by Spy Desk 1 Comment

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“At Tilghman Island Seafood, we collaborate closely with watermen who are dedicated to the Chesapeake Bay’s unique ecosystem.  These local watermen recognize that their livelihoods are deeply connected to the health of our waters. We are committed to balancing productive fishing with responsible practices to help secure the Bay’s future.” – FromTilghman Island Seafood’s promotional marketing material

Nick Hargrove on the deck of the buyboat Bivalve he uses for deploying shells to Chesapeake Bay oyster bars. His rapidly growing Tilghman Island Seafood operation is located just over the drawbridge at Knapps Narrows. DENNIS FORNEY PHOTO

Rumplestiltskin perfected a method for spinning straw into gold.  A pretty neat trick.

Now some latter-day local Rumplestiltskins– swapping American ingenuity for the spinning wheel–are doing something similar except with invasive catfish and oyster shells instead of straw.

Blue catfish ravaging Chesapeake Bay’s crabbing and finfish industries, and millions of tons of discarded and aging oyster shells on Washington’s Pacific coast are proving profitable for enterprising watermen. Ecological benefits are also part of this unique equation.

Nick Hargrove of Tilghman Island Seafood and his oyster partners at Dorchester County’s Farm Creek Oyster Farm and Madison Shell Recycling–brothers Alex and Benny Horseman–are in the thick of what is shaping up to be an inspired renaissance for the Chesapeake seafood industry. Inspired, because Hargrove’s marketing of catfish from coast to coast is helping control a damaging invasive species, while importing discarded west coast oyster shells is helping address the scarcity of local oyster shells needed for restoration of the Chesapeake’s oyster populations. Good for the oyster industry. and good for cleaning the Bay’s waters.

That, in turn, is solving Pacific Seafood’s dilemma of what to do with endless piles of oyster shells discarded after their meats have been harvested.

“Pacific Seafood is one of the west coast’s largest seafood processors,” said Hargrove in a recent interview. “Up until now the only use for the shells has been by Washington state for nature trails. They looked at us like we were crazy when we told them we thought we could use them all. We’re talking about seven million or so tons of old oyster shells, piled up in heaps forty and fifty feet tall.”

Nick Hargrove provided this image of a small portion of the west coast treasure trove of discarded and aged oyster shells now filling a missing link in the Chesapeake oyster restoration initiative. The heaps of shells, like ancient Native American middens, are located on Pacific Seafood’s property in Washington State.

So, while Hargrove has been building a nationwide network of catfish sales including Whole Foods and other seafood purveyors, he and his oyster partners successfully completed the lengthy process necessary to receive Maryland’s first permit for importing non-native shells for restoration and aquaculture.

After the permit process to ensure the old and aged imported shells won’t create another invasive species problem, it appears the west coast trove will meet decades of need for replenishing, rebuilding and seeding the Bay’s oyster bars. “The big deal for the permitting was the fact that these west coast shells are domestic and not foreign,” said Hargrove.

When weather isn’t hampering catfish and oyster harvesting, as ice is doing now, Hargrove’s operations handle 100,000 pounds of fresh catfish filets and 1,000 bushels of oysters per week.

He employs 30 people in processing and about 70 watermen who harvest the oysters and catfish.

 “It’s a lot of responsibility and requires lots of capital,” said Hargrove.

“Ice in the upper Chesapeake is keeping our catfish watermen in and that’s hampering our production,” he said recently.  “We like to handle about 20,000 pounds of filets a day, but in weather like this we’re lucky to get 20,000 pounds a week. Demand is exceeding our ability to supply, but that goes with this business. There will always be ups and downs.  We’ve learned to bob and weave.”

The juggling act is continuous: perfecting marketing and sales, creating new products like catfish nuggets, seeking legislation to further enhance catfish harvesting, and making plans for meeting spring and summer planting demands for oyster shells being trucked east.

 “Right now I’m working with Sen. Johnny Mautz on a bill that would allow electric-shock fishing for catfish,” said Hargrove.  “That would be particularly helpful for the summer when the fish aren’t as hungry.”

At the same time, he and his partners are figuring out how many oyster shells they will be able to sell to the state for this year’s demands. The state buys loads of bushels with attached spat–baby, tick-sized oysters–as well as bare shells.

Bare shells are deployed to help rebuild oyster bars with material that attracts naturally occurring oyster spat in the Bay’s waters. Spa- on-shell are used to seed sanctuary, public fishery and leased aquaculture bottom where proper substrate, also known as cultch, already exists.

Chris Judy, director of Maryland’s shellfish division, said the west coast oyster shells–of the crassostrea gigas species–are proving effective at attracting spat. “They have been properly assessed and approved, and have the added advantage of being less expensive than shell bought from Virginia. Even being shipped all the way across the country they are still less expensive than the shells from Virginia,” said Judy.

He said west coast gigas shells, as well as crushed concrete and rocks, have been tested by University of Maryland’s Horn Point Laboratory in Dorchester County as possible alternatives to the native crassostrea virginica oyster shells typically used for restoration. Because of demand up and down the Chesapeake, in Maryland and Virginia for restoration projects, native shells–recycled after harvesting and shucking–are in short supply.

In laboratory conditions, the gigas shells proved the most effective of all the alternatives at attracting spat.  They even proved more effective than native shells included as part of the test.

“That was in laboratory conditions,” said Judy. “In the Bay waters, in more variable conditions, the gigas shells performed better than native shells in some areas, equal to them in other areas, and not as well in some areas.

“We deployed about 89,000 bushels of gigas shells last May and June–just shells–in places like Tangier Sound, Honga River and Harris Creek to improve the oyster bars, the spat set and to enhance the industry,” said Judy. “When we checked on them again in the fall, we found they had worked well.  A favorable spat set. They do the job, as do the other alternatives, but these are more cost effective. Concrete and rocks also work as a substrate for catching spat, but they are more expensive.”

The gigas shells, said Judy, will be a “major contribution” to what is already being accomplished in Maryland’s oyster restoration efforts.

Over the next two months, Judy said the shellfish division will be contacting various county oyster committee officials to determine their preferences for where in 2025 they would like bare oyster shells and spat-on-shell planted. Those discussions will also include what kind of shells would be preferred.

Between federal funds, state capital funds, sanctuary funds, bushel taxes, oyster export taxes and surcharge fees paid by watermen for oystering licenses, the state has millions of dollars to spend over the next few years for planting bare shells, seeding with spat on shell, and other restoration efforts.

That is in addition to other efforts such as Oyster Restoration Partnership initiatives which included hundreds of millions of spat on shell deployed in  2024.

Hot-off-the-press printed materials developed by Tilghman Island Seafood are helping build nation-wide sales of Chesapeake Bay catfish.

Judy said given the attractiveness of the west coast gigas shells supply and their cost effectiveness, the amount the shellfish division buys this year will be up to how much Hargrove wants to sell; and to the amount funding will allow. He said that includes bare shells and spat-on-shell for public fishery bars, and for whatever may be available for the state’s oyster sanctuaries.

Hargrove said he sees the gigas shells as a game changer.  “We received our permit to use the shells in August of 2022. In 2023 we deployed about 100,000 bushels of spat-on-shell, and 180,000 bushels in 2024.  That’s for public and private ground seeding efforts. We deployed more spat-on-shell bushels on private grounds than on public grounds and that’s a first.” They also deployed hundreds of thousands of bushels of bare gigas shells for bottom restoration purposes.

Hargrove said he used a pen and the back of a napkin to design the oyster-tanks-and-cages system he uses for his spat-on-shell operation at the Tilghman Island Seafood complex.

Using larvae purchased from oyster hatcheries like Horn Point, near Cambridge, and Ferry Cove, near Tilghman, he blends them into cages filled with about 30 bushels of oyster shells in tanks pumped full of  Bay water from Knapps Narrows.

The larvae take about two weeks to attach to the bare shells.  “When the spat are about the size of a tick on the shells, we lift the cages out of the tanks and transport them to a hopper and conveyor belt.  We load them on the decks of buy boats we use to take them to the bars designated by the different state and county entities.

“We’re getting the resources we need,” said Hargrove, “and the industry is starting to grow. Now we have access to the shells we need, access to all the larvae we need for spat–Ferry Cove is doing a helluva job–and we have the capacity to exceed the state’s needs and handle private aquaculture needs as well. Plus, we can do it cheaper than buying from Virginia and keep all the money in Maryland instead.”

Judy said results from the annual statewide fall oyster survey in October will be released in March.  “Generally speaking, the Bay received a spat set and the survival rate was good.  The spat from the tremendous, widely distributed set we saw in 2023 are growing now to smalls.  That’s all positive news.”

Dennis Forney has been a publisher, journalist, and columnist on the Delmarva Peninsula since 1972.  He writes from his home on Grace Creek in Bozman.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Eco Lead

Intense Maryland Energy Debates in Annapolis Fill a Single Afternoon

February 7, 2025 by Maryland Matters Leave a Comment

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For the last few years, the nuclear energy industry has stood on the precipice of the Maryland energy policy debate, waiting for its close-up.

Industry leaders and their lobbyists have repeatedly talked about how important nuclear is to the state’s power portfolio. They have implied, without saying so outright, that nuclear, which accounts for 40% of the energy generated in the state, and 80% of its carbon-free energy, ought to get greater recognition from Maryland policymakers — along with state subsidies.

On Thursday, the head of the industry’s national trade association, the Nuclear Energy Institute, got more than an hour in the House Economic Matters Committee to boast about nuclear’s potential, as state lawmakers wrestle with an energy shortage, spiking prices, clean energy goals and climate mandates.

“The value of nuclear is you get all of this very reliable, clean power,” Maria Korsnick, the NEI CEO, testified. She later told lawmakers, “The point of my being here is to be helpful to you.”

The Calvert Cliffs nuclear plant in Southern Maryland has been a workhorse for five decades and is likely to be relicensed for several more decades sometime in the 2030s. But scientists and engineers are also developing more compact nuclear technologies that don’t require so much space and water to operate, which are often called small modular reactors (SMR).

A package of bills from legislative leaders designed to generate more energy in Maryland and reduce ratepayer costs, includes giving nuclear energy “tier 1” status, making it eligible for certain state clean energy subsidies. But House Economic Matters Chair C.T. Wilson (D-Charles), an architect of the just-introduced measures, said he invited NEI to speak to his committee not to hype nuclear power, but to inject a dose of reality, because the newer technologies still won’t be ready for several years.

“It’s a reminder to people it’s not a magic word,” Wilson said in an interview. “It’s got to be planned. It’s much more challenging than saying the word ‘SMR.’ It wasn’t to sell it.”

The nuclear briefing was part of a long day of hearings in the Economic Matters Committee on hot energy topics. The panel also heard testimony on legislation that would scale back a controversial natural gas infrastructure program, and on a massive bill to promote the generation of clean energy in Maryland.

In a way, it was a microcosm of the energy debates that will dominate the rest of the General Assembly session in a single afternoon.

A range of Maryland policymakers believe nuclear needs to become a bigger part of the state’s clean energy portfolio, especially as other technologies like solar and wind struggle to fully realize their potential.

“Nuclear has the opportunity to play — or to be — part of the solutions, like never before,” Korsnick told Economic Matters Committee members Thursday.

She laid out some of the new technologies that are being developed, answered questions about nuclear plant safety and security, the disposition of nuclear waste, the nuclear workforce, and steps states are taking to incentivize nuclear energy. Korsnick did not come with a specific ask of lawmakers, but did say that states and local communities are increasingly embracing nuclear power, where once they feared and shunned it.

“When I say nuclear is going to be thriving, it’s not because we’re pushing for it, it’s because people are pulling for it,” she said.

Boosting nuclear energy is part of the bill that the committee heard later in the day, the Abundant Affordable Clean Energy – Procurement and Development Act, sponsored by Del. Lorig Charkoudian (D-Montgomery). That bill would ease state regulatory hurdles for relicensing the Calvert Cliffs plant in the 2030’s (though the federal government takes the lead in that process).

Charkoudian’s bill also seeks to boost battery storage in the state, taking energy generated during off-peak hours and holding it in reserve for when there’s greater consumer demand. It would also ensure that whatever electric power is generated from offshore wind in federal waters off the coast of Ocean City remains in Maryland, and it would seek to dedicate a greater portion of state energy taxes assessed on data centers to more relief for utility ratepayers.

Charkoudian conceded the complexity of her legislation, and said tweaks and amendments are still being made.

“When you have a hundred different agencies and stakeholders and people working on a bill, it’s never going to be perfect,” she said.

But most of the individuals who testified on the bill were generally supportive, though Frederick Hoover, chair of the Maryland Public Service Commission, which regulates utilities, warned it could lead to more battles over where to site clean energy installations in the state.

Ambitious as Charkoudian’s bill is, it may be subsumed by the forthcoming debate over the House and Senate leaders’ legislative package on energy, and Thursday’s hearing on the bill was remarkably speedy, all things considered.

In fact, the hearing about the other bill on the committee’s docket, to place limitations on the state’s STRIDE program to repair and improve natural gas infrastructure, was far lengthier and more contentious. The bill, from Del. Elizabeth Embry (D-Baltimore City), would require gas companies to focus on safety when making upgrades to gas pipelines and other infrastructure.

The STRIDE law, which took effect in 2013, provides incentives to gas utilities to make a range of infrastructure improvements, which are paid for with fees on ratepayers’ gas bills. But with utility bills rising, critics of STRIDE have argued that gas companies are pushing forward on infrastructure work that may not be necessary, adding needless costs to consumers’ bills — especially as the state looks to move away from fossil fuels.

“Utilities generate higher profits by spending extra money with the government’s approval,” said David Lapp, who heads the Maryland Office of People’s Counsel, which represents consumers’ interests on utility matters.

Proponents of the legislation said it would emphasize community safety while saving ratepayers money.

“This bill does not repeal STRIDE,” Embry told her colleagues Thursday. “It’s a modest bill. It makes modest changes to the current law.”

But gas companies — and some Republicans on the committee — made the opposite argument, and the Republicans also suggested that Embry’s bill, as the state pushes to meet strict climate mandates, is secretly designed to kill off the natural gas industry.

Mark Case, a vice president at Baltimore Gas & Electric, warned that limiting the program — and the surcharges — could hinder the gas companies’ ability to replace aging industry that could pose a danger to communities. He said that since the inception of STRIDE, the company has typically replaced about 42 miles of pipe a year.

“These are not 5-year-old pipes where we’re going in and saying, ‘let’s go replace them.’”

Washington Gas lobbyists came with Cynthia Quarterman, who was the administrator of the federal Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration under former President Barack Obama. She said Maryland must “stay the course [with STRIDE] to catch up to other states” and that upgrading gas pipelines is “of the utmost importance.”

But Laurel Peltier, who assists low-income ratepayers through her work for AARP, told Maryland Matters that the STRIDE program has become perverted.

“The issue with gas delivery and STRIDE overall is, ratepayers have become ATMs and gas utilities have their PINs,” she said.

By Josh Kurtz

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Filed Under: Eco Lead

ShoreRivers shares 2025 legislative priorities

February 7, 2025 by ShoreRivers Leave a Comment

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Now that the Maryland General Assembly has reconvened for the 447th Legislative Session, ShoreRivers’ advocacy efforts are in full swing. The organization’s advocacy work, which is led by the Riverkeepers, is fundamental to creating system-wide change to protect local rivers against the major issues that impact water quality on the Eastern Shore.

This is a pivotal year for the State of Maryland and all Chesapeake watershed states, as government leaders work with the Environmental Protection Agency’s Chesapeake Bay Program to revise and strengthen a new Chesapeake Bay Agreement that will guide restoration work in years to come. ShoreRivers and fellow clean water advocates see 2025 as an opportunity to bolster Maryland’s efforts to implement this new agreement by advocating for strong policies that protect our natural resources and local rivers. Findings from the Chesapeake Bay Program’s CESR Report (A Comprehensive Evaluation of System Response) continue to influence ShoreRivers’ priorities and complement the Bay Agreement’s vision for restoration goals for years to come.

These efforts are no small challenge, as fiscal pressures loom large this session due to a 2+ billion-dollar deficit facing the state coupled with current financial instability at the federal level. This pressure, combined with Maryland’s focus and attention to meet renewable energy goals, means that ShoreRivers and our members will be working harder than ever to shine a spotlight on Eastern Shore water quality — and the policies we need to protect and restore our rivers.

Key efforts this year include the following, though additional bills and legislation are likely to be added to this list as they are introduced and prove to be in line with ShoreRivers’ mission of protecting Maryland’s Eastern Shore waterways through science-based advocacy, restoration, education, and engagement.

1.)  The Nearshore Farming and Finance Act (SB898/HB1175), a bill that will increase nutrient application setbacks and improve incentive programs for nearshore habitat restoration on agricultural operations within the Critical Area. This bill will also establish the state’s first incentive payments for leased land agricultural operators.

2.)  The Maryland PFAS & Sewage Sludge bill (SB732/HB909), which will establish testing requirements to identify PFAS concentrations in biosolids and set enforceable limits to prevent further contamination, protecting Maryland’s food and water sources and ensuring a healthier future for all.

3.)  A bill to improve On–Site Sewage Disposal Systems in Climate Vulnerable Areas (HB671), which will limit septic siting within the 500 year floodplain, and ensure that low-income households have access to Bay Restoration Funding to make necessary improvements to failing or poor performing units in climate vulnerable areas.

Defending important funding sources through budget advocacy will be another important priority for ShoreRivers this session. With conflicting pressures from the Bay Program’s goals of accelerated restoration work and a budget deficit pressuring Maryland legislators and advocates to “do more with less,” ShoreRivers is committed to defending historically beneficial environmental funds such as the Bay Restoration Fund, the Coastal Trust Fund, the Chesapeake Bay Trust, State Aided institutions, and Program Open Space, and funding appropriated through the Tree Solutions Now Act 2021.

At ShoreRivers, we engage in legislative advocacy because addressing non-point source pollution — or “runoff pollution,” the leading contributor of pollutants to our rivers — is often most effective by updating policies that address modern challenges and support restoration goals. By combining locally driven restoration efforts with river-friendly policies, we are encouraging the behavioral changes needed to improve land use practices and better manage the landscapes responsible for nutrient and sediment runoff. ShoreRivers looks forward to a productive legislative session with members of the General Assembly and fellow environmental advocates. Visit shorerivers.org to learn more about this important work.

 

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Filed Under: Eco Notes

Flock Together for the Great Backyard Bird Count: Find birds in your community and share the joy

February 3, 2025 by Pickering Creek Audubon Center Leave a Comment

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Share in the joy of birds during the annual Great Backyard Bird Count (GBBC) at Pickering Creek Audubon Center and help make your community stronger for you and the birds. Bird and nature lovers everywhere unite in the effort to tally as many of the world’s bird species as possible over these four days.  Visitors are welcomed enjoy bird walks guided by experienced birders at the Center on Friday February 14 from 8-10am. Combined with other bird counts, GBBC results help create a clearer picture of how birds are faring —whether individual species are declining, increasing, or holding steady in the face of habitat loss, climate change, and other threats.

The 28th annual Great Backyard Bird Count is taking place February 14 through 17, 2025.

“The GBBC continues to bring together millions of people every year,” said David Bonter, co-director of the Center for Engagement in Science and Nature at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. More than a half-million people participated during the 2024 GBBC—double the number of participants in the past five years. They reported 7,920 species of birds from 200+ countries and subregions.

“Participating in the Great Backyard Bird Count is an easy and great opportunity to bird with your friends and neighbors,” said Brooke Bateman, senior director of Climate and Community Science at the National Audubon Society. “More and more we see how birds can bring communities closer all across the world. The more we enjoy birds together, the more likely it is that we take steps to protect them and the places they need.

“This free annual event also acts as a stepping stone for people looking to contribute to our understanding of bird populations around the world,” says Jody Allair, director of communications at Birds Canada.

“Joining your community to count birds means that we can track the long-term changes in bird populations,” says Bonter, “and we wouldn’t be able to do that without you. The world is changing fast, and birds often reflect the impact of environmental change first.”

Anyone can participate in the Great Backyard Bird Count. To take part in the 2025 GBBC, each participant or group counts birds for any length of time (but for at least 15 minutes) and enters the birds they can identify at each site they visit. That could be their backyard or neighborhood or locally at Pickering Creek Audubon Center. All are invited to participate in guided bird walks led by experienced birders at the Center on Friday, February 14 from 8-10am. Enjoy watching birds along our trails and contribute to the effort as extra eyes on the sky spotting birds.  Sign up to participate at https://pickeringcreek.org/programs/upcoming-programs .

First-timers should make it a point to read complete instructions on the GBBC website where they will also find helpful birding tips and birding app downloads. The GBBC website also features a new map for marking local GBBC community events like the guided bird walks at Pickering Creek Audubon Center. https://www.birdcount.org/community-map/

You’re also invited to tune in to a special webinar about how to participate in the GBBC. Register for one of two free events happening on Thursday, February 6, at 7:00-8:00 p.m.

Eastern Time or Wednesday, February 12 3:00-4:00 p.m. Eastern Time. Register: https://dl.allaboutbirds.org/2025gbbcwebinar.

The Great Backyard Bird Count is a joint project of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, National Audubon Society, and Birds Canada and is made possible in part by founding sponsor Wild Birds Unlimited.

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Filed Under: Eco Notes

New report shows natural resources conservation on the  Delmarva Peninsula generates $8 billion in annual economic activity 

January 23, 2025 by Eastern Shore Land Conservancy Leave a Comment

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Eastern Shore Land Conservancy (ESLC) and the Delmarva Restoration and Conservation Network (DRCN) released an expansive report today showing the  economic impact of natural resources conservation on Maryland’s Eastern Shore and the entire  Delmarva Peninsula.  

“This report underscores the profound financial benefits of conserving our natural resources,” said  Steve Kline, president and CEO of ESLC, and chair of DRCN. “Decision makers prioritize  economic development, and rightfully so. Here on Maryland’s Eastern Shore and on the broader  Delmarva, our natural resources are a powerful economic engine. Continuing to commit strong  funding to the programs that conserve and restore those natural resources is not only a wise  investment in the environment, but an investment in a healthy economy that will drive regional  prosperity for generations to come.”  

According to the report, natural resources drive approximately $8.1 billion in economic activity  annually across the thirteen-county region. The report highlights that the resource-based economy  of the Delmarva Peninsula supports more than 74,000 jobs region-wide, contributing more than  $2.6 billion in annual labor income. Key findings include:  

  • Natural resources on the Delmarva Peninsula generate over $8.1 billion in annual economic activity. 
  • These activities support more than $2.6 billion in annual labor income and sustain over 74,000 jobs across key industries, including forestry, agriculture, fishing, restoration, and tourism. 
  • This economic activity supports more than $700 million in annual tax revenues for State/Commonwealth governments in Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia.

The report, titled, “Natural Resources Conservation on the Delmarva Peninsula,” draws on input  data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the U.S. Census Bureau, and state and local  government financial documents to model critical impacts. The report was conducted by Sage Policy  Group (SAGE), a renowned economic and policy consultancy that works alongside clients in the  public, private, and nonprofit sectors to produce a comprehensive quantitative report. The study  includes data, several case studies, and community spotlights that highlight the voices of the Eastern  Shore through the perspectives of local business owners and community members benefitting from  ongoing environmental conservation.  

“The findings of this report are deeply important and mark a pivotal moment for understanding the  true value of our natural resources. The region’s wetlands, forests, and waterways are not only vital  to our ecosystem and culture, but also clearly serve as key economic drivers,” said Michelle Koenig, DRCN Co-Chair and Director of Conservation and Watershed Planning with the Delaware Center  for Inland Bays. 

“As this report shows, protecting the Eastern Shore’s natural resources is not only critical to our  environment – it’s also central tothe region’s economy, supporting more than 74,000 jobs and over $8 billion in economic activity. These findings demonstrate why our work to protect and preserve  the Chesapeake Bay is so important, and I’ll continue working alongside partners like ESLC and the  DRCN in these efforts,” said U.S. Senator Chris Van Hollen. 

“Conserving our state’s natural beauty doesn’t just make Delaware more resilient against the effects  of climate change, it’s an economic driver that sparks tourism and recreation and creates good paying jobs,” said U.S. Senator Chris Coons. “I’m proud to have secured the funding required to  spur this report making clear we need to continue to protect our state’s natural heritage because  when it does well, our whole state does well.” 


The mission of Eastern Shore Land Conservancy (ESLC) is to conserve, steward, and advocate  for the unique rural landscape of Maryland’s Eastern Shore. ESLC is a nationally recognized  nonprofit that has helped to protect more than 68,000 acres of land on more than 330 properties  stretching across six counties: Cecil, Kent, Queen Anne’s, Talbot, Caroline, and Dorchester. Since  1990, ESLC’s work has provided access to nature and outdoor recreation; protected migratory hubs,  wildlife corridors, and diverse habitats; safeguarded farms, forests, and wetlands; and promoted the  rural heritage of the Eastern Shore. 

Formed in 2017, the Delmarva Restoration and Conservation Network (DRCN) is a  collaborative of local, state, and federal government agencies and nongovernment organizations whose mission is to restore and conserve Delmarva’s landscapes, waterways, and shorelines that are  special to its people, fundamental to its economy, and vital to its native fish, wildlife, and plants. They work with private and public landowners to identify the most important places to protect and  restore land, while obtaining support and funding for voluntary restoration and conservation.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Eco Notes

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