March 23, 2004
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New Program Offers $146 Million to Benefit Western Pa. Farmers Agriculture is not only Pennsylvania's largest industry, it is also the largest contributor of water pollution. In 2002, Western Pennsylvania Conservancy began laying the groundwork for a program that would address this issue by helping farmers improve water quality and wildlife habitat. Working with 23 local partner organizations, WPC submitted an application to the Governor's office which was, in turn, sent to USDA as a way to further expand the Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program (CREP) into the Ohio River Basin. Yesterday afternoon, U. S. Agriculture Secretary Ann Veneman and Governor Ed Rendell met at the Richard McElhancy farm in Hookstown, Beaver County, to announce that $146 million would now become available to help western Pennsylvania farmers and improve Pennsylvania's water quality. The far-reaching impact of this important work will extend to the Gulf of Mexico. Pennsylvania's Ohio River Basin Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program (CREP) will seek to enroll 65,000 acres of environmentally sensitive agricultural land. Landowners within 16 counties that are a part of the Ohio River Basin are eligible for the program. Farmers who enroll land in the new program will adopt land management practices that help reduce sediment, nitrogen and phosphorus entering the basin, improving water quality, groundwater quality and wildlife habitat in the Ohio River, the third largest drainage basin into the Gulf of Mexico. The Ohio River Basin CREP will enable western Pennsylvanians to participate in an innovative program along with the rest of the state. The program will seek to enroll marginal and/or environmentally sensitive agricultural land into an incentive based program that pays landowners to implement agricultural best management practices (BMP's). The incentive rates are based on the erodibility index (EI) - the more marginal the land, the higher the incentive rate. BMP practices translate into immediate improvements in environmental health that include; reduced sedimentation and nutrient loading in surface and groundwater, improved game and non-game habitat, and protection from one of Pennsylvania's most pressing environmental pressures: development.
Senator Arlen Specter, Congresswoman Melissa Hart, Secretary Wolff and representatives of the Pa. Department of Environmental Protection joined farmers, sportsmen and conservationists at the March 22nd event to learn more about this exciting conservation program. Today's photo was taken yesterday afternoon and features Pennsylvania Govenor Edward G. Rendell (center) with his advisor for Hunting, Fishing and Conservation Robert B. Miller, Jr. (left) and WPC staff (left to right) Jack Rowley, Tolif Hunt, Larry Schweiger, Jacqui Bonomo, Katherine Smitherman, Ben Wright and Cynthia Carrow. Click here to voice your support for funding to protect open space, farms and forests, to restore polluted land and water, and to revitalize Pennsylvania's communities and economy! E-mail Today's WPC Daily to a Friend!
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