(ANNAPOLIS, MD)—The Chesapeake Bay Foundation's (CBF) biennial State of the Bay Reportis a mix of good and bad news. The good news is that the overall pollution score improved, but that improvement was offset by declines in fisheries.
"While we can celebrate water quality improvements, we must also acknowledge that many local rivers, streams, and the Chesapeake Bay are still polluted. They remain a system dangerously out of balance," said CBF President William C. Baker. "The Clean Water Blueprint is in place and working, but there are danger signs ahead. The states must pick up the pace of reducing pollution, especially from farms and urban areas."
The 2014 State of the Bay Report is a comprehensive measure of the Bay's health. CBF scientists compile and examine the best available historical and up-to-date information for 13 indicators in three categories: pollution, habitat, and fisheries. CBF scientists assign each indicator an index score between 1 and 100. Taken together, these indicators offer an assessment of Bay health.
The 2014 report score is 32, a D+, unchanged from the 2012 score. The report notes improvements in dissolved oxygen, water clarity, oysters, and underwater grasses. Nitrogen, toxics, shad, resource lands, forested buffers, and wetlands were unchanged. Declines were seen in scores for phosphorus, and rockfish, and blue crabs.
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Keep crying wolf and keep getting those gov't grants.
ReplyDeleteBS breeds more BS. Buy Save the Bay plates and fund ignorant executives writing fluffy articles and begging for more donations to pay for their even bigger salaries!
ReplyDeleteMeanwhile, they lobby the EPA to cut the throats of all the hard working food producing non-polluters. Showing this kind of force in DC gets them more grant money to pay more of those salaries and write more fluffy articles.
It's time to stop both of these entities who are not helping and dredge the Conowingo Reservoir before renewing any hydro electric permits.