Today the Center for Progressive Reform releases a briefing paper on Chesapeake Bay policy in anticipation of the one-year anniversary of President Obama’s Executive Order on Chesapeake Bay Protection and Restoration. The Choose Clean Water Coalition also today sent a letter to EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson stressing that EPA's strategy for the Bay must have robust requirements and tough consequences.
By next Wednesday, one year to the day after the Executive Order, the Federal Leadership Committee—made up of representatives from a range of federal agencies—is required to release its final Strategy for Restoration and Protection of the Chesapeake Bay. The final Strategy will integrate the draft reports issued under section 202 and the draft Strategy issued under section 203, all of which were previously released for public comment (See our comments from January). In the coming months, the future of Chesapeake Bay restoration will take shape. In addition to the release of the final Strategy, Bay states will begin to submit their preliminary Phase I Watershed Implementation Plans and EPA will finalize the Bay-wide Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL). Collectively these developments promise to do what past Bay restoration efforts have not: to hold Bay jurisdictions and EPA accountable to specific commitments and hard deadlines. However, with much of the economy still in distress and a lack of resources in every Bay state, it is difficult to imagine that they will be able to consistently meet their commitments. In its new leadership role, EPA must distinguish between genuine efforts that fall short and intentional foot-dragging that fails to meet these commitments.
CPR’s briefing paper recommends that:
President Obama’s Executive Order on the Chesapeake marked a pivotal moment in Bay restoration. The Order directed federal agencies, and specifically EPA, to take a strong leadership role in restoration efforts. This new role—a combination of enforcer and collaborator—is a welcomed, if overdue, change. The coming months will set the tone for what EPA and other federal agencies expect from Bay states, and that tone should be firm and forceful. All eyes—and our eyes—will be watching.