The company has partnered with the Chesapeake Bay Foundation on this campaign and will donate $10 to its Keystone 10 Million Trees Partnership for every customer who switches from a paper bill to an electronic bill this month.
The company is providing an initial $10,000 donation to the Chesapeake Bay Foundation and will give up to $25,000 total through this campaign depending on customer response.
All of the trees planted as result of this campaign will be planted in communities served by Pennsylvania American Water.
“Enrolling in paperless billing programs is one way we can all decrease our environmental footprints and be good stewards of our critical natural resources,” said Pennsylvania American Water President Mike Doran. “Cutting down on paper mail saves trees and fuel – plus it’s easy and economical. We hope our customers will join us in this important sustainability effort.”
To go paperless today, log on to your account through the company’s MyWater portal and click “Go Paperless” on the left side of your home page.
Don’t have a MyWater account? It’s quick to set one up at the Pennsylvania American Water website. Click “Sign Up” in the MyWater login window and be sure to have your account number handy.
Trees can help clean local water sources, improve living conditions, create natural shade and privacy, and increase property values. Read more here.
Customers can take their environmental commitment a step further and request free trees for their properties through this initiative.
For more information, a request form can be found online.
Be sure to note that you are a Pennsylvania American Water customer on the online request form.
“At the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, we are proud to join with partners like Pennsylvania American Water who understand the importance of clean water and what it means to our quality of life,” said Lane Whigham, Chesapeake Bay Foundation’s Pennsylvania director of major giving. “By supporting CBF, Pennsylvania American Water helps create vibrant streamside forests throughout Pennsylvania. These trees improve air quality and prevent pollution from running into our streams and rivers, helping save the Chesapeake Bay downstream while also helping make sure that communities across Pennsylvania have a healthy, thriving environment.”
For more on Chesapeake Bay-related issues in Pennsylvania, visit the Chesapeake Bay Foundation-PA webpage. Click Here to sign up for Pennsylvania updates (bottom of left column). Click Here to support their work.
Also visit the Keystone 10 Million Trees Partnership to learn how you can help clean water grow on trees.
CBF has over 275,000 members in Bay Watershed.
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[Posted: April 4, 2022] PA Environment Digest
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