Monday, September 30, 2024

Green & Healthy Homes Initiative Now Accepting Applications For EPA Environmental Justice Thriving Communities Grants In EPA Region 3

The Green and Healthy Homes Initiative's
Thriving Communities Grant Program, in collaboration with the the US Environmental Protection, to award $40 million in grants to fund eligible projects in historically disadvantaged communities throughout EPA’s Region 3-- Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia, and 7 federally recognized tribes.
Applications will be accepted on a rolling process. The submission deadline for the 2-year awards is November 30, 2024. The deadline for the 1-year award is April 20, 2025.

Funding is provided through the federal Inflation Reduction Act.

The program is using EPA’s definition of disadvantaged communities which is “communities that are underserved and overburdened.” 

These communities may be experiencing challenges in areas such as climate change, energy, health, housing, legacy pollution, transportation, water and wastewater, and workforce development, and in many cases have endured decades of underinvestment. 

Environmental justice projects can address the health, economic and social well-being of a community as well as equal access to the decision-making process to maintain a healthy environment in which to live, learn, and work. 

Projects can include, but are not limited to: Air quality & asthma; Fence line air quality monitoring; Monitoring of effluent discharges from industrial facilities; Water quality & sampling; Small cleanup projects; Improving food access to reduce vehicle miles traveled; Stormwater issues & green infrastructure; Lead & asbestos contamination; Pesticides & other toxic substances.

Other eligible projects can include: Healthy homes that are energy/water use efficient and not subject to indoor air pollution; Illegal dumping activities, such as education, outreach, & small-scale clean-ups; Emergency preparedness & disaster resiliency; Environmental job training for occupations that reduce greenhouse gases & other air pollutants; Environmental justice training for youth

Eligible applications include nonprofits, local governments, institutions of higher learning and other groups.

Visit the Green and Healthy Homes Initiative's Thriving Communities Grant Program webpage for all the resources you need to apply.

Questions should be directed to: ThrivingCommunities@ghhi.org or call us at 443-687-7343. 

[Posted: September 30, 2024]  PA Environment Digest

NRCS-Pennsylvania Announces Sign-Up For Conservation Easement Programs

On September 30, Denise Coleman, State Conservationist for the USDA-
Natural Resources Conservation Service in Pennsylvania announced the new fiscal year 2025 sign-up periods for conservation easement programs, including the Regional Conservation Partnership Program (RCPP), and Agricultural Conservation Easement Program (ACEP). 

This year NRCS is announcing both National and Statewide application opportunities. This means applicants have a greater opportunity than ever to utilize federal funds to protect land through conservation easements. 

NRCS statewide signup cutoff periods for ACEP and RCPP Easements are November 1, 2024, January 1, 2025, and March 1, 2025.

NRCS National signup cutoff periods for Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) ACEP are October 4, 2024 and December 20, 2024

PA NRCS accepts applications for easements anytime. Applications accepted before the signup deadlines will be considered for both the Statewide and National IRA funding. 

“ACEP and RCPP conservation easement purchase programs are an effective tool for landowners and partners to conserve, restore and protect our nation’s wetlands, productive agricultural lands and grasslands,” said Coleman. “NRCS is honored to be trusted by our customers to help them make long term conservation goals a reality while protecting our nation’s stewardship goals at the same time.”

ACEP-WRE applications are accepted directly from landowners on eligible lands. These easements are used to restore and enhance wetlands and improve habitat. 

Eligible lands have a history of crop production, contain hydric soils, and can be restored to natural wetland conditions. 

Contact your local NRCS office to learn more about submitting an application for ACEP WRE. 

ACEP-ALE and RCPP easement applications are accepted from eligible entities only.  Eligible entities are state and local partner organizations that apply to NRCS on behalf of landowners to acquire a conservation easement on eligible agricultural land and forest land. 

NRCS does not accept applications for ACEP-ALE and RCPP directly from landowners. 

Agricultural easement applications are coordinated through the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture Bureau of Land Preservation, the local county land preservation boards, Lancaster Farmland Trust, and the Land Conservancy of Adams County

Forest easement applications are taken by partnering land conservancies, such as Berks Nature, Clearwater Conservancy, the Lebanon Valley Conservancy, and Manada Conservancy.

Click Here for the complete announcement.

More Information

To participate in USDA conservation easement programs, applicants should be farm or forest landowners and must meet USDA eligibility criteria. 

To take advantage of NRCS technical assistance and expertise or federally funded conservation on your farm or land, please contact your local USDA NRCS Field Office.

Visit the NRCS-Pennsylvania webpage for more information on this and other assistance programs.

[Posted: September 30, 2024]  PA Environment Digest

Delaware Highlands Conservancy Announces Winners Of Confluence: Land, Water, Wildlife Photo Contest; ARTery Gallery Exhibition

On September 30, the
Delaware Highlands Conservancy announced the winners of its seventh annual juried photo contest-- Confluence: Land, Water, Wildlife-- and a gallery exhibition of the photographs at the ARTery Gallery in Milford, Pike County starting November 7. 

The contest invited local photographers to capture striking nature photos from the Upper Delaware River region in five categories: landscape, wildlife, macro, water, and the Van Scott Nature Reserve, plus a youth category for photographers under age 18.

The winners are--                    

-- Landscape category: winner April Richling (Honesdale, PA); runners-up Jeff Sidle (Beach Lake, PA) and Eric Baylin (North Branch, NY) 

-- Wildlife category: winner Kathleen Colligan (Beach Lake, PA); runners-up Kathleen Colligan and Barbara Carpenito (Beach Lake, PA).

-- Water category: winner Beth Baylin (North Branch, NY), runners-up Roger Gottlieb (Port Jervis, NY) and April Richling (Honesdale, PA).

-- Macro category: winner Meagan Hill (Beach Lake, PA), runners-up Milicent Wightman (Beach Lake, PA) and Kathe Williams (Lake Ariel, PA).

-- Van Scott Nature Reserve category: winner Claire Shickora (Lords Valley, PA) and runner-up Alexandra Santo (Lake Ariel, PA).

-- Youth category: winner Owen Doyle, age 13; runners-up Payton Darcy, Lily Eltz, and Micah Baillie Feinblatt.

-- People’s Choice: winner and the Conservancy Staff Pick is Eileen Chorba (Beach Lake, PA).

The winning photographs are available for viewing on the Delaware Highlands Conservancy Facebook page.

ARTery Gallery Exhibit

The ARTery Gallery in Milford, PA will host the Conservancy from November 7th until December 9th in an exhibition featuring the winning photographs alongside artwork created by ARTery member artists. 

The show will commence with a reception open to the public on Saturday, November 9th from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. 

The ARTery Gallery is located in the historic Forest Hall building at 210 Broad Street in Milford, PA. 

The cooperative gallery is owned and operated by successful and emerging artists and artisans from the Tri-State area. 

They enjoy collaborating with and presenting exhibits with other local organizations and are proud to partner and exhibit these winning photographs each year.  

“Meeting the photographers and sharing their work with visitors, who thoroughly enjoy the beautiful images of our region, is a high point of our yearly exhibit schedule,” says gallery Director, Marie Liu.  “The public is encouraged to visit the exhibit throughout its month-long installation to enjoy the talent of these photographers, the awesome beauty that surrounds us in the Delaware River valley, and learn about the Conservancy.”

The Delaware Highlands Conservancy works in partnership with landowners and communities to protect the working farms and forests, clean waters and wildlife habitat of the Upper Delaware River region. For more information, call 570-226-3164/845-583-1010.

[Posted: September 30, 2024]  PA Environment Digest

New Cumberland Library In Cumberland County To Hold Oct. 20 Lecture, Book Signing Event For Cradle Of Conservation, An Environmental History of Pennsylvania

The
Friends of the New Cumberland Library are kicking off their 2024-2025 Cultural Series with a lecture and book signing by Allen J. Dieterich-Ward, author of Cradle of Conservation: An Environmental History of Pennsylvania.

Allen Dieterich-Ward is Professor of History and Director of The Graduate School at Shippensburg University. 

His latest book deepens our understanding of how Pennsylvanians have conserved and consumed. 

From the origins of “Penn’s Woods” to the controversial practice of fracking, Cradle of Conservation provides the first comprehensive study of Pennsylvania’s environmental history.

The event will be held at the New Cumberland Public Library at 1 Benjamin Plaza, New Cumberland, PA starting at 3:00 p.m.

Click Here for more on the event.

Learn more about Pennsylvania’s conservation history by visiting the PA Conservation Heritage website to find articles, teaching aids, documentaries and more.

Resource Links:

-- Temple University Press To Release Cradle Of Conservation - An Environmental History Of Pennsylvania By Allen Dieterich-Ward Sept. 20  [PaEN] 

-- PA Parks & Forests Foundation Penn’s Stewards Newsletter: New Book On PA Conservation History; PA Healthy Lands Week; Viewfinders For Colorblind In 10 Parks; Friends Group Activities; More!  [PaEN] 

[Posted: September 30, 2024]  PA Environment Digest

Monday PA Environment & Energy NewsClips - 9.30.24

“The people have a right to clean air, pure water, and to the preservation of the natural, scenic, historic and esthetic values of the environment. Pennsylvania's public natural resources are the common property of all the people, including generations yet to come. As trustee of these resources, the Commonwealth shall conserve and maintain them for the benefit of all the people.”

-- Article I, Section 27 Pennsylvania Constitution  [It’s Not A Suggestion]


House Fall Voting Schedule

-- September 30

-- October 1, 2, 7, 8, 9, 21, 22, 23

-- November 12, 13

-- Committee Schedule


Senate Fall Voting Schedule

-- September 30

-- October 1, 2, 7, 8, 9, 21, 22, 23

-- November 13, 14

-- Committee Schedule


TODAY’s Calendar Of Events 


September 30-- Senate Appropriations Committee meets to consider Senate Bill 1237 (Baker-R-Luzerne) reauthorizing the PA One Call underground utility safety program [that excludes almost all conventional oil and gas pipelines]. Rules Room [No video coverage].  Off the Floor.


September 30-- House Consumer Protection, Technology & Utilities Committee meets to consider House Bill 2189 (Matzie-D-Beaver) reauthorizing the PA One Call underground utility safety program [that excludes almost all conventional oil and gas pipelines]; House Resolution 511 (Matzie-D-Beaver) designating Sept. 23 to 29 Rail Safety Week.  Room 515 Irvis Building. 10:00 a.m. Click Here to watch online.


October 1-- House Environmental Resources and Energy Committee meets to consider House Bill 2277 (Otten-D-Chester), the PA Reliable Energy Sustainability Standard (PRESS) is the Governor’s Energy Plan that would diversify energy generation, improve grid reliability, lower consumer costs by avoiding energy price spikes and create energy-related jobs; House Bill 2393 (Friel-D-Chester) setting standards for the storage or land application of food processing residual waste on farms; House Bill 2594 (Friel-D-Chester) providing for the certification of food processing residual waste haulers and brokers; Senate Bill 211 (Yaw-R-Lycoming) setting decommissioning requirements for solar energy facilities [Senate Fiscal Note & Summary].. Room 205 Ryan Building. 9:30 a.m.  Click Here to watch online.  Read more here on agenda.


October 1-- House Republican Policy Committee hearing on PJM’s Electric Capacity Auction, What Needs To Be Done To Prevent Blackouts By 2030.  Room 418 Capitol Building.  9:00 a.m.  Click Here to watch onlineRead hearing announcement.


October 1-- House Veterans Affairs & Emergency Preparedness Committee meets to consider House Bill 1541 (Harkins-D-Erie) banning PFAS ‘Forever Chemicals’ in firefighting equipment; House Bill 1571 (Scott-D-Montgomery) require labeling of firefighting equipment containing PFAS ‘Forever Chemicals.’  Room 515 Irvis Building. Call of the Chair.  Click Here to watch online.


-- September 30 -  Weekly PA Environment Digest Newsletter Now Available  [PaEN]


-- PA Oil & Gas Weekly Compliance Dashboard - September 21 to 27 - Gas Storage Areas Wells Leaking; Failure To Comply With Orders, Failure To Report Fracking Chemicals; Bubbling Conventional Pipeline Leak  [PaEN]


-- PA Oil & Gas Industrial Facilities: Permit Notices, Opportunities To Comment - September 28 [PaEN] 


-- DEP Posted 73 Pages Of Permit-Related Notices In September 28 PA Bulletin  [PaEN] 


-- KDKA: ‘I Don’t Know That Anybody Could Be Fully Prepared For The Amount Of Flooding’ From Hurricane Helene In North Carolina: FEMA  [Warning To One Of The Most Flood-Prone States In US - Pennsylvania]


-- PittsburghUnionProgress.com: Turnpike Hears Strong Opposition To Allegheny Mountain Bypass


-- Post-Gazette: Pittsburgh Company Pioneers Heat Pump Technology To Warm, Cool Buildings


-- MCall: 34,000+ Met-Ed Customers Lose Power In Northampton County Due To Substation Problem 


-- Post-Gazette Editorial: Reopening Three Mile Island Nuclear Power Plant Is A Huge Boost For PA  


-- WESA: Pittsburghers Pledge To Get Out Of The Car For ‘Week Without Driving


-- Citizens Voice: North Branch Land Trust Receives PPL Foundation Grant To Help Protect Land In Hazleton Area


-- TribLive: St. Xavier In Unity To Host Fall Walk, Road Ramble, Input On Nature Preserve Plans In Westmoreland 


6th Oil/Natural Gas Spike: True Energy Independence Means Renewables

[There Is No Limit To What Oil/Natural Gas Industry Can Make You Pay]


-- Reuters: Big US Oil/Gas Companies Reveal ‘Massive’ $42 Billion In Payments To Foreign Governments; US Gets Worst Natural Resource Extraction Deals 


Other States/National/International


-- The Guardian/ProPublica: EPA Will Withdraw Approval Of chevron Plastic-Based Fuels Likely To Cause Cancer


PA Politics - Everything Is Connected

-- Erie Times: Boomerang Bellwether: Erie County Critical To Both Democrats, Republicans

-- Inquirer: PA House Races To Watch In November That Will Determine Who Takes, Keeps Control

-- Inquirer: PA State Treasurer Race - Here’s What You Need To Know

-- Spotlight PA: The Powerful Interests Bankrolling Critical Statewide Row Office Races

-- TribLive: Mail-In Ballots Mean Many Will Have Voted Long Before Election Day

-- PennLive Guest Essay: A Lot Of Good Republicans Are Disappointed In Their Party, Their Candidate For President - By Mark Singel

-- AP: University Of Pennsylvania Imposes 1-Year Suspension On Professor Over Comments On Race

-- PennLive: Growing Number Of Violent Threats Puts PA School Districts On Edge

-- TribLive: Microschools Growing As Option As More Families Seek School Choice

-- Inquirer: Horse Deaths At Parx Casino, A Racing Association’s Alleged Financial Misconduct Have Industry Alarmed

-- The Center Square: Details Of New $1.3 Billion 76ers Basketball Arena Proposal Announced In Philadelphia

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[Posted: September 30, 2024]  PA Environment Digest