Saturday, November 22, 2025

Chesapeake Bay Journal: Revised Chesapeake Bay Watershed Cleanup Agreement Set For Vote Dec. 2

By Jeremy Cox,
Chesapeake Bay Journal

The future of the Chesapeake Bay cleanup greatly depends on what happens at a gathering of state and federal leaders at Baltimore’s Inner Harbor on Dec. 2.

The Chesapeake Bay Program’s Executive Council is set to consider adopting a raft of updates to the blueprint that has guided the multi-state and federal effort for more than a decade.

The Bay Program has overseen the estuary’s cleanup since 1983, directly and indirectly influencing the spending of billions of dollars in environmental projects.

The council includes the governors of all six states in the Bay watershed — Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, New York, Delaware and West Virginia — as well as the mayor of the District of Columbia; the administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency; and the chair of the Chesapeake Bay Commission, which consists mostly of state legislators.

As the Bay Journal went to press, four governors were expected to attend the meeting: Maryland Gov. Wes Moore (D), Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro (D), Delaware Gov. Matt Meyer (D) and outgoing Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R). 

Also expected to attend are the District of Columbia Mayor Muriel Bowser (D) and Maryland state Sen. Sara Love (D), chair of the Chesapeake Bay Commission.

The 2014 version of the Bay agreement had set a 2025 deadline for putting in place actions necessary to achieve a variety of goals, including reducing nutrient and sediment pollution, expanding public access to waterways, planting trees along streambanks and opening the upper reaches of rivers and streams to fish passage. 

The effort met a number of its goals but fell short of others, including the foundational goal to reduce nutrient pollution in the Bay.

The newly revised agreement extends the region’s cleanup commitment by 15 years. 

Many leading environmental groups have criticized the document as lacking ambition. They point to rollbacks, for example, in the amount of wetlands to be created.

The federal government shutdown in October and early November also prevented many agency experts from participating in the final days of revising the agreement.

But advocates for the new plan say it is an improvement over the first draft circulated for public comment over the summer. 

The revised version sets a uniform deadline of 2040 to reach the plan’s goals, with a 2033 midpoint assessment. 

And it more firmly ties states to meeting a mandatory “pollution diet” that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency enacted in 2010.

“The Bay restoration movement could have easily fizzled out in the current climate of division and uncertainty, said Keisha Sedlacek, senior policy director for the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, the region’s largest Bay advocacy group. “Instead, everyone worked to find common ground, creating a vision for the next 15 years,”

The Executive Council meeting is scheduled for 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Dec. 2, at the National Aquarium in Baltimore.

Visit the Chesapeake Bay Program’s Executive Council webpage for information on how to register to join the meeting remotely via Zoom.


(Reprinted from Chesapeake Bay Journal.  Click Here to subscribe to the Chesapeake Bay Journal.)

Related Articles This Week:

-- DEP Awards $3.1 Million In Federal Funds To Support 8 Local Water Quality Improvement Projects In 8 Counties  [PaEN]

-- Chesapeake Bay Journal: Revised Chesapeake Bay Watershed Cleanup Agreement Set For Vote Dec. 2  [PaEN]

-- Chesapeake Bay Foundation Gives Thanks For Conservation Efforts By Landowners Like These Turkey Farmers In Adams, Lycoming Counties  [PaEN] 

-- York County Master Watershed Stewards Growing Native Trees For The Chesapeake Bay Restoration Effort  [PaEN]

-- DEP Invites Comments On Renewal Of The Water Quality/Mining Permit For 11,336 Acres Of Consol Mining Underground Coal Mining In Cumberland Twp., Greene County [PaEN] 

-- EPA, DEP Announce Hanover Foods Agrees To Pay $1.15 Million Penalty For Clean Water Act Violations At Its York County Plant  [PaEN] 

-- DEP, EPA, DOJ Reach $1.15 Million Settlement With Hanover Foods Over Federal Clean Water Act Violations In York County

-- Penn State Extension/Alliance For The Chesapeake Bay: Dec. 10 Funding Forest Conservation Work Webinar  [PaEN] 

NewsClips:

-- Chesapeake Bay Program: The Decades-Long Effort To Restore Brook Trout Habitat In The Kettle Creek Watershed, Potter County 

-- Chesapeake Bay Journal - Carolyn Beans: Lancaster County Set To Reach 125,000 Acres Of Preserved Farmland

-- PennLive: Lancaster Conservancy Preserves 180 Acres In York County

-- Republican Herald: Schuylkill, Luzerne County Watershed Projects Receive EPA Section 319 Funding

-- Fox43: Hanover Foods Ordered To Pay $1.15 Million Fine For Pollution Violations In Codorus Creek Tributary In Settlement With EPA, DEP, Lower Susquehanna RiverKeeper, Environmental Integrity Project  

-- Partnership For Delaware Estuary 2025 Year In Review Video

-- Horn Farm Center: Ecological Restoration, Ecological Gardener, Regenerative Grower, Forager, Beekeeper Training Programs In York County

[Posted: November 22, 2025] PA Environment Digest

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