Tuesday, February 24, 2026

US Army Corps Pittsburgh District, Southwestern PA Commission Host March 9 Public Meeting On Chartiers Creek Flood Risk Study In Allegheny, Washington Counties

The
US Army Corps of Engineers Pittsburgh District and the Southwestern PA Commission will host a March 9 public meeting on the Chartiers Creek Watershed Flood Risk Management Feasibility Study in Allegheny and Washington counties.

The meeting will be held at the Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission office, 42 21st Street in  Pittsburgh from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

The Chartiers Creek extends 48 miles from Washington County downstream to the Ohio River. In recent decades, the creek’s watershed has experienced frequent, systemic flooding, increasing flood- and life-safety risks to communities. 

The feasibility study will examine the approximately 277 square-mile area to evaluate possible flood-control management solutions and alternatives to reduce risk for the more than 250,000 residents living within the watershed.

The study is authorized under the 2022 Water Resources and Development Act (WRDA). Conducting it efficiently is part of the district’s core mission priorities, including modernizing business processes. 

Click Here for the announcement of the meeting.

Related Articles This Week:

-- Penn State Extension Hosts 5-Part Advanced Stream Repair Webinar Series Starting March 27   [PaEN] 

-- Penn State Extension Hosts In-Person Stream Health Investigation Educator Workshops March 18 In Butler County, March 31 In Cumberland County [PaEN]

-- Penn State Researchers Find Some Pesticides Can Slip Through Forested Stream Buffers, Other Natural Protections Into Streams [PaEN]  

NewsClip:

-- Chesapeake Bay Journal: How To Reduce PFAS ‘Forever Chemicals’ In Your Drinking Water

[Posted: February 24, 2026]  PA Environment Digest


Penn State Researchers Find Some Pesticides Can Slip Through Forested Stream Buffers, Other Natural Protections Into Streams

By Jeff Mulhollem,
Penn State News

Pesticides can harm aquatic ecosystems and human health, so scientists need to understand how they move from farm fields into streams. 

A management tool commonly implemented is riparian buffers--  strips of vegetation, like shrubs or grasses, bordering streams-- that the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) advises can reduce the amount of nutrients, sediment and pesticides getting into waterways. 

But it’s unclear how effective buffers actually are at stopping pesticides from entering streams, according to a multidisciplinary team led by Penn State researchers. 

To find out, the researchers conducted a study on a small agricultural stream, finding that adding buffers likely reduces the amount of specific pesticides from reaching the stream, but not others.

The researchers, who published their findings Feb. 24 in the Journal of Environmental Quality, focused on Halfmoon Creek [in Centre and Huntingdon counties] and its 24-square-mile watershed in central Pennsylvania characterized by a karst landscape--  an area underlain by soluble bedrock with lots of cracks, sinkholes and underground water flow.

The study is part of the team’s three-year investigation into the overall mitigation ability of riparian buffers, funded by a $750,000 grant from the USDA’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture.

“In this research, we wanted to understand whether vegetative buffers can reduce the amount of various pesticides getting into streams in agricultural areas,” said team leader Heather Preisendanz, professor of agricultural and biological engineering in the College of Agricultural Sciences. “We have seen evidence that buffers can protect streams from nutrients and sediment, but pesticides are a different story because they move with water in different ways, depending on the type.”

Pesticides can reach streams by surface runoff-- rain washes them over land--  or in groundwater if they soak into soil and move underground, explained Preisendanz, who is the director of the Institute for Sustainable Agricultural, Food, and Environmental Science at Penn State. 

In karst watersheds, she added, groundwater can move fast and far through cracks and underground channels-- often seeping directly into streams. That can bypass buffers completely.

The team monitored five stream locations and sampled water biweekly during the 2023 growing season. 

They tested for two herbicides often sprayed on fields to control weeds-- Atrazine and Simazine-- and four insecticides widely used by suppliers to coat and protect corn and soybeans seed-- Clothianidin, Imidacloprid, Thiacloprid and Thiamethoxam. 

The researchers analyzed how concentrations of those pesticides in stream water varied with flowrate to identify transport pathways.

The most commonly detected pesticides in stream water were Simazine, in 93% of samples; Atrazine, in 92% of samples; and Clothianidin, in 75% of samples. 

These results suggest that the chemicals are almost always present in the stream’s water during the growing season, researchers said.

Atrazine and clothianidin showed strong links between high stream flow and concentration, the researchers found, meaning they’re mainly moved by surface runoff. 

Because of that, riparian buffers can help trap or slow them down, Preisendanz pointed out. 

But Simazine did not behave like a runoff-driven chemical. It moved with groundwater, even during periods of low flow, traveling through underground fractures and conduits under karst fields directly into streams. 

Riparian buffers don’t help much with this pathway, she said.

According to the researchers, this study highlights the need to consider transport pathways to mitigate pesticide pollution, particularly in karst watersheds, because water can travel long distances underground and pesticides applied far upstream can show up downstream, often with very little dilution. 

In karst landscape, pollution can enter streams below the buffer zone, so even well-designed local buffers may miss a lot of the contamination.

“Our results here show that buffers are helpful, but only for pesticides that move in surface runoff-- groundwater-transported pesticides, especially in karst watersheds, can bypass buffers entirely,” she said. “Before we choose how to reduce pesticide pollution, we need to consider how pesticides actually move through the landscape, because we can’t greatly reduce pesticide pollution with buffers alone if the pesticides are slipping underground.”

First author Henry Kibuye, a doctoral degree candidate in the Department of Agricultural and Biological Engineering; Tyler Groh, assistant research professor and watershed management extension specialist; and Tameria Veith, agricultural engineer with the USDA Agricultural Research Service, contributed to the research.


(Photos: Heather Preisendanz, Professor of Agricultural and Biological Engineering; and Henry Kibuye, a doctoral degree candidate in the Department of Agricultural and Biological Engineering.)

(Reprinted from Penn State News.)

Related Articles This Week:

-- Penn State Extension Hosts 5-Part Advanced Stream Repair Webinar Series Starting March 27   [PaEN] 

-- Penn State Extension Hosts In-Person Stream Health Investigation Educator Workshops March 18 In Butler County, March 31 In Cumberland County [PaEN]

[Posted: February 24, 2026]  PA Environment Digest

Penn State Extension Hosts 5-Part Advanced Stream Repair Webinar Series Starting March 27

The
Penn State Extension will host a five-part Advanced Stream Repair Webinar Series on March 27, April 3, 10, 17 and 24 to be held Noon to 1:00 p.m.

Gain a practical, start-to-finish understanding of modern stream restoration in this comprehensive webinar series. 

Participants will explore the causes of stream degradation, learn how to assess whether a stream is a good candidate for restoration, and examine common challenges and proven solutions.

The topics for each webinar include--

-- March 27: Getting Started With Advanced Stream Repair

-- April 3: Historic Dams, Legacy Sediment, Buried Wetlands, and Restoration

-- April 10: Large Woody Material Additions in Stream-Valley Restoration

-- April 17: Limited Space Streambank and Habitat Restoration Practices

-- April 24: Watershed Manager Panel Discussion

Who is this for?

-- Streamside property owners seeking help restoring degraded stream sections

-- Conservation professionals expanding their stream restoration knowledge

-- Concerned citizens interested in improving local stream health

-- Conservation volunteers involved in or exploring restoration projects

What will you learn?

-- Why streams degrade and how historical land use affects current conditions

-- Modern restoration techniques, site selection, and required baseline data

-- Legacy sediment basics, benefits of removal, and dam removal impacts

-- How floodplain and wetland reconnection improves water quality and habitat

-- The ecological role, design, and permitting considerations for strategic wood placement

-- Streambank stabilization methods for confined or challenging sites

-- How restoration affects flooding and how development influences stream systems

-- Ecological, water quality, and recreational benefits, plus long-term maintenance and assistance options

Continuing education credits are available.

Click Here to register and for more information.

Visit the Penn State Extension website to learn more about many other education opportunities.

Related Articles This Week:

-- Penn State Extension Hosts 5-Part Advanced Stream Repair Webinar Series Starting March 27   [PaEN] 

-- Penn State Extension Hosts In-Person Stream Health Investigation Educator Workshops March 18 In Butler County, March 31 In Cumberland County [PaEN]

[Posted: February 24, 2026]  PA Environment Digest

Tuesday PA Environment & Energy Articles - NewsClips: 2.24.26

“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]


Senate Voting Schedule

Budget Hearings: February 24 to March 5

March 16, 17, 18, 23, 24, 25

April 20, 21, 22

May 4, 5, 6

June 1, 2, 3, 8, 9, 10, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 29, 30

-- Committee Schedule


House Voting Schedule

Budget Hearings: February 25 to March 12

March. 23, 24, 25

April 13, 14, 15, 27, 28, 29

May 4, 5, 6

June 1, 2, 3, 8, 9, 10, 15, 16, 17, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30

September 28, 29, 30

October 5, 6, 7, 19, 20, 21

November 9, 10

-- Committee Schedule


TODAY’s Calendar Of Events 


NOTICE: PA House Cancels Budget Hearings Tuesday


February 26-- Senate Appropriations Committee budget hearing: 1:00 - Department of Environmental Protection.


March 2-- NEW. House Energy Committee meets to consider House Bill 2150 (Mullins-D- Lackawanna) requiring energy consumption and water use by data centers [Draft Amendment], House Bill 2151 (Donahue-D-Lackawanna) directing DCED to develop Model Data Center Zoning Ordinance and provide assistance to municipalities [Draft Amendment]. Room G-50 Irvis Building. 10:00 a.m. Click Here to watch online.


March 2-- NEW. House Energy Committee informational meeting on net metering policies. Room G-50 Irvis Building. 10:30 a.m.  to Noon. Click Here to watch online.


March 2-- House Appropriations Committee budget hearing: 1:00 - Departments of Environmental Protection and Conservation and Natural Resources. Click Here to watch live.


March 3-- Senate Appropriations Committee budget hearing: 1:00 - Public Utility Commission.  


March 5-- House Appropriations Committee budget hearing: 1:00 - Public Utility Commission. Click Here to watch live.


March 16-- NEW. House Energy Committee hearing on House Bill 2223 (Fiedler-D- Philadelphia) advanced transmission technologies [Draft Bill], House Bill 2225 (Davidson) virtual power plants [Draft Bill]  Room G-50 Irvis Building.  Noon to 2:30 p.m. Click Here to watch online.


March 18--  CANCELED. Rescheduled for April 30. DEP Oil & Gas Technical Advisory Board meeting. 10:00 a.m. Contact: Todd M. Wallace twallace@pa.gov(formal notice)


March 23-- NEW. House Energy Committee informational meeting on the PA Energy Development Authority. Room G-50 Irvis Building.  10:30 to 11:30 a.m.  Click Here to watch online.


March 24-- NEW. House Energy Committee hearing on House Bill 2076 (Venkat-D-Allegheny) establishing a regulatory framework for geothermal energy for residential, commercial and industrial uses. Room B-31 Main Capital. 10:00 to 11:00 a.m.  Click Here to watch online.


April 16-- DCED PA Grade Crude [Oil] Development Advisory Council meeting.  Penn State, State College.  10:00.  Contact: Adam Walters 717-214-6548 or adwalters@pa.gov



-- Evangelical Environmental Network: Rollbacks On Mercury, Toxic Emissions Limits From Power Plants Threatens The Health And Lives Of Our Children [PaEN]  


-- Post-Gazatte - Anya Litvak: US Steel/Nippon Gets Green Light From Allegheny County For Slag Recycling Project That Puts Emission Limits Where They Didn’t Exist Before


-- WTAE: ‘A Race Against Time:’  Remembering Michele Wright’s Coverage Of 2002 Quecreek Mine Rescue In Somerset County


-- Penn State Extension Hosts In-Person Stream Health Investigation Educator Workshops March 18 In Butler County, March 31 In Cumberland County [PaEN]


-- TribLive: Most Pittsburgh Water Authority Customers Facing Rising Tide Of Higher Bills


-- Republican Herald: After Aqua Pennsylvania Water Emergency Ends, Shenandoah Officials Working To Prevent Further Problems


-- WESA - Rachel McDevitt: Hazelwood Residents Urge Pittsburgh City Council To Create Buffer Between Homes, Waste Transfer/Recycling Center


-- York Daily Record: From Petroglyphs To Paintings, The Susquehanna River’s Story Endures In Vast Art Collection


-- Erie Times: Corry Junction Greenway Trail Project Back On Track In Corry 


-- Wilkes-Barre Times-Leader: Plans For New Park On Former Harry E. Colliery Coal Breaker Site Advance In Swoyersville


A.I. /Data Centers


-- Scranton Times: Archbald Schedules 2nd March 10 Hearing On Proposed 14 Building A.I. Data Center Campus [PDF of Article]


-- TribLive: Murrysville Takes First Steps Toward Regulating A.I. Data Centers, Solar Array Development In Allegheny County


-- Utility Dive: PPL Spending Plan Jumps 15% To $23 Billion On Transmission, Grid Hardening To Supply Data Centers With 25.2 GW Of Electricity In PA, KY  


-- Investor Class Action Lawsuit Filed Against CoreWeave, Inc. Lancaster Data Center Developer Seeking Recovery For Overstating Demand For Its Services


-- LancasterOnline: BusinessInsider Reports Lenders Passed On Financing Lancaster City A.I. Data Centers; Developer Says Project Is Fully Funded And Under Construction


-- Wall Street Journal: Viral Doomsday Report Lays Bare Wall Street’s Deep Anxiety About A.I. Future [PDF of Article]


Today’s Oil & Gas Violations


-- Today’s Violations: DEP inspection of two Carol E. & Guy R. Daubenspeck conventional wells in Connoquenessing Twp., Butler County found the wells abandoned and not plugged and owner failed to submit annual production, waste generation and well integrity reports. Violations issued.  DEP inspection report.


-- Today’s Violations: DEP inspection of Niche Energy LLC conventional well in Wayne Twp., Erie County found evidence of wastewater spill, corroded storage tank. Inspection sent to owner for “review.” DEP inspection report.  ​


-- Today’s Violations: DEP monitoring of Expand Oper LLC State Game Lands shale gas well found continuing casing/cementing failure for 133 days and counting in Leroy Twp., Bradford County. Violations, monitoring continued. DEP inspection report.


Clairton Coke [Coal] Works Explosion


-- TribLive: 2nd Lawsuit Filed By Family Of Westmoreland County Man Killed In US Steel/Nippon Clairton Coke [Coal] Works Explosion


Train Derailments


-- The Center Square: Development Of New Railroad Safety Rules Gets Nod From PUC Using Lessons Learned From Norfolk Southern Train Derailment 


Other States/National


-- PA Capital-Star: US Supreme Court Takes Up Climate Case Testing Local Lawsuits Against Oil Companies


PA Politics - Everything Is Connected

-- Inquirer: PA Leaders Want To Avoid Another State Budget Impasse, But With $4.3 Billion Budget Shortfall Can They?

-- Inquirer: PA Republican Candidate For Governor Stacy Garrity Will Be President’s Guest At State Of Union Address; Here’s Who Else Is Going From PA

-- Spotlight PA: Rape Crisis Centers Say Shapiro’s Budget Bill Worsen Staffing, Service Challenges

-- WHYY: ACLU Of PA Accuses Quakertown Police Chief Of Acting As ‘Counter-Protester’ During Student Protest Of President’s ICE Policies

-- Post-Gazette: Community, Lawmakers Rally In Support Of Sewickley Father Arrested By President’s ICE As Daughter Undergoes Cancer Treatment

-- WESA: McCandless Approves Resolution To Keep Local Police From Working With President’s ICE

-- PennLive Editorial: Church-Going Pennsylvanians Are Marching On Washington For Immigrant Families 

-- PA Capital-Star: PA Small Businesses Cheer US Supreme Court Tariff Decision, But Still Face Uncertainty; Tariffs Cost Pennsylvanians $4 Billion

-- Wall Street Journal Editorial: The President’s Unending Tariff Mess

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Diversity - Equity - Inclusion

[Posted: February 24, 2026]  PA Environment Digest

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