Thursday, March 12, 2020

Eastern PA Coalition For Abandoned Mine Reclamation Joins Keystone 10 Million Trees Partnership To Clean Up PA's Waterways

The Partnership brings together a broad array of agencies, conservation groups, outdoors enthusiasts, businesses, and individuals to address a critical threat to Pennsylvania communities: polluted water.
The goal is to plant 10 Million trees throughout Pennsylvania by the end of 2025.
Roughly 40,000 miles of Pennsylvania’s rivers and streams are impaired by polluted runoff and the legacy of coal mining, including Solomon Creek, Nanticoke Creek, Newport Creek, just to name a few in the Wyoming Valley.
Trees are a key part of the solution. They filter and absorb polluted runoff from the land, stabilize streambanks, improve soil quality, reduce flooding, and provide habitat for wildlife.
Tree Planting April 4
EPCAMR will be in Centralia, Columbia County planting apple tree seedlings on April 4th and will be getting free native trees and tubes for our planned Fall Annual Cleanup in October. Trees planted here are within the Mahanoy Creek Watershed. Click Here to volunteer
“Trees, especially when alongside streams and streets, are one of the most cost-effective ways to restore and protect stream health, help keep nutrients and soils on the land, and cleanse drinking water sources,” said Harry Campbell, CBF Executive Director in Pennsylvania. “More trees benefit our farmers, our communities, and our health and welfare.”
“EPCAMR has joined the 10 Million Trees Partnership because we see it as a natural fit for the work that we are doing to reclaim our abandoned mine lands and restore our mining impacted waterways that need riparian, floodplain, and habitat improvement projects in order to improve the water quality that is going to our major streams and rivers in both the Susquehanna and Delaware River Basins,” said Bobby Hughes, EPCAMR Executive Director.  “Trees are sequestering carbon. We’re reducing our overall footprint by planting the trees and we are helping to improve soil health, watershed health, and the wildlife habitat areas that they will be planted in for both freshwater aquatic species and mammals, birds, insects, butterflies, and pollinators alike. It’s ecosystem restoration and it involves people from the coalfield communities getting their hands dirty and sometimes, their feet wet!”
“We’re already a part of the Appalachian Regional Reforestation Initiative (ARRI) in partnership with the Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement and have signed the Statement of Mutual Intent (SMI) many years ago and have already pledged to work together to promote and encourage the restoration of high-value, hardwood forests on reclaimed coal mined lands in Appalachia using the Forestry Reclamation Approach and this partnership just makes sense to be a part of,” said Hughes.
The partnership will help achieve Pennsylvania’s commitment to reduce pollution in local streams and rivers. The Commonwealth’s Clean Water Blueprint calls for planting 95,000 acres of forest in the Bay watershed by the end of 2025.
“Clean rivers and streams are essential to our wellbeing,” said Brenda Sieglitz, CBF Keystone 10 Million Trees Partnership Manager. “By working together to plant 10 million trees, we can ensure our waterways are a vibrant part of our communities for years to come.”
Find out about local projects and get involved by becoming an active EPCAMR Volunteer through our website.  
Visit the Keystone 10 Million Trees Partnership for more on this initiative.
For more information on programs, initiatives, upcoming events and how you can get involved, visit the Eastern PA Coalition for Abandoned Mine Reclamation website.
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[Posted: March 12, 2020]  PA Environment Digest

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