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Md.
Expands Environment Goals as Va. Retrenches
By Anita Huslin
Tuesday, January 16, 2001
Environmentalists
and conservationists are lining up in Annapolis and Richmond at the start of
the legislative sessions to push for more money to preserve land, plant more
oysters in the Chesapeake Bay and crack down on water polluters.
But
an inspection of the agendas of each governor and key lawmakers illuminates the
states' vastly different approaches toward protecting and restoring the
environment.
On
the one hand is Maryland Gov. Parris N. Glendening, a Democrat with a national
reputation as an advocate of curbing sprawl, who has proposed spending $145
million on land conservation and $2.5 million on oyster restoration projects.
On
the other is Gov. James S. Gilmore III (R), who is building a legacy as
Virginia's premier tax-cutter and is proposing a $13.6 million reduction in
spending on the environment.
Overlaying
these differences is the pressure both states are under to meet the goals of
the Chesapeake Bay 2000 cleanup agreement. Signed last summer by leaders of
Maryland, Virginia, Pennsylvania and the District of Columbia, the ambitious,
10-year pact is aimed at curbing sprawl, restoring wetlands and replenishing
oyster beds, among other environmental goals.
Holding
the states to that agreement is environmental groups' top priority,
particularly in Virginia, where environmentalists say Gilmore's campaign to
fund a $1-billion-a-year phaseout of the car tax threatens to undermine the
state's commitment to the effort.
"We're
not going to make the progress we need to and certainly not going to be able to
fulfill the commitment we made to our sister states without ratcheting up the
efforts significantly," said Chuck Epes, a spokesman for the Chesapeake
Bay Foundation's Virginia office.
Gilmore
has called for a $6.2 million reduction for the Virginia Land Conservation
Foundation, $1.75 million less for local soil and water conservation districts
and a $52,500 cut in state oyster money.
He
is also looking for $1 million in savings from the Virginia Marine Resources
Commission as part of a 9 percent reduction in spending by several state
agencies, including the Department of Environmental Quality and the Department
of Conservation and Recreation.
"The
things that we're doing are not and should not be regarded as a sign of
hostility to these programs," said John Paul Woodley Jr., Gilmore's
secretary of natural resources. "The priorities . . . that came to the
fore in developing this budget together with the somewhat disappointing revenue
picture we've had over past year have resulted in difficult choices having to
be made."
Private
interests and the federal and local governments have historically shouldered
many of the costs of environmental and conservation initiatives in Virginia.
Woodley said the state would look for other ways to assist such efforts.
By
contrast, Glendening, who detailed his environmental agenda yesterday at an environmental
summit in Annapolis, is making land conservation a cornerstone of his session
priorities. He is pledging $145 million to buy and conserve land over the next
five years.
"My
intent is to lead by example," Glendening said after the summit. "We
can't solve these issues alone. I certainly hope our neighbors will also."
While
environmentalists offered high praise for Glendening's package, they said they
still believe the state can do more to prevent the spread of nutrient and
sediment pollution in the bay by banning the open-water disposal of dredge
material. Last summer, Glendening killed a proposal to dump dredged sediment at
a site north of the Chesapeake Bay bridge, but the chances of an outright ban
getting far this session are slim.
"We've
made the decision to spend our political capital on open-space
preservation," Glendening said. "We can only get so much done through
[the legislature] at one time."
On
water quality, Maryland lawmakers this session hope to force the state
Department of Environment to move more quickly to prevent companies from
polluting while their permits are being renewed and require wastewater plants
to report sewage overflows to the state as soon as they occur.
"I
think it should be enshrined in the law that when a sewage overflow occurs, the
Maryland Department of the Environment and the public are notified," said
state Sen. Brian E. Frosh (D-Montgomery).
In
both states, environmentalists and watermen will be watching the legislatures
for new restrictions on commercial and recreational crabbers. Maryland
lawmakers also intend to try to gain regulatory control over the oil pipelines
within its boundaries.
That
measure is intended to give the state greater regulatory oversight of oil
companies in the wake of last summer's accident in southern Prince George's
County, where more than 100,000 gallons of fuel oil spilled from a cracked pipe
at Potomac Electric Power Co.'s generating plant.
"We
don't know yet what caused that spill, but we do know that the pipelines are
not inspected as often as they probably ought to be, given the fragility of the
Chesapeake and its importance to the economy and heritage of the region,"
Frosh said.
Environmentally-minded
Virginia lawmakers said they will fight to restore funding for bay-related
efforts and push to dedicate a portion of the state's recordation tax to land
conservation.
"Right
now, we're putting about $7.5 million of general fund money into those
programs, but to reach the Chesapeake 2000 program goals, we need $40 to $50
million a year," said Virginia Sen. Bill Bolling (R-Hanover), who chairs
the Chesapeake Bay Commission, the legislative wing of the bay cleanup effort.
Although
a higher proportion of bay watershed lands in Virginia already have been
protected from development than in Maryland, Virginia still has more than
533,000 acres to preserve to meet the bay agreement and traditionally spends
less on conservation than Maryland, according to recent studies.
Virginia
legislators also will try to restore funding to their state's water quality
improvement fund, which provides money to improve sewage treatment plants,
helps farmers reduce nutrients running off their fields and pays for stream
restorations. Currently, the fund gets 10 percent of the budget surplus, and
that portion has dwindled in the past year to about $2.7 million.
To
make up for the huge drop, the legislature's Committee for the Future of
Virginia's Environment has authorized a $28.8 million budget amendment to
restore the fund to its historic average of $31 million.
"That's
very important because there are a lot of projects in the pipeline we'd like to
fund, and if we go from a lot of money to virtually no money, some of those
projects are going to dry up," Bolling said.
© 2001
The Washington Post
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