STORIES OF PROGRESS IN ACHIEVING HEALTHY WATERS
FARM PROJECTS HELP PROTECT DRINKING WATERS FROM THE SCHUYLKILL RIVER

Berks County, PA, March 5, 2015

•	Three farms get more than $1.2 million to
protect streams - latest in series of Schuylkill
Action Network (SAN) agricultural projects.

•	Schuylkill - source of drinking water for more
than 1.5 million people.

•	EPA a key SAN partner since 2003

Success/Progress Story: Farm improvements helping to restore Schuylkill River and tributaries.

General Information:

Three dairy farms are among the latest in Berks County, Pennsylvania to reduce pollution from their properties
- part of a broader, long-term effort by the Schuylkill Action Network, or SAN, to target a key threat to drinking
water supplies for more than 1.5 million people.

The Rice, Zimmerman and Martin farms have installed best management practices (BMPs) that include manure
storage, stormwater management, barnyard controls and fencing - steps that benefit the farmers and
contribute to cleaner water by keeping animals, their wastes and other pollutants out of streams.

EPA's Mid-Atlantic Water Protection Division has been closely involved in SAN activities since 2003 when EPA
co-founded the SAN, a unique partnership of government agencies, non-profit groups and commercial
interests - over 350 members strong - focused on cleaning up pollution affecting the Schuylkill River.

In dealing with farm pollution, the Division's Office of Drinking Water and Source
Water Protection serves as a member of the SAN Agricultural Workgroup and
advises on funding for specific projects. Activities are directed toward impaired

Berks County. PA

streams with priority to headwater areas.

Agriculture is a main source of pollution in the watershed, affecting about a third of the streams in Berks
County. Stormwater runoff, drainage from abandoned mines, and pathogens are other chief culprits.

Specifics:

In the 2014 time period alone, farms in the Schuylkill Watershed have installed nine manure storage facilities,
added eight acres of riparian buffers, upgraded six barnyards to control stormwater pollution and created two
animal crossings to prevent erosion. To date, more than 175 similar types of farm improvement projects have
been completed at priority project sites in the watershed.

The Rice, Zimmerman and Martin farms received more than $1.2 million for their work, primarily from two
sources: $903,180 from the USDA Natural Resource Conservation Service's Environmental Quality Incentives
Program (EQIP), and $210,504 in matching funds from the Schuylkill River Restoration Fund through a grant to
the Berks County Conservancy and Berks County Conservation District.

The Conservation District is also receiving EPA Clean Water Act Section 319 funds through the Pennsylvania
Department of Environmental Protection to assess the stream benefits of the BMPs installed at the three farms
and others in the area. For more information, visit SAN's Agricultural Projects page.

Beth Garcia, 215-814-5243
EPA WPD Office of Drinking Water and Source Water Protection


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