Press

Chesapeake Bay Program

A Watershed Partnership

www.chesapeakebay.net

410 Severn Avenue, Suite 109 • Annapolis, Maryland 21403 ¦ 410-267-5700 ¦ toll free 800-YOUB-BAY

v

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 10, 2007

Contact: Josh Voelker, (410) 267-5708

ivoelker@chesapeakebav.net



(5

$5 MILLION AWARDED TO REGIONAL ORGANIZATIONS TO
REDUCE NUTRIENT POLLUTION TO THE CHESAPEAKE BAY

Washington, D.C. - Eight watershed-based projects designed to prevent millions of
pounds of harmful substances from entering the Chesapeake Bay were announced today
as recipients of the 2007 Chesapeake Bay Targeted Watershed Grants Program. A total
of $5 million from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the National
Fish & Wildlife Foundation (NFWF) will finance the projects, which range in amount
from $400,000 to $800,000.

The Chesapeake Bay Targeted Watershed Grants, announced at a ceremony this morning
at Watts Branch Park by EPA Assistant Administrator for Water, Benjamin H. Grumbles,
and NFWF Executive Director Jeff Trandahl, will help the eight regional organizations
implement innovative programs designed to reduce the amount of nutrients (nitrogen and
phosphorous) and sediment flowing into the Chesapeake Bay.

"These grass-roots, blue water projects will reduce local runoff pollution and increase
Bay-wide health, while showing the nation the power of innovation and Cooperative
Conservation to keep America's watersheds clean,"' said Grumbles.

This year's Targeted Watersheds Grant recipients are:

•	Reducing Nutrient Loads from Equine Operations, Maryland Department
of Agriculture, $700,000

•	Conestoea Watershed Manure Composting. Chesapeake Bav Foundation,
Inc., $800,000

•	Stream Fencing Pilot for Reducing Nutrient Loads, Virginia Polytechnic
Institute and State University. $800,000

•	Market Based Approach to Nutrient Reduction, Protected Harvest,
$800,000

•	Watts Branch Watershed Restoration Project, District of Columbia
Department of the Environment, $500,000

•	Extreme BMP Makeover, Center for Watershed Protection, $605,000

•	Innovative Cropping Practices in the Shenandoah River Watershed,
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, $400,000

•	Meeting Regional Goals through Local Benefits, The Conservation Fund,
$400,000

Combined, the eight projects have the potential to reduce more than 1.5 million
pounds of nutrients and over 1.1 million pounds of sediment annually to the Bay.
Grants were awarded to projects that include: improving manure and pasture
management on 1,450 acres of small horse farms; creating a diversified system for
composting and marketing livestock manure; implementing a range of innovative,

— more ~


-------
$5JVIiHioii^wardedJbr_Chesa]3eakeJia£Restoration

Page^

farmer-friendly practices to keep livestock out of streams and off streambanks; demonstrating the
widespread potential for continuous no-till and other innovative cropping practices; establishing a dairy
certification and marketing program for milk that is produced to minimize impacts to the Chesapeake;
and, demonstrating the value of stream restoration and low impact development practices to reduce
pollution runoff in urban and suburban settings.

"These projects have tremendous potential to accelerate the restoration of the Chesapeake Bay and its
tributaries," stated Trandahl. "Collectively they demonstrate promising market-based strategies for
addressing some of the most challenging impacts to the Bay, including impacts from agriculture and
residential development, as well as demonstrating the positive impacts of large-scale stream and riparian
restoration in both urban and rural settings."

Applications for the Chesapeake Bay Targeted Watersheds Grant Program are reviewed by a steering
committee convened by NFWF, and awardees are selected based on criteria established jointly by the
Foundation and steering committee which include innovation, sustainability and cost-effectiveness.

Primary funding for the grant program is provided by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency through
its national Targeted Watersheds Grants Program, and the Chesapeake Bay Program.

For a listing and map of the 2007 Chesapeake Bay Targeted Watersheds, visit the National Fish and
Wildlife Foundation homepage at http://www.nfwf.org/targetedwatersheds or the Chesapeake Bay
Program at http://www.chesapeakebav.net/.

m#


-------