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Post by Admin on Oct 13, 2014 17:26:32 GMT
A Better Way to Restore the Chesapeake Bay
When: October 28, 2014 - 6:00 p.m. - Reception / 7:00 p.m. Forum Location: Washington College - Hynson Lounge, 300 Washington Avenue., Chestertown, Maryland, 21620
Maryland officials expect that it will cost over $14 billion in the next decade to meet EPA pollution mitigation targets for the Chesapeake Bay by 2025. Yet Maryland has pointedly ignored a single, enormous source of the pollutants-the massive amount of water-scoured sediment and trapped nitrogen and phosphorus behind the Susquehanna River's Conowingo Dam. Periodic discharges from the dam, such as the one following Tropical Storm Lee in 2011, spill enormous amounts of sediment and nutrients into the Bay, dwarfing the most optimistic cleanup targets that have been set for the watershed. What should Maryland do to reduce Chesapeake Bay pollution, and is current policy too much or too little? Panelists: Robert M. Summers, Ph.D. Secretary, Maryland Department of the Environment Jim Simpson Economist and author of the forthcoming Maryland Public Policy Institute report, "A Better Way to Restore the Chesapeake Bay" David Schnare Senior Fellow, Energy and the Environment Thomas Jefferson Institute for Public Policy Moderator: Christian Krahforst, Ph.D. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow, Center for Environment & Society Washington College
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