Source: United States Senator for Maryland Ben Cardin
March 23, 2022
Members of Congress urge strategic reprogramming of unused funding to create new “Chesapeake Resilient Farms Initiative”
WASHINGTON – U.S. Senators Ben Cardin (D-Md.), Bob Casey (D-Pa.) and Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) and Representatives Bobby Scott (D-Va.-03), John Sarbanes (D-Md.-03) and Abigail Spangberger (D-Va.-07) recently led a total of 20 Chesapeake Bay-state colleagues in a letter to Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack urging new action to address region-wide threats from climate change as the Bay states work toward 2025 pollution reduction goals. Specifically, the Members of Congress called on the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) to reallocate previously appropriated Fiscal Year 2021 funds to launch the “Chesapeake Resilient Farms Initiative.”
The request outlines how the NRCS could establish the Chesapeake Resilient Farms Initiative to provide an infusion of financial and technical assistance for producers to implement voluntary conservation practices. These practices include the introduction of rotational grazing and riparian buffers that cost-effectively reduce nutrients and sediment flowing into local waters and the Chesapeake Bay. These measures also are highly effective at mitigating greenhouse gas emissions and helping farms adapt to climate change.
“The timely reallocation of financial and technical assistance to producers in the most effective basins in the Chesapeake Bay watershed will reduce nutrient pollution from their farms and help our states meet their water quality goals,” the members wrote. “The need for additional investment in conservation assistance for farmers in the Chesapeake Bay watershed is more urgent than ever.”
Joining Senators Cardin, Casey, Van Hollen and Reps. Scott, Sarbanes, and Spanberger in the letter are Senators Carper (D-Del.), Warner (D-Va.), Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), Coons (D-Del.) Kaine (D-Va.) and Representatives Connolly (D-Va.-11), Beyer (D-Va.-08), Blunt Rochester (D-Del.-At Large), Brown (D-Md.-04), McEachin (D-Va.-04), Raskin (D-Md.-08), Wild (D-Pa.-07), Wexton (D-Va.-10), and Luria (D-Va.-02).
The text of the letter can be found here and below.
March 22, 2022
The Honorable Thomas J. Vilsack
Secretary of Agriculture
United States Department of Agriculture
1400 Independence Avenue, SW
Washington, DC 20250
Dear Secretary Vilsack:
Thank you for making climate solutions on productive and sustainable working lands a priority. We urge you to direct previously allocated, non-expended Fiscal Year 2021 Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) funds to establish the Chesapeake Resilient Farms Initiative. The timely reallocation of financial and technical assistance to producers in the most effective basins in the Chesapeake Bay watershed will reduce nutrient pollution from their farms and help our states meet their water quality goals. Enhancing climate resilience in the region will fulfill the Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) commitments in Executive Order 13508, Chesapeake Bay Protection and Restoration, and well as Executive Order 14008, Tackling the Climate Change Crisis at Home and Abroad.
We respectfully ask you to identify any available funds for the establishment of a climate-smart agriculture conservation initiative. Chesapeake Bay restoration partner organizations estimate nearly $750 million is needed over ten years for natural resources conservation programs in the watershed.
Launching an initiative using Farm Bill programs such as the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP), Agricultural Conservation Easement Program (ACEP), Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP), Regional Conservation Partnership Program (RCPP), and Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) is critical to ensuring states attain the Bay TMDL and the Chesapeake Bay Watershed Agreement, of which USDA is a trusted federal agency partner.
The region’s farmers are committed to protecting the Chesapeake Bay while contributing to the nation’s food supply and economy, despite growing pressures including climate change impacts. However, additional resources are needed to support this work. Recent data revisions mostly affecting agriculture are increasing the estimated amount of nitrogen reaching the Bay by 6.2 million pounds per year and phosphorus by 600,000 pounds—more than one-fifth of the estimated reductions the watershed has achieved since the Chesapeake Clean Water Blueprint goals were set in 2010. We must deliver the federal resources needed to significantly increase the pace of voluntary conservation and help close this gap by 2025.
Our states have already identified the areas where projects that cost-effectively reduce nutrients and sediment pollution are also highly effective at mitigating greenhouse gas emissions and helping farmers adapt to climate change. For example, riparian forest buffers serve as natural filters that increase groundwater recharge, helping to ensure local streams do not go dry during prolonged periods of dry weather, and store rainfall as well as carbon in soils.
The need for additional investment in conservation assistance for farmers in the Chesapeake Bay watershed is more urgent than ever. Please ensure no stone is unturned to start a climate-smart initiative in the region throughout the funds assessment process. We look forward to working with you to support eligible producers and partners in the Chesapeake Bay watershed.
Sincerely,