Chesapeake Executive Council acts on climate change

Chesapeake Executive Council acts on climate change Download
Virginia Beach, VA ()

Representatives from the Chesapeake Bay watershed states, the District of Columbia, the Chesapeake Bay Commission and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) gathered today to discuss the impacts of climate change on the 64,000-square-mile Chesapeake Bay watershed—stretching from Cooperstown, New York to their meeting location at the Brock Environmental Center in Virginia Beach, Virginia.

At the meeting, Virginia Governor Ralph Northam, Maryland Governor Larry Hogan and Chesapeake Bay Commission Chair David Bulova joined their colleagues in signing a directive that commits the Chesapeake Bay Program to address the increasing threats of climate change in all aspects of the partnership’s work. In particular, Bay Program partners will utilize their world-class scientific, modeling, monitoring and planning capabilities to prioritize the communities, working lands and habitats that are most vulnerable to the risks that a changing climate is bringing to the region.

"I strongly believe that by working together as a region in a bipartisan way, we can and we will continue to find real, commonsense solutions to address climate change and to protect the Chesapeake Bay,” said Maryland Governor Larry Hogan. "These challenges are too important to lose this opportunity to take action now."

Prior to the public meeting where the directive was signed, members of the Council, designees and guests joined Pamela Northam, First Lady of the Commonwealth of Virginia, and educators, including Imani Black, the founder of Minorities in Aquaculture, Melissa Deas, acting chief resiliency officer from the District of Columbia and Mark Luckenbach, associate dean of research and advisory service at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science (VIMS) on-board a VIMS vessel for their own Meaningful Watershed Educational Experience—a term that is unique to the Chesapeake Bay Program in describing student environmental education about and in the Chesapeake Bay watershed.

While on-board, participants were able to see first-hand an area that is considered to be ground-zero for climate change. The Virginia Beach and Hampton Roads region are experiencing one of the highest rates of sea-level rise and coastal flooding on the East Coast. The Virginia Coastal Resilience Master Planning Framework notes that sea levels in the region have experienced more than 18 inches of relative sea level rise in the past 100 years and are anticipated to continue to increase at an even faster rate in the future due to heavier rainfall and other extreme weather. Members, designees and guests also viewed potential solutions to addressing climate impacts, including tree canopies, a living shoreline and an oyster restoration site.

Conversations also centered around climate inequity, reaffirming the Council’s actions from the previous year, when they signed a statement prioritizing diversity, equity, inclusion and justice in all of the Bay Program’s work. In the newly implemented, Directive No. 21-1 Collective Action for Climate Change, the Bay Program specifically commits to prioritizing marginalized communities in providing necessary resources, including a focus on wetlands, tree canopy and environmental literacy, to adapt to the impacts from a changing climate.

"The Climate Directive we are signing today is the latest example of why this partnership is so important,” said Chesapeake Bay Commission Chair David Bulova. “Collective action allows us to apply the best science possible so that we can understand and mitigate the impacts of a changing climate and prioritize resources toward our most vulnerable communities. We need to do to this if we want a more resilient landscape and watershed.”

In June 2014, the Executive Council signed the Chesapeake Bay Watershed Agreement, with the vision of fostering an environmentally and economically sustainable watershed with clean water, abundant life, conserved lands and access to the water, a vibrant cultural heritage, and a diversity of engaged citizens and stakeholders.

Established over 37 years ago, the Chesapeake Executive Council is responsible for guiding the policy agenda and setting conservation and restoration goals for the regional, watershed partnership, the Chesapeake Bay Program. Members include the governors of Delaware, Maryland, New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia, the mayor of the District of Columbia, the chair of the Chesapeake Bay Commission and the administrator of the EPA on behalf of the federal government. Virginia Governor Ralph Northam currently chairs the Chesapeake Executive Council which will next meet in Richmond, Virginia in December 2021.

"A healthier Chesapeake Bay depends on a targeted, science-based approach that accounts for climate change,” said Virginia Governor Ralph Northam. “It will take bold, urgent actions to reach our goal of a Bay that is fully restored by 2025. Virginia commits to working diligently with our watershed partners to meet this commitment in a resilient, practical, cost effective manner that benefits our vast waterways, our environment, and our economy."

Quotes

"A healthier Chesapeake Bay depends on a targeted, science-based approach that accounts for climate change. It will take bold, urgent actions to reach our goal of a Bay that is fully restored by 2025. Virginia commits to working diligently with our watershed partners to meet this commitment in a resilient, practical, cost effective manner that benefits our vast waterways, our environment, and our economy."

  • Ralph Northam, Chair, Chesapeake Executive Council and Governor, Commonwealth of Virginia

"I strongly believe that by working together as a region in a bipartisan way, we can and we will continue to find real, commonsense solutions to address climate change and to protect the Chesapeake Bay. These challenges are too important to lose this opportunity to take action now."

  • Larry Hogan, Governor, State of Maryland

"The Climate Directive we are signing today is the latest example of why this partnership is so important. Collective action allows us to apply the best science possible so that we can understand and mitigate the impacts of a changing climate and prioritize resources toward our most vulnerable communities. We need to do to this if we want a more resilient landscape and watershed.”

  • David Bulova, Chair, Chesapeake Bay Commission and Delegate, Commonwealth of Virginia

“It is vital that we take action to increase resiliency and address impacts to the Chesapeake Bay watershed from the climate crisis, which threatens all aspects of our environment and economy. The Biden-Harris administration is committed to close collaboration and partnership with our state and federal partners to tackle this shared challenge in the Bay, including through implementation of this important new directive.”

  • Michael Regan, Administrator, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

“Over the past year, we’ve seen even more land preserved along the Nanticoke River, leading to the opening of new parks, including Nanticoke Crossing, and expanded public access to our waterways. With continued water quality improvement projects buoyed by passage in our state of the Clean Water for Delaware Act and sustainable watershed practices, our residents and visitors are finding more recreational and economic opportunities throughout Delaware’s portion of the Chesapeake Bay watershed.”

  • John Carney, Governor, State of Delaware

“In the face of a changing climate, the health of our people, our economy and our environment are intertwined. We also understand and recognize that given the disproportionate impacts of climate change on black and brown communities, environmental justice is also racial justice. Washington, D.C. is proud to be a leader in fighting climate change, and we are proud to join our regional partners in building a more resilient and sustainable Chesapeake Bay watershed.”

  • Muriel Bowser, Mayor, District of Columbia

"We must move now out of a reactive mode on climate change, and proactively adapt to impacts that are already happening as we work to lower greenhouse gas emissions to avert still worse impacts. In Pennsylvania, we're making this shift across sectors and programs, including incorporating our Chesapeake Bay watershed goals into our statewide climate impacts assessment, to help partners develop strategies to put the most resilient water quality improvement projects on the ground in the most strategic locations as runoff events increase in both rural and urban areas."

  • Tom Wolf, Governor, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania

“West Virginia continues to support our watershed partners in achieving the goals of the Chesapeake Bay Watershed Agreement, which includes ensuring clean and healthy waters for all of the residents and visitors to our region.”

  • Jim Justice, Governor, State of West Virginia