Delaware River water project measuring its effectiveness

delaware river (spring)

The Delaware River Watershed Initiative, a wide-ranging collaboration between environmental groups seeking to protect water quality in the 13,500 square-mile area, is beginning to monitor and measure its progress since being launched in 2014.

The initiative, led by the William Penn Foundation, aims to shield the basin’s water supplies from forest loss, runoff from farms and storm drains, and aquifer depletion. It has spent the past two and a half years providing grants and coordinating the efforts of more than 40 conservation nonprofits.

Jon Hurdle reports in NJ Spotlight:


Now, the 10-year program is moving into a second phase in which it will assess progress toward its goal of restoring clean water across the watershed from upstate New York to the mouth of the Delaware Bay.
“We need to prove to our board that this is working,” said Clare Billott, program officer for the DRWI, speaking at the biennial Delaware Estuary Science and Environmental Summit, a gathering of conservation groups brought together by the Partnership for the Delaware Estuary.
With the foundation’s initial investment of $35 million, the program is a major effort to protect water in a region that supplies drinking water to some 15 million people. DRWI officials said the program would complement the new federal Delaware River Basin Conservation Act, which requires the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service to coordinate the work of conservation groups in the region.
Billott said the foundation has provided $15 million a year since the initiative began, and has leveraged another $15 million from the U.S. Department of Agriculture and $60 million from other sources.
While the funding may not yet have produced improvements in water quality throughout the watershed, it has helped to improve some local conditions, and has created an alliance of conservation groups that are jointly working toward common goals, Billott said.
“The biggest single thing that we got out of Phase 1 is that every one of these groups say that they are working with others,” she said.
In its upcoming second phase, the initiative’s managers will look at what participating groups have achieved, but they won’t be expected to have already hit their targets, Billott said.
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NJ Democratic leaders on Trump immigration order



Non-verbatim summary of a news conference today
in New Jersey on President Trump’s immigration order
.


U.S. Senator Bob Menendez The U.S. was founded by those escaping from religious persecutions.   What we are doing is rejecting, for example, those Iraqi interpreters who helped our military at a critical juncture during wartime. This undermines national security.
It sends the message Don’t join the Americans because they will turn their backs on you. We will do what we can to de-fund elements of the (Trump) executive order.  In all my years working on immigration I’ve never seen such fear and also such absolute commitment to push back.



U.S. Senator Cory Booker: Trump has put American citizens at greater risk and has undermining our core values. The ban applies to seven countries, none of which has been involved with the death of Americans for 40 years. He is carving out exemptions based on religious beliefs. It send the signal that we are declaring war on Islam. We are not, but it plays into the hands of terrorists. It blocks constructive partnerships with other countries.
 It also creates an environment at home that isolates immigrant communities.  To force local police to enforce the order undermines the job of local police in creating cooperation with local communities. We all believe in the ideal of religious freedom. We cannot accept this and are calling on all Americans to reject it.



Newark Mayor Ras Baraka;  We are standing behind our position as a security city. We support residents who come to work every day and help to build our community. We will not participate. Won’t let him (Trump) use local police to return people to where he thinks they belong.  We need to bring the world closer together not push it apart.


Jersey City Mayor Steve Fulop: The order is personal for me. Most of my family came here escaping Nazi Germany. Many of my relative died in the camps. We have a large Syrian community in Jersey City. We had a productive meeting today with community leaders and want to make our security city even stronger and to be an example to other
like-minded cities.



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NJ enviro, energy bills in committee Monday – Jan. 30



Here’s the lineup of Senate and Assembly committees that will consider environment and energy bills tomorrow, January 30, 2017, in Trenton, NJ


SENATE ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY
1/30/17 10:00 AM
Aide: (609) 847-3855
Committee Room 10, 3rd Floor, State House Annex, Trenton
S-2369  Whelan, J. (D-2); Van Drew, J. (D-1)
Limits application of DEP shellfish habitat rules for
certain dredging activities.  
Related Bill: A-4152
      
S-2834  Sweeney, S.M. (D-3); Greenstein, L.R. (D-14)  
The “Water Quality Accountability Act”;
imposes certain testing, reporting, management, and infrastructure investment
requirements on water purveyors.
     
S-2873  Smith, B. (D-17); Bateman, C. (R-16)
Requires municipal land use plan element of master plan
to address smart growth, storm resiliency, and environmental sustainability
issues.  
Related Bill: A-4540
      
S-2884  Whelan, J. (D-2)
Declares that deed restrictions or agreements that
prevent raising or constructing of a structure to certain flood elevation
standards are unenforceable.  
Related Bill: A-4484
     
SR-102  Van Drew, J. (D-1); Connors, C.J. (R-9)
Urges National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
to conduct new summer flounder assessment before implementing catch limits for
2017. 
Related Bill: AR-206
_________________________________________
    
ASSEMBLY APPROPRIATIONS
1/30/17  1:00 PM
Aide: (609) 847-3835
Committee Room 11, 4th Floor, State House Annex, Trenton 
A-4488  Andrzejczak, B. (D-1); Taliaferro, A.J.
(D-3); Houghtaling, E. (D-11)
Appropriates $3 million from General Fund to Dept. of
Agriculture for financial assistance to farmers whose crops have been affected
by Dickeya dianthicola disease and for related research.  
Related Bill: S-2944
   
__________________________________________ 
SENATE BUDGET AND APPROPRIATIONS
1/30/17  1:00 PM
Aide: (609) 847-3835
Committee Room 4, 1st Floor, State House Annex, Trenton
S-1899  Whelan, J. (D-2)
Requires BPU to render decision on case within 12
months of final public hearing or hold another public hearing prior to deciding
case.  
Related Bill: A-2512
_____________________________________
 
ASSEMBLY COMMERCE AND ECONOMIC DEV.
1/30/17  1:30 PM
Aide: (609) 847-3875
Committee Room 16, 4th Floor, State House Annex, Trenton

A-2743
  Coughlin, C.J. (D-19)
Authorizes municipality to provide for imposition and
collection of special assessment to secure developer’s recovery of cost of
certain improvements in connection with redevelopment project.
    
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NJ court rules on open records case tied to Bridgegate


Matt Arco reports today 
for NJ.com:

It turns out requests for public records are themselves public records.
A New Jersey appeals court ruled Friday citizens can seek and obtain public records requests that were filed by other people. The legal battle over the case has ties to the George Washington Bridge lane closure scandal.
The plaintiffs had sought public records requests filed to numerous state agencies.
Christie’s office and numerous state agencies had sought to reverse a judge’s ruling granting the requests. They argued New Jersey’s Open Public Records Act doesn’t require them to give the plaintiffs access to third-party OPRA requests. They cited a previous appeals court ruling in a case involving federal subpoenas in Middlesex County that they said buttressed their argument.
On Friday, the appeals court wrote the earlier ruling wasn’t relevant and that the public records act doesn’t exempt third-party requests.
In November, a jury found Christie’s former aide, Bridget Anne Kelly, and his Port Authority appointee, Bill Baroni, guilty on all counts.
In a seven-week trial that saw their own words used against them, Baroni and Kelly were convicted of helping orchestrate massive traffic tie-ups at the George Washington Bridge in September 2013. The plot was hatched to send a pointed message to Fort Lee Mayor Mark Sokolich, after he stepped back from his earlier public support of Christie.
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Trump calls enviro regs on automakers ‘out of control’


Steven Overly writes in
The Washington Post
:

President Trump told leaders of the country’s largest automakers Tuesday that he will curtail “unnecessary” environmental regulations and make it easier to build plants in the United States, changes that he expects will shore up the manufacturing jobs he repeatedly promised to voters on the campaign trail. 


After weeks of taunting the automotive industry over Twitter, Trump made a point to meet with the chief executives of General Motors, Ford and Fiat Chrysler just days into his term. He has pressured the companies to build more vehicles in the United States and hire more Americans into manufacturing jobs.


 “We have a very big push on to have auto plants and other plants, many other plants, you’re not being singled out … to have a lot of plants from a lot of different items built in the United States,” Trump told executives Tuesday. “It’s happening. It’s happening, bigly.” 


But Trump’s efforts to increase U.S. auto manufacturing may require more than changes to environmental regulations or permits, said Kristin Dziczek, director of the industry, labor and economics group at the Center for Automotive Research. 


Economics still favor building plants and hiring workers in Mexico, where labor is less expensive and there are fewer trade barriers. What’s more, Dziczek said the big automakers make investments knowing they will outlive any single president, regardless of what policies or regulations are put in place.


“This industry has been around for 100 years, and plants last for 40 or 50 years or more,” Dziczek said. “They can’t be swerving left and right every time there is a political change.” 


From the same article


President Trump told the chief executives that environmental regulations are “out of control” and his administration will focus on “real regulations that mean something” while eliminating those that he finds inhospitable to business. 


 “I am, to a large extent, an environmentalist. I believe in it, but it’s out of control,” Trump said. 




Executives declined to answer questions after the meeting, including whether the president cited any specific regulations he would cut. Only a portion of Tuesday’s gathering was open to the press. 


The industry contends that complying with increasingly stringent fuel economy standards increases the cost of making cars, which must then be passed on to buyers or compensated for with job cuts. 


Those regulations were introduced after the Obama administration rescued GM and Chrysler during the financial downturn and were upheld by the Environmental Protection Agency two weeks ago. 



Safe Climate Campaign Director Daniel Becker said job creation doesn’t need to come at the expense of regulations that have a positive impact on the environment. The fuel economy standards, in particular, help to save consumers money at the gas pump and reduce the country’s dependence on oil, he said. 


 “Despite the rhetoric, there is often reason behind regulations, and in this case there is overwhelming evidence of how beneficial they are for consumers, the industry and overall Americans,” Becker said.
 



Analysts have speculated that Trump could ease those regulations or others that impact the industry as a reward for companies creating more jobs in the United States. Trump has also pledged to reduce corporate taxes, a move that would surely please executives.



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