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Toxic Contaminants Phase III WIPs Co-Benefits Fact Sheet

This fact sheet describes the co-benefits that are possible when nutrient and sediment best management practices are selected in a thoughtful manner with site-specific conditions in mind. This fact sheet includes contact information for each state for more information. Additional information on best management practices and co-benefits for the Phase III WIPs is available here.

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Watershed Implementation Plan (WIP) Planning Targets Fact Sheet

The 2010 Chesapeake Bay Total Maximum Daily Load (Bay TMDL) outlines the reductions in nitrogen, phosphorus and sediment that are needed to ensure the Bay can meet water quality standards. To collectively achieve these Bay-wide nutrient and sediment reductions, each watershed jurisdiction is assigned specific targets. The Chesapeake Bay Program has developed updated planning targets for the Phase III Watershed Implementation Plans (WIPs).

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Best Management Practices Fact Sheet

The implementation, tracking and reporting of best management practices (BMPs) has been at the center of the Chesapeake Bay Program’s restoration efforts for three decades. BMPs are conservation and technological practices that can reduce the amounts of nonpoint source pollutants—such as nutrients and sediment—that enter local waters and the tidal Chesapeake Bay. The Chesapeake Bay Program rigorously tracks the progress of its partners toward meeting goals for healthier Bay waters, including their BMP implementation efforts. As part of this effort, the partnership requires a three-step BMP verification process that ensures they are being implemented correctly and are effectively reducing nutrient and sediment pollution as expected.

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Accounting for Growth Fact Sheet

The population of the Chesapeake Bay region continues to grow, driving land use changes such as increases in developed land areas and decreases in agricultural and natural land cover. How will these changes affect future pollutant loads in the watershed? Using modeling tools, the Chesapeake Bay Program has generated growth projections through the year 2025, which will help jurisdictions (Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia) and local partners plan for what is to come. In this context, accounting for growth really means accounting for changes in pollution loads from any source category (e.g. wastewater) due to population growth and associated land use change.

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A Generalized Additive Model approach to evaluating water quality: Chesapeake Bay case study.

Link to the final manuscript, or contact rmurphy@chesapeakebay.net for the final version.

Citation: Rebecca R. Murphy, Elgin Perry, Jon Harcum, Jennifer Keisman, 2019. "A Generalized Additive Model approach to evaluating water quality: Chesapeake Bay case study",
Environmental Modelling & Software, Volume 118, 2019, Pages 1-13, ISSN 1364-8152, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsoft.2019.03.027.

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Bay Barometer: Health and Restoration in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed (2017-2018)

The data in Bay Barometer reflect the Chesapeake Bay’s health over the course of many years and, in some cases, decades. The publication offers a snapshot of the best available information from 2017 and 2018 on ecological health and our efforts to protect and restore the nation’s largest estuary, as well as our progress toward achieving the goals and outcomes of the Chesapeake Bay Watershed Agreement.

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2017-2018 Bay Barometer Fact Sheet: West Virginia

More than 3,500 square miles of West Virginia sit within the Chesapeake Bay watershed, and one of the state’s major rivers—the Potomac—flows into the Bay. West Virginia has committed to achieving 18 of the outcomes in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed Agreement. Its progress toward seven of these outcomes is highlighted here.

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2017-2018 Bay Barometer Fact Sheet: Virginia

More than 21,000 square miles of Virginia sit within the Chesapeake Bay watershed, and five of the Commonwealth’s major rivers—including the Appomattox, James, Potomac, Rappahannock and Roanoke—flow into the Bay. Virginia has committed to achieving 28 of the outcomes in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed Agreement. Its progress toward 12 of these outcomes is highlighted here.

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