Calendar of Events

Click Here to view the Calendar of Events.

To submit an item for the Calendar of Events click here

Contact Us

Click Here for information on how to contact
The Journal.

Login



Journal On-Line

Click Here to go to
The Journal's Online Edition.
Available only to subscribers of the print edition.

To set up your online access,  Email us
your requested login and password.

I am searching for ...

Find local places of worship in The Journal's Worship Directory.

Click Here to view Church listings.

Related Articles

Pay Your Bill On-Line

Click Here to Pay A Bill On-Line

WEEKLY WASHINGTON UPDATE - Oct. 2, 2009 PDF  | Print |  E-mail
Saturday, 03 October 2009 01:05

I’m excited to report that this week the House of Representatives passed my Chesapeake Bay Accountability and Recovery Act (H.R. 1053), by a bipartisan vote of 418-1. I introduced the bill at the beginning of the 111th Congress and it would streamline the monitoring and coordination of the Bay restoration efforts amongst 10 federal agencies, six states and the District of Columbia, over one thousand localities and multiple non-governmental organizations.

Currently, the complexity and number of folks involved in the process has failed to produce significant results. Passage of this legislation is by no means the only effort necessary to renew the health of the Bay. However, it is the down payment we vitally need to accomplish this effort.

My bill would fully implement two cutting edge management techniques, crosscut budgeting and adaptive management. Neither technique is currently required or fully utilized in the Bay restoration efforts, where results have lagged far behind the billions of dollars spent. Both methods required by the bill have been used successfully in complex restoration efforts in the Everglades, the Great Lakes and the California Bay Delta.

Additionally, my bill requires the Environmental Protection Agency to appoint an Independent Evaluator to review and report on restoration activities, and the integration of adaptive management and other initiatives suggested by the Chesapeake Executive Council. The evaluator would report findings and recommendations to Congress every three years.

I was overwhelmed buy the amount of support of that this vital legislation received throughout the legislative process. The passage of this bill is a testament to the fact that bipartisanship isn’t dead. Legislators have come together from across the aisle to highlight the vital role the Bay plays in the daily lives of citizens throughout the watershed and to ensure its recovery. I have great hopes that the same spirit will be carried over to the Senate and I’m working to ensure its swift passage.

 

Get the Flash Player to see this player.
Image rotator by Simplweb.


Journal Links


  

joomla web hosting: from Simplweb.com