Emily Knearl of the Nature Conservancy’s Delaware/Pennsylvania chapter, said reauthorizing the act is a crucial investment. The Delaware River watershed, which stretches from the Catskills to southern Delaware, contributes $25 billion a year in economic activity from recreation, water quality, water supply, hunting and fishing, ecotourism, forest, agriculture, open space, potential Marcellus Shale natural gas, and port benefits.
“Coupled with other clean water funding, it’s investments such as these that improve the quality of our water, that improve our waterways, that improve coastal resilience, that even help build stronger habitats that make these waters a better place to live, fish, swim and even drink,” she said.
“What people don’t realize … is our lives are touched every single day by watersheds and by basins in the sense that it is the water that comes out of your tap,” Knearl added. “If you or your family loves to fish, it is the fish that can come off your fishing pole. It is what you can use to water your lawn. What your kids can swim in … it can be the stream that your family plays in … It could be the beach that you spend time on.”
Kelly Knutson, director of the Coalition for the River Watershed, said reauthorization would help aid in the fight against climate change, reduce harmful waste and prevent chemicals, including PFAS, from entering drinking water.
“You have everything from sediment and erosion going into the ecosystem, you have harmful chemicals being discharged into our water, as are man-made chemicals like PFAS being found in the waters,” he said. “So by doing on-the-ground restoration projects, we’re helping to remedy and provide a more resilient ecosystem and solution to some of the issues that we’re facing.”