Restoring the Chesapeake Bay Watershed
Sustain, restore and conserve

 

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President Obama Issues Chesapeake Bay Executive Order

On May 12, 2009, President Barack Obama signed Chesapeake Bay Restoration and Protection Executive Order 13508. The Executive Order recognizes the Chesapeake Bay as a national treasure and calls on the federal government to lead a renewed effort to restore and protect the nationÕs largest estuary and its watershed.

The Chesapeake Bay Protection and Restoration Executive Order established a Federal Leadership Committee to oversee the development and coordination of reporting, data management and other activities by agencies involved in Bay restoration. The committee is chaired by the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency and includes senior representatives from the departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Defense, Homeland Security, Interior, Transportation and others.

The Service is one of ten Federal agencies that developed seven draft reports, released on September 9. These draft reports identify strategies to accelerate cleanup and restoration of the nationÕs largest estuary and its vast watershed. On behalf of the Department of the Interior, the Service co-led development of the draft Habitat and Living Resources Report (202(g)), which identifies actions that will apply science and technologies to improve management decisions for habitats and living resources.

The Federal Leadership Committee will evaluate the draft reports and consult with bay jurisdictions to refine the recommendations. On November 9, a draft strategy that integrates the seven reports will be released for public comment. A final strategy will be completed by May 12, 2010.

Learn More about the Chesapeake Bay Executive Order

News Release (EPA)

Read the full text from the White House Briefing Room

The Chesapeake Bay is the largest estuary in North America. Its waters provide food and habitat for an abundance of fish and wildlife. It serves as a highway for commerce, a playground for the public, a storehouse of food, and a home for over 16 million people who live in its vast watershed.

In recent years the Chesapeake has become less able to support the fish and wildlife it once did. Increasing amounts of nutrients, sediments, and toxic substances are causing serious ecological problems in the Bay. Studies show alarming declines in populations of fish and wildlife and in the habitat available to them.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is one of many federal, state, and local agencies and private organizations engaged in the Chesapeake Bay restoration program.

Together we are working to reverse the damage already done, to arrest further degradation and to restore the Bay to its former productivity as nearly as time, technology and resources allow.

Last updated: November 16, 2009