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Pennsylvania’s Riparian Forest Buffer Initiative DEP Citizens Advisory Council May 17, 2016

Conserving Penn’s Woods. Pennsylvania’s Riparian Forest Buffer Initiative DEP Citizens Advisory Council May 17, 2016. Outline. DCNR Chesapeake Bay work Chesapeake Bay forest buffer goal Our current ideas. DCNR/Chesapeake Bay Work. Recreation and public access Education and outreach

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Pennsylvania’s Riparian Forest Buffer Initiative DEP Citizens Advisory Council May 17, 2016

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  1. Conserving Penn’s Woods Pennsylvania’s Riparian Forest Buffer Initiative DEP Citizens Advisory Council May 17, 2016

  2. Outline • DCNR Chesapeake Bay work • Chesapeake Bay forest buffer goal • Our current ideas

  3. DCNR/Chesapeake Bay Work • Recreation and public access • Education and outreach • Land conservation • Urban tree planting (TreeVitalize) • Riparian Forest Buffers

  4. What is a riparian forest buffer?

  5. Slide courtesy Nick DiPasquale

  6. Slide courtesy Nick DiPasquale

  7. Slide courtesy Nick DiPasquale

  8. Slide courtesy Nick DiPasquale

  9. PA Success story • 54,000 acres of RFBs • 24,000 acres established through CREP • PA Stream ReLeaf • Growing Greener • Many partners • Accomplished at the local level

  10. PA RFB Accomplishments

  11. Slide courtesy Nick DiPasquale

  12. Slide courtesy Nick DiPasquale

  13. Recent Federal and State Responses • 2014 RFB Leadership Summit in D.C. • State Tasks Forces • Heavy focus on CREP • Asked for State RFB Leads • 2014 Chesapeake Bay Agreement • Management strategy and 2-year work plans

  14. PA 2-Year Work Plan • Leadership and collaboration • RFB Advisory Committee (March 28 and June 2) • Funding and resources for new and innovative approaches  • Complement existing programs • Flexibility and simplicity • Importance of maintenance

  15. PA 2-Year Work Plan • Communication, outreach, and technical assistance • Messaging, DCNR Foresters, social science • Planning to prioritize efforts • Technology and partners • Improve efficiency

  16. Conserving Penn’s Woods Multi-use Riparian Forest Buffer Program Concept DEP Citizens Advisory Council May 17, 2016

  17. Purpose • Help PA reach Bay goal of 95,000 new acres of RFBs by 2025 • Complement, but not duplicate, existing programs – CREP, EQIP • Hallmarks include greater flexibility in landowner eligibility, buffer designs, widths, plant species • Income-producing opportunities will be explored

  18. Funder

  19. Partner Roles • DCNR – Forestry technical assistance, grant administration • The Nature Conservancy (pending) – Technical assistance on targeting, mapping, general site characterization • Watershed/county partners – Landowner outreach, buffer designs, landowner agreements, oversee implementation and maintenance • Penn State Ag. Extension – Social data mining to determine socio-economic and cultural attributes of landowners inclined to participate in buffer programs; also agroforestry technical assistance • DEP – verification and reporting

  20. Pilot Program DCNR developing pilot sites to test-run the program • Yellow Breeches watershed in Cumberland/York counties • Lost Creek watershed in Juniata County • 3-4 State Park locations • Municipal and county parks

  21. Multi-use Riparian Forest Buffer Design Zones 2 and 3 can be planted with different species and at expanded widths to incorporate perennial crops of fruits, nuts, and floral trees and shrubs.

  22. Costs Covered • Tree and shrub plant materials, tree tubes, stakes, trellises, etc. • Site prep and buffer installation • Maintenance for 3 years • NO rental payments to landowners • Income-producing plants based on series of approved plant materials with new or established markets • 20-year MOUs to participate • Separate funding for livestock fencing, if applicable

  23. Potential Funding Sources 1. Grants – direct grants to third parties, no rental payments and no payback requirement • Current and future Growing Greener and Keystone funding • Private foundation funding 2. Revolving fund or investment funded – requires income-generating plants with payback of principal and/or interest • State revolving funds • Third-party investors • Program-related investments (PRIs) – third-party vendor guarantees payback 3. Credits – downstream neighboring states, carbon credits, nutrient credits, stormwater credits

  24. Elderberry • Berries: $3/lb retail • Juice: $15-17/11 oz jar • Syrup: $18/4 oz jar retail • Wine: $10-13/bottle retail • Cough drops: $2.50/15 retail • Concentrate: $25 per 375 ml • Cuttings: $1-2.50 • Plants: $5.00 each USDA National Agroforestry Center Farming the Woods, Ken Mudge and Steve Gabriel Fairfax County Public Schools continuumhealing.com

  25. Woody florals • Redosier dogwood, pussy willow, etc. • Cuttings: $0.37-0.45/stem retail, some species up to $6/stem • Wreaths: $45+ each retail • Willows can generate up to $56K/acre and live 20+ years USDA National Agroforestry Center University of Kentucky gardensofgrowth.com

  26. Pros and Cons Pros: • Additional tool in the toolbox • Wider landowner applicant pool • Landowner motivated by plant-generated income – better care and maintenance • “Designer” buffers can be shaped to landowner preference • Variable widths adjust to parcel Cons: • Contract is voluntary • Income and results may vary • Payback process may be hard

  27. Questions? Sara Nicholas Policy Director, DCNR snicholas@pa.gov Matt Keefer Assistant State Forester, DCNR makeefer@pa.gov

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