Author Topic: Save Barnegat Bay’s Fertilizer Bill Passes Both Houses in Legislature  (Read 2473 times)

Offline ped579

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December 13, 2010
 
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Save Barnegat Bay’s Fertilizer Bill Passes Both Houses in Legislature

            In Save Barnegat Bay’s biggest victory ever, both houses of the New Jersey legislature today passed the statewide lawn fertilizer bill that originated in our Lavallette office.  Governor Christie has pledged to sign this bill as part of his plan for Barnegat Bay.         

            According to legislative testimony by Scotts MiracleGro in August of this year this bill, once it becomes law, will become the model for most other states.

            The law will be the first in the country to regulate the content of fertilizer rather than merely rely on homeowners to read and follow the directions on the bag as the mechanism for protecting estuaries.

            “We are extremely proud that a bill that will affect the whole country started in Save Barnegat Bay’s small office here in Ocean County,” said Jennifer O’Reilly, Executive Director of Save Barnegat Bay. “It shows that acting locally can make change globally.”

            The basic concepts of the bill were researched by Michael Borgatti during 2008 when he was Science Research Associate for Save Barnegat Bay.  Following that Mr. Borgatti,  Save Barnegat Bay Chairman William deCamp Jr.,  and attorney Michele R. Donato placed these concepts into a model ordinance intended for municipalities in the Barnegat Bay watershed.

            The pivotal moment in the campaign was in the summer of 2009 when Senator Bob Smith, D-Middlesex, and Assemblyman John McKeon, A-Essex, who are the chairmen of the environment committees in their respective houses, learned of Save Barnegat Bay’s ordinance and incorporated its substance in their matched bills, S-1411 and A-2290.

“We are very, very grateful to the Committee Chairmen, Senator Smith and Assemblyman McKeon,” said Mr. deCamp. “They were willing to listen to us instead of to certain powerful interests, and the whole state and country will benefit from that.”

            In the Senate the primary sponsors were Senators Bob Smith and Jennifer Beck, and the co-sponsors were Senators Andrew Ciesla and Christopher Connors of Ocean County as well as Senators Jeff Van Drew, Brian Stack, Loretta Weinberg, and Christopher Bateman.

            In the Assembly the primary sponsors were John McKeon, Reed Gusciora, and Valerie Huttle.  Ocean County Assemblymen and woman James Holzapful, David Wolfe, Brian Rumpf, and Diane Gove were co-sponsors as was Assemblyman Patrick Diegnan Jr and Assemblywoman Connie Wagner.

            “We are very grateful for the help of all these sponsors and co-sponsors in both houses,” said deCamp.

            Among the provisions in the bill are these:

      Any fertilizer sold or used in New Jersey will be required to have at least 20% of its nitrogen in slow release (water insoluble) form.

     Directions on fertilizer bags will be required to result in only 0.9 pounds of total nitrogen going down per thousand square feet.

      Phosphorus will be banned from lawn fertilizer except in special cases.

     Professional applicators will be subject to a lesser standard than homeowners but will all be required to take a brief course and be certified by the state.

Environmentalists were forced to make substantial compromises in that the requirement for slow release nitrogen is 20% not 30%, golf courses are not included, and professionals are held to a lesser standard. They noted, however, that golf courses contribute far less nitrogen than is popularly believed and that their professional groundskeepers will have to be certified.

Although 20% may seem to some to be a low figure, it should be understood that as long as the overall feeding is not excessively large the grass will generally absorb most of the water soluble content in the fertilizer.

Because phosphorus is banned in the bill, and because phosphorus is the major cause of eutrophication in fresh water, this bill is a major victory for the fresh water streams, rivers, and lakes of our state and nation.

Nitrogen is the primary cause of eutrophication in salt water bodies such as Barnegat Bay. Since the majority of nitrogen entering Barnegat Bay falls in the rain, this victory in itself will not solve the bay’s nitrogen problem. Clean air and land use reforms must follow.

            “The environmental groups with a presence at the State House, such as the Sierra Club, the New Jersey Environmental Federation, Environment New Jersey, Clean Ocean Action, and the American Littoral Society, were wonderful and indispensible in getting the bill passed,” deCamp continued.  “We knew the concepts, but they know their way around Trenton. We got much more help in the state capital than we did back in Ocean County.”

Mr. deCamp strongly praised Mr. Borgatti who is now a third year law student at Rutgers Camden and a part time employee at the Board of Public Utilities. Mr. Borgatti used a Bachelor of Science degree and an interest in law and marine science to master the scientific, legal, and political aspects of lawn fertilizer, which are complicated.

“Above all I am grateful to Save Barnegat Bay’s Board of Directors and staff for keeping our organization up and running during this campaign against wily and powerful opponents,” deCamp concluded.
IN GOD WE TRUST

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Offline SurfJockey

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Re: Save Barnegat Bay’s Fertilizer Bill Passes Both Houses in Legislature
« Reply #1 on: December 17, 2010, 10:04:02 AM »
 clp
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Offline Scott G.

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Re: Save Barnegat Bay’s Fertilizer Bill Passes Both Houses in Legislature
« Reply #2 on: December 17, 2010, 11:11:27 AM »
 t^ clp t^
Fishing, with me, has always been an excuse to drink in the daytime.

Offline IrishAyes

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Re: Save Barnegat Bay’s Fertilizer Bill Passes Both Houses in Legislature
« Reply #3 on: January 05, 2011, 05:00:13 PM »
Signed by the Gov today.

BARNEGAT — New Jersey adopted the nation's toughest restrictions on fertilizer today as part of a package of bills signed into law by Gov. Chris Christie to protect the fragile Barnegat Bay from further pollution.

Runoff from fertilizer applied to lawns and farms eventually makes its way into waterways and contributes to water pollution and fish-killing algae blooms.

The bills require upgrades to malfunctioning storm drains, force contractors to loosen soil that becomes hard-packed.

A key provision requires that at least 20 percent of nitrogen in fertilizer sold in New Jersey be the slow-release type to prevent it from easily washing into waterways.

Christie signed the bills in Waretown, a Barnegat Bay boating and crabbing community.

"Over the years there have been studies and talks and conversations about taking the necessary steps to save Barnegat Bay, but very little action," Christie said in the clubhouse of a bayfront beach club after signing the bills. "Today you saw action."

Jeff Tittel, director of New Jersey Sierra Club, called the bills "a victory for the environment."

"Without these bills especially, the fertilizer bill, the bay will die," he said. "These bills are each a piece of the puzzle to protect the bay and our environment."

Christie said he was signing "the toughest fertilizer standards in America," and noted the fertilizer industry gave significant opposition to the proposed standards before both sides agreed on the 20 percent nitrogen requirement.

Nitrogen is a major component of water pollution. It leads to algae blooms that deprive water of oxygen and kill fish and other marine life.

It also encourages the growth of stinging jellyfish, which have overrun the bay and rivers near it, including the Manasquan and Metedeconk, making them virtually unswimmable at times and clogging the engines of some boats.

Another essential part of the state's plan to protect the bay is an agreement negotiated last month with the owners of the Oyster Creek Nuclear Generating Station to shut down the nation's oldest nuclear power plant in 2019, 10 years earlier than expected.

It is located next door to Waretown in the Forked River section of Lacey Township.

The plant sucks 1.4 billion gallons a day from the bay into its pipes, and discharges warmer water back into the bay, which hurts water quality. The plant agreed to shut down early in return for New Jersey backing off its demand that it build costly cooling towers to replace the massive water intake to cool the plant.

A fourth Barnegat Bay bill that passed the state legislature was not part of the package signed into law Wednesday. It would establish a "total daily maximum load" for nutrients like nitrogen that can be allowed to enter the bay each day.

Christie said that bill is still in legal review.

Captain Joe of the Irish Ayes

May the holes in your net be no larger than the fish in it.  ~Irish Blessing


Offline Bucktail

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Re: Save Barnegat Bay’s Fertilizer Bill Passes Both Houses in Legislature
« Reply #4 on: January 05, 2011, 05:24:37 PM »
It's a start. t^

Offline Fishin Dude

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Re: Save Barnegat Bay’s Fertilizer Bill Passes Both Houses in Legislature
« Reply #5 on: January 05, 2011, 10:42:13 PM »
 clp clp clp clp clp  <'((((><
I've spent most of my life fishing, the rest I've just wasted     <'((((><

 

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