HARRISBURG, PA — The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection this past week unveiled a sweeping slate of clean-water investments, major enforcement actions, and permitting reforms aimed at restoring local waterways, strengthening environmental accountability, and accelerating community development across the Commonwealth.

The announcements — totaling more than $3.1 million in watershed grants, a proposed federal consent decree over hundreds of Clean Water Act violations, and the first permit issued under a new fast-track SPEED program — mark one of the agency’s most consequential weeks of action this year as Pennsylvania heads into the holiday season with renewed focus on clean water and environmental stewardship.

“Clean water is vital to community health and a fundamental right of every Pennsylvanian,” DEP Secretary Jessica Shirley said. “These projects are examples of good stewardship and best practices to create healthier streams and wetlands, reduce flood risk, and improve fish and wildlife habitat.”

The combined actions underscore DEP’s dual mission: reducing nonpoint source pollution that harms local waterways and holding industrial polluters accountable when they violate state and federal laws.

DEP Awards More Than $3.1 Million for Watershed Restoration Across Eight Counties

The cornerstone of last week’s announcements is a set of eight Section 319 Nonpoint Source Management Grants totaling $3,118,174. The grants support watershed restoration projects that reduce pollution from stormwater runoff, agriculture, mine drainage, and streambank erosion — all major contributors to impaired waterways in Pennsylvania.

Roughly 53 percent of impaired watersheds in the state are affected by nonpoint source pollution.

Funded by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and administered by DEP, Section 319 grants implement best management practices outlined in Watershed Implementation Plans for 44 impaired watersheds and support development of new plans in additional areas. Projects with ties to the Chesapeake Bay Watershed receive special consideration.

This year’s awards include:

Berks County — $317,872

The Berks County Conservation District will complete streambank restoration on Crosskill Creek and install agricultural best management practices on a tributary of Little Swatara Creek. Estimated annual pollutant reductions include:

2,215 lbs. nitrogen
5,901 lbs. phosphorus
223 tons sediment

Columbia County — $148,726

The Columbia County Conservation District will update the 2007 Catawissa Creek Watershed Implementation Plan, providing fresh data, prioritizing remediation efforts, and assessing land reclamation needs.

Dauphin County — $899,721

The Tri-County Conewago Creek Association will restore unnamed tributaries and Brills Run through stream projects and agricultural BMPs. Expected annual load reductions:

3,853 lbs. nitrogen
801 lbs. phosphorus
371 tons sediment

Indiana County — $254,758

Funds will support revisions to the 2008 South Branch Plum Creek WIP and help identify sources of impairment to guide future restoration work.

Lancaster County — $557,770

The Donegal Chapter of Trout Unlimited will execute restoration projects across Conowingo Creek, reducing:

625 lbs. nitrogen
570 lbs. phosphorus
188 tons sediment

Lebanon County — $457,727

The Doc Fritchey Chapter of Trout Unlimited will stabilize 1,000 feet of streambank, restore riparian buffers, and establish wet meadow areas along Snitz Creek to reduce:

75 lbs. nitrogen
68 lbs. phosphorus
22 tons sediment

Luzerne County — $260,000

The Eastern Pennsylvania Coalition for Abandoned Mine Reclamation will support redevelopment and mine reclamation in heavily mined regions, including mapping, technical assistance, and community outreach.

Schuylkill County — $221,600

The Schuylkill Conservation District will design a treatment system for the Pine Forest Shaft abandoned mine drainage discharge, a major source of pollution in the Upper Schuylkill River.

These projects, Shirley said, “demonstrate the value of partnerships between conservation districts, local groups, and state agencies working to protect our waterways.”

More Than 600 Clean Water Act Violations Lead to Proposed $1.15 Million Consent Decree

In one of the largest enforcement actions announced this year, DEP, the EPA, the U.S. Department of Justice, and the Lower Susquehanna Riverkeeper Association filed a proposed consent decree addressing over 600 violations of the federal Clean Water Act by Hanover Foods Corporation.

The violations stem from effluent discharged at Hanover Foods’ wastewater treatment facility between 2016 and 2025, including exceedances of temperature limits and nutrient pollution thresholds under the company’s National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System permit.

Under the proposed settlement:

Hanover Foods will pay $1,150,000 in civil penalties, split evenly between DOJ and DEP.
The company will install new equipment, including:

A permanent boiler to maintain correct treatment temperatures
A Total Suspended Solids sensor for real-time monitoring
Spare-part programs to minimize equipment downtime

The company must improve compliance, monitoring, and reporting protocols.

“This is about holding polluters accountable,” Shirley said. “Through this settlement, we are ensuring facilities are up to standards and eliminating unlawful discharges into the Susquehanna River and the Chesapeake Bay.”

The consent decree is subject to a 30-day public comment period before final approval.

DEP Issues First Fast-Track Permit Under New SPEED Program

In a separate development, DEP approved its first permit under the Streamlining Permits for Economic Expansion and Development (SPEED) initiative, designed to accelerate permit reviews for qualified projects while maintaining environmental protections.

The inaugural SPEED permit is a major modification to an existing Chapter 102 Stormwater Management permit for Towns at York Creek, a mixed-use project expected to bring new housing and retail options to the York community.

DEP reviewed and approved the application in 51 days, a timeframe that included a mandatory 30-day public comment period — less than half the standard review time under the Governor’s PAyback program benchmarks.

“Not only have we sped up DEP’s permitting review, but we did it while protecting the environment,” Shirley said. She noted that a DEP-approved qualified professional conducted an initial technical review, allowing agency staff to complete a faster final assessment.

The SPEED program, launched in June, has since been expanded to include:

Air Quality Plan Approvals
Dam safety permits
Individual water obstruction and encroachment permits
Storage tank site-specific permits
Mining GP-103 Small Projects permits
Concentrated Animal Feeding Operation permits

More permit types are expected to follow after the program’s expansion was secured in the 2025–26 state budget.

Officials say the reforms will help local governments and developers deliver projects faster while ensuring stormwater, air quality, and land disturbance rules continue to protect waterways and communities.

A Week of Environmental Action Reflecting Wider State Priorities

Last week’s DEP announcements mirror several broader themes in the Shapiro Administration’s economic and environmental strategy:

1. Water Quality Restoration

With 53 percent of impaired waterways affected by nonpoint source pollution, Pennsylvania continues to invest heavily in watershed improvements.

2. Stronger Enforcement

Federal-state partnerships, like the Hanover Foods action, signal a willingness to hold chronic violators accountable.

3. Faster Permitting Reform

The SPEED program represents a major shift toward eliminating long-standing backlogs in environmental permitting — a key economic complaint among businesses and municipalities.

4. Investments in Local Communities

Whether streambank restoration or mixed-use development in York, the announcements tie environmental goals to local economic benefits.

5. Chesapeake Bay and Regional Impact

Many funded projects directly affect tributaries of the Susquehanna and the Chesapeake Bay, helping Pennsylvania meet long-standing pollution-reduction obligations.

A Commonwealth Moving Toward Cleaner Water and Faster Growth

Taken together, the more than $3.1 million in grants, the sweeping enforcement action, and the first implementation of the SPEED program reflect what Secretary Shirley described as “a commitment to protecting Pennsylvanians and protecting our environment.”

As the state heads into the holiday season, DEP officials say their work illustrates both progress and ongoing effort — restoring watersheds, modernizing environmental oversight, and ensuring that economic development and environmental protection advance together.

The public comment period for the Hanover Foods consent decree is now open, and residents can access records through DEP’s informal file review portal.

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