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The Chesapeake Bay Foundation

The Chesapeake Bay Foundation (CBF), the United States' largest regional conservation organization, is dedicated to protect and save the Chesapeake Bay and its tributary rivers. The Chesapeake Bay is the largest Estuary in the United States. Since 1967, it has worked to "Save the Bay" by reducing pollution to improve water quality

Supported by more than 196,000 active members, CBF is headquartered in Annapolis, Maryland, with additional offices in Pennsylvania and Virginia. Annapolis is the capital of the US state of Maryland, as well as the County seat of Anne Arundel County. The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania ( often colloquially referred to as PA (its abbreviation by natives and Northeasterners is a state located in the Northeastern The Commonwealth of Virginia ( is an American state Its programs include environmental advocacy, environmental education, and habitat restoration throughout the Bay watershed (primarily central Pennsylvania, Maryland, and eastern Virginia).

Target issues for CBF include:(

Throughout its 40-year history, CBF has sought to inform and engage both citizens and elected officials, demanding that adequate public and private investment be made to save the Bay. The foundation has achieved significant milestones in the struggle to arrest the decline of the nation's largest estuary and to restore its health. An estuary is a semi-enclosed Coastal body of Water with one or more Rivers or Streams flowing into it and with a free connection to the open CBF has mobilized tens of thousands of volunteers for oyster, wetland, and forest restoration, and trained millions of students and teachers in the field and in the classroom. A wetland is an area of Land consisting of Soil that is Saturated with Moisture, such as a Swamp, Marsh, or Bog The landmark EPA study of the Chesapeake Bay in the 1970s, the Chesapeake 2000 agreement setting specific regional goals for water quality improvement, Maryland's historic sewage treatment bond bills in 2004, and Virginia's unprecedented financial commitment to water quality improvement in 2006 have been important strides towards CBF’s ultimate goal.

During the last several years, the urgency of CBF's mission has been underscored by major national and international reports that point to pollution and aquatic dead zones around the world as the leading environmental problem of this century. The rapid rise in population in the Chesapeake watershed -- now approximately 16 million, and growing by 100,000 persons per year -- reinforces the need to implement scientific solutions in the region to address present and future water quality.

CBF has a staff of approximately 165 full-time employees. Nearly 80 percent of its budget of comes from private philanthropic and membership contributions.

To learn more about CBF and its programs, visit cbf.org


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