Christina Basin Clean Water Partnership (CBCWP)

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Mission | Background | Christina Basin Facts | Watershed Governance | Existing Uses | Innovative Watershed Financing | Water Quality Trading | The Partnership | Implementation | Reports | Projects

Christina Basin Map

Since 1993, the Water Resources Agency has served as the Delaware co-coordinator of the Christina Basin Clean Water Partnership.  The Chester County Water Resources Authority and Chester County Conservation District serve as the Pennsylvania co-coordinators in the Christina Basin.

Mission

The mission of the Christina Basin Clean Water Partnership is to restore the waters of the Brandywine, Red Clay, and White Clay Creeks, and Christina River in Delaware and Pennsylvania to fishable, swimmable, and potable status by 2015.  To do this, we recommend that the partnership:

1.    Employ a full-time watershed-governance structure.
2.    Raise funds for restoration through innovative
       watershed financing.
3.    Develop a water-quality trading bank.

Since 1993, the two states, the U. S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA), the Delaware River Basin Commission, and the Christina Basin Clean Water Partnership have been working together to restore interstate streams in the Christina Basin to Clean Water Act standards.  The Christina Basin is one of only two watersheds in the entire Delaware River Basin that shares the boundaries of more than one state.  In 2006 the USEPA and the two states negotiated Total Maximum Daily Loads (TMDL) for impaired streams in the Christina Basin.  In February 2008 at a legislative briefing in Kennett Square, Pa., the partnership announced the completion of a $1 million grant as part of the USEPA Targeted Watershed Initiative as the top-ranked application out of 170 watersheds in the U.S.  

Chester County, Pa., has developed watershed plans for the Brandywine, Red Clay, and White Clay Creeks.  Delaware has completed a Pollution Control Strategy for its portion of the basin.  Stream water quality is improving in the Christina Basin, particularly with regard to dissolved oxygen, phosphorus, and sediment, while nitrogen is degrading and bacteria levels are too high.  The economic value of the Christina Basin approaches $270 million annually.

The phases of the Christina Basin Clean Water Strategy have been completed as follows:   
Phase   I  DRBC/USEPA Mediation/Problem Assessment, 1994-1996
Phase  II  GIS Watershed Mapping, 1997-1998
Phase III  Monitoring/Implementation, 1999-2000
Phase IV   TMDL Modeling/Implementation, 2001-2003
Phase  V   TMDL Promulgation and Implementation, 2004-2005
Phase VI   Targeted Watershed Implementation, 2004-2007

Chester County, PA logo DNREC logo DRBC logoDEP logoEPA logo USGS logoNRCS logo

 

AttachmentSize
Christina Basin Legislative Event Clean Water is Good Business March 25, 20115.14 MB
Christina Basin Clean Water Partnership Awards Legislative Event March 25, 201125.98 KB
Christina Basin Trends (pdf) (Presented at BVA, 5/20/2010)1.56 MB
Christina Basin-PADEP Aquatic Assessment (BVA, Ed Filip, 5/20/2010)998.61 KB
Christina Basin White Paper (pdf)2.22 MB
Christina Basin Phase III Report (pdf)10.69 MB
Christina Basin WRAS Report Executive Summary (pdf)787.72 KB
Christina Basin WRAS Final Report (pdf)6.31 MB
DNS Freshwater Wetlands (pdf)138.68 KB
EPA Nonpoint SourceNews-Notes, June 2009 #871.8 MB
Christina Basin EPA Targeted Watershed Grant in Delaware and Pennsylvania, May 06, 20093.49 MB
Christina Basin Targeted Watershed Grant - Final Report, December 2008 (pdf)12.97 MB
Coordination of sampling to support trend analysis in the Christina River Basin in Pennsylvania and Delaware, December 2008 (doc)36.5 KB
Reinvigoration of the Christina Basin Clean Water Partnership (pdf)2.23 MB