“The real man smiles in trouble, gathers strength from distress, and grows brave by reflection.”
― Thomas Paine
Chesapeake Bay Report Card 2015
Lower phosphorus scores in 2015 are unexplained
Despite overall improvements in Bay Health and improvements in almost every other Bay Health indicator, the score for total phosphorus worsened to 70% in 2015, down from 79% the previous year. This indicator is a measure of total phosphorus concentrations in the water at over 130 stations throughout the tidal waters of Chesapeake Bay. Although modeled estimates showed a decrease in phosphorus loadings from the watershed, phosphorus concentrations in the Bay increased, causing the scores to go down . This disconnect is difficult to explain —lower inputs to the Bay should result in less phosphorus in the water. And, while scores decreased from 2014-2015, phosphorus scores are showing a long-term improving trend from 1986-2015. Further research, like the study underway at UMCES on the Conowingo Dam, is needed to answer this question .
The words " mystery ", " baffled " and " puzzled " are memes, used, among numerous similarly variants, whenever anyone in the wholly-controlled-and-coopted Political, Academic, Scientific and Media establishments wants to lie about, well, basically anything.
As you can see, the folks in charge started covertly dumping phosphorus in the Chesapeake in 2015.
The author is covering for them, which is why they gave you the numbers, but carefully hedged by omitting the percentage decrease between them. They didn’t want you to grasp that the phosphorus score in the bay suddenly worsened by 11% from 2014 to 2015, after improving steadily from 1986 to 2015.
Since “covert phosphorus dumping” would get his employers strung up from lamp posts, the generational Satanist author ran with " unexplained ".
Chesapeake Bay Foundation annual grades, by year
1998 - 27%
1999 - 28% (a 3.7% increase over the previous year)
2000 - 28%
2001 - 27% (a 3.7% decrease over the previous year)
2002 - 27%
2003 - 27%
2004 - 27%
2005 - 27%
2006 - 39% (a 44% increase over the previous year)
2007 - 42% (an 8% increase over the previous year)
2008 - 43% (a 2.4% increase over the previous year)
2009 - 46% (a 7% increase over the previous year)
2010 - 42% (an 8.6% decrease over the previous year)
2011 - 38% (a 9.5% decrease over the previous year)
2012 - 47% (a 23% increase over the previous year)
2013 - 45% (a 4.2% decrease over the previous year)
2014 - 50% (an 11% increase over the previous year)
2015 - 53% (a 6% decrease over the previous year)
2016 - 54% (a 1.8% increase over the previous year)
2017 - 54%
2018 - 46% (a 14.8% increase over the previous year)
The Chesapeake Bay’s health began to improve in 1999. That’s right when the literal forest of energetic weaponry that is generally supposed to be cell phone infrastructure was thrown up virtually overnight in all the nations. And it’s also when aerosol operations got underway, also in all the nations. By 2001, the malefic effect of this fantastic assault on the Ether had, as intended, erased the environmental improvement seen three years previously, and the Chesapeake languished at its lowest level of health in the data set for five more years in a row.
Fortunately for us all, Orgonite was invented right around the same time as the wireless technology was, and by 2006 enough of the simple, inexpensive devices had been distributed to transform the health of the Ether back to the positive. A 70% increase in health is seen in the Bay from 2005 to 2009.
Then, for a short time, the ever-expanding and ever-more-powerful technical infrastructure was strong enough to overcome the positive trend. A 17.3% decrease in Bay health is seen from 2009 to 2011.
Then, in 2012, the year the great positive changes I’ve been documenting in these articles got underway in earnest, we see a huge 23% improvement in the health of the Bay. And it really took off from there: the health of the Bay increased 42% from 2012 to 2017. Increased by almost half, in just five years.
Which maps against the great positive changes occurring at every level of our reality, which commenced in 2012, and which I’ve been documenting without cease since 2013.
The Mayans had 2012 as the end of their “long count”. My guess is that, in the late 1990’s wireless technology was developed and deployed by the folks in charge in a last-ditch effort to stop a natural transformation of the Earth back to the positive coming that they knew was coming in 2012. They knew that great positive change, that great rise in awareness would lead to their downfall.
Most fortunately for us all, Orgonite was developed at around the same time as the wireless technology was, and the widespread deployment of the former has unknitted and transformed the Death energy component of latter. And here we are, in a transformed world, watching the downfall of our about-to-be-former Dark masters.
Please consider sending them highest Love energy as you read this.
Jeff Miller, Brooklyn, New York, March 16 , 2020
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2005 - We should not lose sight of the fact that modest progress in saving the Bay has been made since its nadir in 1983. The pace of improvement is glacial, however, and has stalled, slipping a point from a high of 28 in 2000 and again in 2002.
This year, the state of the Bay remains unchanged at 27.
2006 - Overall grade for Chesapeake Bay: C-
Slight improvement compared to 2006 (39); health remained in moderate-poor condition
Overall bay health has increased slightly since a record low in 2003 , largely driven by improvements in phytoplankton community and chlorophyll a scores.
Poor water clarity
The Bay was extremely turbid in 2006, with the worst Bay-wide water clarity assessment since water clarity monitoring started in 1985. The exact causes for the degrading water clarity are not well understood.
(Where a 17% improvement since 2003 is referred to as “slight”. - ed)
2008 - The overall health score only increased by 1% in 2008, compared to 2007. The bay-wide health score has only modestly improved over the past five years, increasing from 36% in 2003 to 43% in 2008. This is still much lower than the 55% the Bay scored in 2002, before the wet conditions in 2003.
2010 - The overall health of the Bay declined for the first time in four years, from 46% in 2009 to 42% in 2010.
2011 - Chesapeake Bay scored 38%, a D+, in overall health for 2011.
2012 - Chesapeake Bay scored 47%, a C, in overall health for 2012.
September 8, 2015 - Marin’s bay shores in better health, more work to be done, report finds
San Pablo and San Francisco bays off Marin’s shores are in better health than in prior years, but are jeopardized by the effects of climate change, according to a new report released this week.
The 96-page “State of the Estuary 2015,” a comprehensive health report for the San Francisco Bay-Delta Estuary by the San Francisco Estuary Partnership, uses data contributed by more than 30 scientists to assess the status of various parts of the ecosystem.
The verdict?
“In many regards the bay is as healthy as it has been in a long time,” said San Anselmo native Josh Collins, chief scientist with the San Francisco Estuary Institute, an environmental research and policy group.
(Where “uses data contributed by more than 30 scientists” is a cloud of general chaff - it’s data you aren’t allowed to know about, or get any substantive information from. Your betters, including the person writing the article, will only allow the broadest generalities to be discussed. That’s because they’re hiding the great, sudden, Etherically-driven environmental recovery behind a general, slow-playing facade. A facade which includes falsely claiming that their own actions led to the positive changes. As you may recall, generality is a hallmark of propaganda. - ed)
2015 - Lower phosphorus scores in 2015 are unexplained
Despite overall improvements in Bay Health and improvements in almost every other Bay Health indicator, the score for total phosphorus worsened to 70% in 2015, down from 79% the previous year. This indicator is a measure of total phosphorus concentrations in the water at over 130 stations throughout the tidal waters of Chesapeake Bay. Although modeled estimates showed a decrease in phosphorus loadings from the watershed, phosphorus concentrations in the Bay increased, causing the scores to go down. This disconnect is difficult to explain—lower inputs to the Bay should result in less phosphorus in the water. And, while scores decreased from 2014-2015, phosphorus scores are showing a long-term improving trend from 1986-2015. Further research, like the study underway at UMCES on the Conowingo Dam, is needed to answer this question.
2016 - The overall score for the Chesapeake Bay Health Index for 2016 was 54%, compared with 53% in 2015.
May 17, 2016 - Chesapeake Bay health improves in 2015
One of three highest scores recorded since 1986
Date:
May 17, 2016
Source:
University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science
Summary:
The overall health of Chesapeake Bay improved in 2015, according to scientists. The largest estuary in the nation scored a C (53 percent) in 2015, one of the three highest scores since 1986. Only 1992 and 2002 scored as high or higher, both years of major sustained droughts. The overall score for the Chesapeake Bay Health Index for 2015 was 53%, compared with 50% in 2014 and 45% in 2013.
January 5, 2017 - Report finds improvements in Chesapeake Bay’s overall health
Water clarity in the Chesapeake Bay is the best it’s been in decades, and native rockfish, oyster and blue crab populations are rebounding as the overall health of the nation’s largest estuary improves, a report released Thursday found.
The Chesapeake Bay Foundation’s biennial State of the Bay report gave the estuary a C-minus grade, an improvement from a D-plus two years ago and the highest score issued since the inception of the report in 1998.
2018 - The 2018 Chesapeake Bay Report Card was released by the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, one of several groups that assess the bay’s health each year. It put the bay’s overall score at 46%
June 15, 2018 - Overall Chesapeake Bay Health Improving For The First Time
For the first time since the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science Chesapeake Bay Report Card scores have been calculated, the positive trajectory that was reported in recent years is now statistically significant . This is important evidence that the positive trend in ecosystem health is real, and that efforts to improve conditions in the Bay are working. The largest estuary in the nation scored a C grade (54%) in the 2017 report card, one of the highest scores calculated. Punctuating this news is the improved A+ (95%) grade for fish populations.
“This is exciting news. It is the first time that the Chesapeake Bay report card scores are significantly trending in the right direction . We have seen individual regions improving before, but not the entire Chesapeake Bay. It seems that the restoration efforts are beginning to take hold,” said Bill Dennison, Vice President for Science Application at the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science.
(They’re saying “improving”, which is terse and general, and downplaying the quantum change from 54% to 95%. Why such a huge change, in just one year, over the whole region? " significantly trending in the right direction ." No, they got an “A”, they have arrived. “Restoration efforts are beginning to take hold.” Beginning? No, they’ve ended, it’s at an “A+” grade.
Broad, general, unspecified " efforts " are alleged to have caused a sudden, quantum change in the environment - which they have not. It’s the general, Etherically-driven improvement of the environment being taken credit for by the people who had been steadfastly trying to destroy it on the down-low with consumer-funded, Death energy-based technologies on the down-low, while putting on a taxpayer-funded, 3D “restoration efforts” show to keep themselves from being lynched. - ed)
May 2, 2019 - Buzzards Bay health continuing to improve, as actions to protect clean water multiply
Bold actions to protect clean water are making a difference to Save Buzzards Bay. That’s what we saw on the Bay in the summer of 2018, according to Bay Health data collected through our Baywatchers monitoring program. Last summer’s conditions continued an upward trend of clearer, healthier waters across the Bay.
A Buzzards Bay Coalition Bay Health sign at Planting Island Cove in Marion.
While you’re out enjoying the water this summer, look out for 142 new Bay Health signs installed at piers, beaches, and boat launches all around Buzzards Bay. These signs display Bay Health scores for the waterways where they are located. These signs were made possible with funding from the Massachusetts Environmental Trust.
Over the past five years, the Bay’s health has largely improved in most places. Roughly two-thirds of waterways monitored in 2018 showed an improvement compared to the previous year. Only 11 waterways showed declining health, and 20 places remained unchanged.
(" Bold actions " is general. " Upward trend " is general. " Largely improved " is general. " Most places " is general. " An improvement " is general. As you may recall, generality is a hallmark of propaganda. - ed)