Perdue has renewed its commitment to the Alliance for the Chesapeake Bay’s Project Clean Stream initiative with a $20,000 grant. From to left to right are Brittany Smith, Senior Agriculture Projects Manager for the Alliance; Ben Hildebrand, Director of Environmental Sustainability for Perdue Farms; and Drew Getty, Deputy General Counsel and SVP, Perdue Farms.
Perdue Farms Reinvests in Health of the Chesapeake Bay Watershed Through Project Clean Stream Partnership
January 15, 2026

Perdue associates remove trash from Shumaker Pond in Salisbury, Maryland, as part of a Project Clean Stream project.
SALISBURY, MD (Thursday, January 15, 2026) — As part of a commitment to protect and enhance the health of the Chesapeake Bay watershed, Perdue Farms has renewed its support of the Alliance for the Chesapeake Bay with a $20,000 investment it its annual Project Clean Stream initiative.
“Project Clean Stream is a community-based initiative and wouldn’t be possible without people volunteering to pick up litter before it reaches their local waterway. It is paramount to have companies like Perdue investing in this project,” said Lauren Sauder, capacity building projects manager for the Alliance for the Chesapeake Bay. “It enables the Alliance to ensure cleanup supplies remain free, lowering the barrier to environmental stewardship and enabling people to readily take local action. Perdue has become a pillar in this initiative. Thank you to the Perdue team for empowering their employees, continuing to support Project Clean Stream, and for their ongoing commitment to the Chesapeake Bay.”
The grant is funded through the Franklin P. and Arthur W. Perdue Foundation, the company’s charitable giving partner, and aligns with Perdue’s Delivering Hope To Our Neighbors® outreach to improve quality of life and build strong communities.
Project Clean Stream is the Alliance’s annual program that links thousands of volunteers from communities and companies in the Chesapeake Bay watershed to collect trash before it reaches creeks, rivers and streams. Perdue associates have contributed many volunteer hours in cleanups across its watershed communities.
Since 2008, Perdue has provided $100,000 in financial support to Project Clean Stream, and its associates have delivered more than 24,000 volunteer hours. They are among the thousands of volunteers who participate in Project Clean stream cleanups annually throughout the watershed states of Delaware, Maryland, New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and West Virginia, and Washington D.C.
“Our renewed commitment to the Alliance for the Chesapeake Bay and Project Clean Stream is about putting our stewardship and teamwork values in action,” said Ben Hildebrand, director of environmental sustainability for Perdue Farms.” By combining financial support with the time and energy of our associates, we’re able to help protect local waterways in the Bay watershed and strengthen the communities where our associates and neighbors live, work, and raise their families.”
For more information about Perdue’s commitment to environmental stewardship, please visit: https://corporate.perduefarms.com/responsibility/environment/
For more information on the Alliance for the Chesapeake Bay and Project Clean Stream, please visit: https://www.allianceforthebay.org




