Forwarded by Jane Clark
PUBLIC'S HELP NEEDED TO IMPROVE RACCOON RIVER; PUBLIC MEETINGS ANNOUNCED
MEDIA CONTACT: Chris Van Gorp at (515) 281-4791 or
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DES MOINES - From Jefferson to Guthrie Center, from Sac City to Des Moines -
the Iowa DNR is seeking your suggestions, comments and questions on
improving water quality in the Raccoon River.
While the river may not run directly through your town or farm, you may
still live in the river's watershed. A watershed, also called a river basin,
is an area of land that drains into a river or stream. Making improvements
in smaller streams and changing how land is managed in the watershed can
make a difference in the river.
The DNR has developed a water quality improvement plan for the Raccoon
River. The DNR will hold four public meetings in the watershed to explain
the DNR's findings and what needs to be done to improve the river. The DNR
will also answer questions and accept comments on the plan. The meetings
will be held:
Guthrie Center:
Nov. 8, 1:30 p.m., Springbrook Education Center (north of Guthrie Center on
F-25)
Jefferson:
Nov. 7, 7:00 p.m., Greene County Community Center, 204 W. Harrison
Sac City:
Nov. 7, 1:30 p.m., Sac City Community Recreation Center, 1015 W. Main St.
West Des Moines
Nov. 8, 6:30 p.m., Raccoon River Park Nature Lodge, 2500 Grand Ave.
Portions of the Raccoon River are impaired by high levels of bacteria and
nitrates. High levels of bacteria can cause people recreating in the rivers
to become sick. Elevated nitrate levels cause problems with using the rivers
as a drinking water source, including thousands of people in the Des Moines
metro area. The DNR's improvement plan found that 90 percent of water
quality problems in the Raccoon River come from nonpoint sources. Nonpoint
source pollution, especially sediment, nutrients and bacteria, washes into
the Raccoon River from wide areas like farm fields, forested lands and urban
areas.
However, the situation cannot be fixed without the help of people upstream
who can address the water quality in their local streams. Citizen
involvement is critical to achieve water quality goals in these watersheds
and across the state.
With the help of Iowans, the DNR is developing water quality improvement
plans, also known as a Total Maximum Daily Loads (TMDLs), to address waters
across the state considered "impaired." The DNR calculates how much of a
pollutant a water body can receive and still maintain its designated use
such as maintaining aquatic life, allowing body contact such as swimming or
being used as a drinking water supply.
The plan also suggests ways Iowans can improve the Raccoon River. The DNR
works with local groups to form watershed projects that put the water
quality improvement plan into action.
Those not able to attend the meetings can view the plan at
http://watershed.iowadnr.gov/tmdl/publicnotice.html and can send their
comments by Nov. 26 to the DNR through the following contact:
Chris Van Gorp
Iowa DNR
Wallace State Office Building
502 E. 9th St., Des Moines, 50319
(515) 281-4791
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For more information on water quality improvement plans and watershed
projects, visit the DNR's watershed improvement Web site at
http://watershed.iowadnr.gov.
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