Iowa DNR News Environmental Protection Division For immediate release Friday, April 12, 2002 DNR REACHES SETTLEMENT WITH SHELDON COOP FOR JANUARY FISH KILL DES MOINES - A settlement of $150,000 for damages and an agreement to implement a number of environmental projects has been reached between Midwest Farmer's Cooperative in Sheldon and the Iowa Department of Natural Resources. The final agreement met the goal of both Midwest Farmers Cooperative and the DNR in creating local projects to improve and protect the environment. The agreement, signed Friday by DNR Director Jeff Vonk, specifies a damage payment of $150,000 for the estimated value of fish killed and other natural resources damages that occurred on the Floyd River in January as a result of a nitrogen fertilizer spill. The final count of dead fish was estimated at 1,034,843 fish along a 55.6-mile stretch of the Floyd River. Money collected for damages will be used for projects in Sioux and Plymouth counties involving improvements on streams. Preference will be given to projects on the Floyd River or its watershed. The liquid nitrogen fertilizer spilled onto the ground when a transfer pipe leading to a bulk storage tank froze and then split at Midwest Farmer's Co-op on Jan. 7. Up to 7,896 gallons of the nitrogen used for fertilizer was lost in the spill. The nitrogen landed outside of a containment dike designed to prevent accidents, then flowed to a storm drain that eventually empties into the river. Midwest Farmers Co-op was also responsible for a fish kill in September of 1998 along the same stretch of the Floyd River when fertilizer-contaminated water was cleaned out from a containment basin and flushed downstream. That incident resulted in more than 400,000 fish being killed along 14.7 miles of stream. The company eventually paid $55,000 in fish restitution and a $10,000 penalty. In addition to the payment for damages, the cooperative has agreed to implement a number of environmentally beneficial projects in northwest Iowa, particularly in O'Brien, Sioux and Plymouth counties near the Floyd River in lieu of paying penalties. The cost of implementing the required environmental projects is estimated at more than $30,000. The projects required by the agreement are: · Sponsoring, at an estimated cost of $7,000, a Full Mock Spill Training Session for Agribusiness Firms in northwest Iowa, by September 1, 2002. The session will include at a minimum Advance Classroom (5 hours); fire; exercises in dry fertilizer spill, broken 2.5 gallon container, 30 gallon container spill, patching plug in 30 gallon container, summer pipe rack, and transfer from liquid tender to applicator; and reporting and paperwork. · Sponsoring and hiring necessary industry technical experts, at an estimated cost of $5,000, two larger group-training sessions on spill processes, regulation, media responses, and working with the DNR and other regulatory agencies, by March 31, 2003. · Assigning a Certified Crop Agronomist [CCA] to the steering committee of the Floyd River Valley Watershed Project. Train six CCAs in the filter-strip program and promote the program to customers bordering the Floyd River in O'Brien, Sioux, and Plymouth Counties. · Establishing an environmental, land stewardship and leadership program for 4-H and FFA in Sioux and O'Brien Counties, with financial support for the programs of between $4,000-6,000 annually for the next two years. · Assisting the Sheldon vocational Agribusiness Department and its environmental, crop production and livestock management classes and outdoor farm classroom by providing technical classroom instruction and laboratory exercises. Materials and staff is estimated to be about $3,300 annually for two years. · Donating land and access across Midwest's property for the Sheldon Community Recreation (Bike and Hiking) Trail, and provide grass seeding to complete the on-site project [est. $3,000 value]. · Continuing to promote GPS Precision Applied Manure in farmer meeting [est. $961 cost in the past year]. · Engineering evaluation of fertilizer storage and transportation facilities is required. Written report is due by May 15, 2002. "The DNR's primary interest is in protecting the environment, not handing out penalties," said Vonk. "This agreement will result in some meaningful improvements to the environment while at the same time sending a message that parties are going to be held responsible when an incident like this occurs," Vonk said. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - For SC email list T-and-C, send: GET TERMS-AND-CONDITIONS.CURRENT to [log in to unmask]