DNR CONTINUES INVESTIGATION OF MANURE SPILL IN SOUTHWEST IOWA WOODBINE - Employees of a hog confinement operation are pumping manure contaminated water due to a manure spill that occurred last week. An employee of Furnas County Farms was killed Tuesday, Sept. 3 in a tractor accident while land applying manure at a 20,000-head pork finishing unit northwest of Woodbine in Harrison County. An umbilical line used to pump manure was apparently ruptured and not discovered by the company until this week. The DNR wasn't notified of the manure spill until Wednesday, Sept. 11. It was estimated that at least 500,000 gallons of manure was spilled and entered Elk Creek which flows to Willow Creek, the Boyer River and eventually to the Missouri River, but the investigation is hampered because so much time has elapsed since the spill occurred. Employees worked through the night Thursday to berm the Elk Creek and pump contaminated water from the stream to be properly land applied. The DNR has recommended that the responsible party coordinate efforts have the water land applied with downstream land owners hopefully to prevent further contamination to Willow Creek. "Cooperation between land owners and Furnas County Farms employees could go a long way toward preventing a fish kill," said Dan Stipe, supervisor of the DNR's field office in Atlantic. Ammonia was detected in Willow Creek during investigation on Friday while similar testing on Thursday did not show any. Due to very low water levels, contamination appears to be going very slowly downstream. However, the DNR has still not been able to document a fish kill relating to this incident. The DNR is continuing its investigation of this incident. For more information, contact Dan Stipe at 712-243-1934. MECHANICAL FAILURE BLAMED FOR SEWAGE BYPASS IN ATLANTIC ATLANTIC - A mechanical failure at the Atlantic waste water treatment plant resulted in approximately 400,000 gallons of untreated sewage being released into the East Nishnabotna River Wednesday and Thursday. The bypass began at approximately 8:15 a.m. on Wednesday and was stopped at 7:15 a.m. Thursday. There have been no reports of a fish kill related to this incident. The DNR is continuing to investigate this incident and may take enforcement action if warranted, according to Dan Stipe, supervisor of the DNR's field office in Atlantic. For more information, contact Dan Stipe at (712) 243-1934. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - For SC email list T-and-C, send: GET TERMS-AND-CONDITIONS.CURRENT to [log in to unmask]