Watershed group may boot metro counties
Donnelle Eller
Des Moines Register USA TODAY NETWORK
Edited for the listserv. Highlights are in bold. Text is in blue. It is
long because it is in the Sunday Register. I believe I hit the high points
with the blue text color. I added a few sentences for those of you outside
of Iowa. There is important information toward the end.

* Supervisors in seven Iowa counties have passed resolutions seeking to
push Polk and Dallas counties out of their watershed management coalition.
The city of Des Moines is in Polk county and Dallas county is directly
west. The Racoon River flows through both counties.*

 A fear of costly government mandates is behind the push. Some link the
effort to the bitter urban- rural divide that emerged after Des Moines
Water Works sued three north Iowa counties five years ago over high nitrate
levels in the Raccoon River. “I wouldn’t say we distrust” urban leaders,
said Paul Merten, a supervisor in Buena Vista County, one of three counties
sued in 2015. “But there’s concern and caution.”

The possible split of the North Raccoon River Watershed Management
Coalition has real-world implications:
*The river is a source of drinking water for more than 500,000 urban and
rural residents. And the coalition seeks to reduce flooding, which caused
millions of dollars in damage last year in Des Moines after a storm dumped
nine inches of rain over two hours.*
 Statewide, flooding has caused $18 billion in damage over nearly three
decades, and scientists expect heavy rainfall to occur with greater
frequency. Buena Vista, Calhoun, Carroll, Palo Alto, Pocahontas, Sac and
Webster counties have passed resolutions saying they will not support the
proposed North Raccoon watershed plan if Dallas and Polk counties remain
part of the coalition.The north Iowa counties claim the Iowa Department of
Natural Resources’ watershed map incorrectly includes Dallas and Polk
counties, an assertion the agency and several coalition members say is
false.

The coalition, which has 40 members, is expected to vote on the proposed
watershed plan on Friday. *Several north Iowa county supervisors disagree
with the plan’s goal to cut the Raccoon River’s nitrate levels by 48%. They
favor a 41% reduction goal, which they say is more realistic, less costly
and in line with a state plan to reduce nitrate levels. Merten said he and
other north Iowa officials worry the voluntary plan could become mandatory
— either through legislation or other legal action.*

 “We were blindsided by the lawsuit,” Merten said. “People are a little bit
wary.”Jonathan Gano, Des Moines public works director and a member of the
coalition, said the north Iowa leaders’ “dramatic change of heart” caught
him and others by surprise. “ The disappointing part to me,” Gano said, is
that the resolutions jeopardize “our opportunity to work directly together.
... We all live here.”

 Financial frets

*The North Raccoon River watershed coalition received nearly $3.7 million
from a $97 million U.S. Housing and Urban Development grant to the state in
2016 to cut flood risks and improve water quality in nine watersheds across
Iowa. But the North Raccoon watershed has struggled to spend the $2.9
million available for improvements. *The grant pays 90% of project costs.
Concerned the money would go unspent, the state decided earlier this year
to redirect about $1.3 million of the Raccoon watershed’s money to Dubuque.

One of the challenges, officials said, is that the grant requires the money
to be spent in Buena Vista and Pocahontas counties, with the focus on
flood-reduction structures, such as terraces, ponds and wetlands. Those are
typically more difficult projects to tackle.“ That was free money they
could have used. Little projects, big projects, projects on the ground,”
said Mark Hanson, a Dallas County supervisor who is on the coalition and
its past chairman.

Supervisor Clarence Siepker said Pocahontas County joined the coalition in
large part to take advantage of the grant money. They planned to use most
of it to re- establish Swan Lake near Laurens, a 324-acre project that
failed to come together because a nearby landowner declined to participate.
The project would have cut nitrates, stored water during heavy rainfall to
reduce flooding and provided wildlife habitat and recreation for residents.
Siepker said Pocahontas officials proposed reducing the size of the
project, among other options, to spend the money, but engineers said they
didn’t meet the grant requirements. “It’s been very frustrating,” he said,
adding that over time, plans for the proposed project went from a
“full-blown lake” to a shallow lake, then to a wetland. “Still, we thought
we could do it.”

 Ted Smith has agreed to work that will stabilize stream banks on land in
the watershed. He said more landowners would have participated in the
program if the Des Moines Water Works lawsuit hadn’t happened. “ There’s a
trust issue,” he said. “No one wants to partner with someone they don’t
trust. “But it’s a shame, because we want Des Moines to know that we care
up here,” he said. “We’re trying to do the right thing. … We can do this
voluntarily. We just need a little more time.”

*In 2013, Iowa adopted a plan, called the Nutrient Reduction Strategy, to
cut 45% of the nitrogen and phosphorus that leaves the state and
contributes to the dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico each summer. The plan is
voluntary for farmers, who are responsible for shaving 41% of nitrogen and
29% of the phosphorus levels.* Cities, businesses and other point-sources,
which fall under government regulations, are responsible for the remaining
reduction. There is no deadline for completing the goal.

But Alicia Vasto, an Iowa Environmental Council water policy specialist,
said the Raccoon watershed division makes “it difficult to say that the
state’s voluntary approach is the way to go.”

 Pushing boundaries

*Don Etler, a retired engineer who represents Palo Alto County on the
watershed coalition, said Iowa DNR incorrectly included Polk and Dallas
counties in the watershed when the group was created in 2017.The name of
the North Raccoon River changes to the Raccoon River just south of Van
Meter,* prompting the claim that the urban counties are improperly included
in the watershed. “ The DNR made a mistake,” Etler said.The supervisors’
resolutions say Dallas and Polk counties would have nearly 60% of the
watershed’s population, but little of the 2.1 million farm acres where most
of the flood and water- quality improvements would go. “We cannot support a
plan which hands over the control of the entire (watershed) to the metro
communities,” Pocahontas County supervisors wrote to the coalition in its
public comments about the plan.

* Allen Bonini, a DNR watershed improvement supervisor, said the state used
the U.S. Geological Survey map, *which was part of the agreement 36 cities,
counties, soil and water soil conservation districts signed to become part
of the coalition three years ago.Palo Alto County, Des Moines, West Des
Moines and Adel joined the coalition later.*“Here, three years later, these
resolutions pop up, claiming that DNR used the wrong map,” Bonini said. “
That’s factually incorrect.”*

 The Iowa DNR and Iowa Economic Development Authority, which administers
the HUD grant, sent letters to the county supervisors noting actions they
can take. One option is to create their own watershed management authority
within the North Raccoon watershed coalition. Members of the watershed can
seek to amend the coalition agreement to reflect a smaller watershed, but
all 40 members would need to agree to the change, the Iowa economic
development agency told supervisors.

*Katie Rock, a Polk Soil and Water Conservation District representative on
the coalition board, believes the real concern lies with the 48.1% nitrate
reduction in the proposed watershed study. (Katie Rock is the Sierra Club
Beyond Coal organizer for Iowa.)*

The vote to use the higher target was controversial, Rock said, with only a
few of the large group representatives at the meeting.

 At least now, she said, coalition members are beginning to have honest
conversations about the study and why they’re part of the coalition.
Lingering anger over the Des Moines Water Works lawsuit is part of the
reason for some. “As a member of the coalition put it, ‘if I’m not at the
table, I’m on someone’s plate,’” said Rock, the coalition’s secretary.

 Voluntary vs. mandatory

Etler, the retired engineer, said rural Iowa counties have reason to be
concerned about the proposed watershed plan becoming the foundation for
mandatory action.

The Iowa Supreme Court dismissed the Des Moines Water Works lawsuit in 2017
against Sac, Buena Vista and Calhoun counties, but an Iowa Citizens for
Community Improvement and Food & Water Watch lawsuit filed last year seeks
similar outcomes.

Des Moines Water Works sought regulatory oversight of farmers, saying
underground drainage tiles funnel high levels of nitrates from farm fields
into the Raccoon River, requiring the utility to spend millions of dollars
removing the nutrient so the water is safe to drink. Iowa CCI and Food &
Water Watch want limits on the nitrogen and phosphorous pollution entering
the Raccoon River as well as a moratorium on new and expanding hog
confinement facilities.Attorneys for the state said the lawsuit would
require “a dramatic shift from present- day agricultural practices” and
create “substantial uncertainty and grave concerns for every member of
Iowa’s agricultural economy.”The Iowa Supreme Court is weighing whether the
lawsuit can proceed.The environmentalists’ lawsuit would “ legally impose
what this plan proposes,” Etler said. “ That directly affects the Raccoon
River watershed.”

 *Merten and others say they’re concerned about the cost farmers and
landowners in their counties could face.Consultants writing the proposed
watershed plan estimate that cutting nitrate levels 41% in the North
Raccoon, matching the state’s Nutrient Reduction Strategy, would cost up to
$1.5 billion over 20 years. Etler said cutting nitrate levels 48% would
double the costs, a per-acre expense that would climb from $700 to $1,500.
Carroll County supervisors said the proposed 48.1% nitrate reduction goal
is far higher than other targets. For example, the nitrate goal on the Des
Moines River at Des Moines is 34% and the Cedar River at Cedar Rapids is
35%. But the 48.1% nitrate reduction target does match a state goal for the
Raccoon River. Debbie says:The reason it is higher is because the Racoon is
the biggest source of nitrates in the Gulf of Mexico. *

Gano and others said the watershed won’t reach either 41% or 48.1%
reduction in nitrate levels over the study’s 10year life. But setting the
goal at 48% would qualify the watershed for additional federal money that
the state administers for impaired waterways. “It’s almost a moot point,”
Gano said. “We won’t get there in 10 years. This is a generational problem,
and it will require decades of work.”

 Stronger together

Despite the northern Iowa counties’ challenges to the coalition’s
membership and study targets, supervisors say they’re committed to reducing
nutrient losses. And Gano, Rock and other coalition members are hopeful the
group will be able to continue working together. Already, the coalition has
reduced the percentage of land the study proposes retiring in flood-prone
areas. Vasto, the Iowa Environmental Council water specialist, said the
state’s watershed management authorities are probably the best way to
address water quality problems.

 Parts of the Raccoon River struggle with high levels of nitrogen,
phosphorous, fecal bacteria and sediment that make it unsuitable for people
to use the water to drink, swim and play in.Agriculture is the primary
source of the pollutants, the proposed watershed plan says, with hundreds
of animal feeding operations and thousands of crop acres in the mostly
rural region.

 Bonini said nothing binds the counties or cities to the plan. But the
boards and councils that adopt the plan can get in line for state or
federal money that helps leaders “address local problems.”The northern
counties “ have put a lot of voice into what they don’t want,” Rock said.“I
hope we can figure out what they do want.”


-- 

Debbie Neustadt
Des Moines, Iowa

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