This is progress. Has anyone contacted the gulf states that are affected by Iowa nutrient runoff? I would think a lawsuit from those states against the farmers or the state of Iowa would move things along. On Sun, Jul 19, 2020 at 11:06 AM Debbie Neustadt <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > 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 > * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * > To unsubscribe from the IOWA-TOPICS list, send any message to > [log in to unmask] > <[log in to unmask]&body=SIGNOFF+IOWA-TOPICS>, > or visit Listserv online > <http://LISTS.SIERRACLUB.ORG/SCRIPTS/WA.EXE?SUBED1=IOWA-TOPICS&A=1>. For > all the latest news and activities, sign up for Sierra Club Insider > <http://www.sierraclub.org/sierra-club-email/insider>, the Club's > twice-monthly flagship e-newsletter. 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