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TREADING WATER
Unfocused and underfunded, clean water goal falters

Stephen Mally/The Gazette


The Mississippi River is shown in November as it flows through Davenport. A government task force said in 2008 it would cut nitrate and phosphorus pollution washing into the river 45 percent by 2015.
Not only has that not happened, but a “dead zone” at the mouth of the river is three times as large as it was supposed to be by this time.

TAKE A CLOSER LOOK By Erin Jordan, The Gazette WHY YOU SHOULD CARE

A
merica’s Midwest faces worsening trouble with undrinkable well UNSAFE DRINKING WATER
water, recreational lakes choked with toxic algae and water treat- The Midwest has some of
the nation’s highest levels of
ment plants requiring budget-busting upgrades to remove pollu- nitrate in groundwater because
tion washing from farm fields and industries. of fertilizer applied to farmland.
The more pollutants there are,
A government task force said in 2008 it would cut nitrate and phosphorus the more expensive it is to treat
pollution 45 percent by 2015 — both to help the Gulf of Mexico, where the municipal water — which you
nutrients have created a sprawling dead zone in which wildlife cannot sur- pay for. Moreover, millions of
Midwesterners rely on private
vive — and to protect the health and safety of Midwest waters. wells, most never tested.
Now 10 years later, the dead zone re- square miles. Nitrate has been linked to
mains a problem, the 45 percent goal has The group established the 45 percent re- health problems like “blue baby
been shoved back 20 years and, although duction in nitrate and phosphorus running syndrome” for pregnant women
LOUISIANA and young children.
millions have been spent in nearly every into the Mississippi because that’s what
Pollution in the Mississippi River state along the Mississippi River, it’s not scientists think is needed to shrink the dead
adds to shrimpers’ troubles. clear any progress is being made, a four- zone. LOST RECREATION
MINNESOTA month investigation by The Gazette found. The task force’s 2008 Action Plan, a Toxin-producing algal blooms
“Their goals for reduction in the dead 64-page document that doesn’t describe or high levels of bacteria caused
Unusual among states, law zone at the Gulf are not being met — not enforcement options, asked each of the 12 more than 1,400 closures or
forces conservation on farmers. even close,” said Kris Sigford, a retired central U.S. states to develop their own swim warnings at public beaches
INDIANA water quality program director for the Min- plans for reducing nutrients. The states are last summer in the 12 states in
nesota Center for Environmental Advocacy. Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa, Illinois, Mis- the Gulf Hypoxia Task Force.
Leader in cover crops sets “In many cases, we’re going the wrong souri, Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee,
higher goal to make a difference. way.” Mississippi, Arkansas and Louisiana. DYING FISH
WISCONSIN The Gulf’s oxygen-deprived dead The Gazette reviewed all 12 state strate- The hypoxia task force states
zone, called that because fish and other gies, talked with dozens of state agency together had more than 200
Nutrient runoff mars scenic
organisms must swim away or die, has an leaders and found the following: reported fish kills in 2017, with
Green Bay with algal blooms.
average size over the past five summers of l The Gulf Hypoxia Task Force said every most determined to be caused
5,772 square miles. That’s three times larger by contaminants washing into
Pages 8A to 10A than the task force’s goal of about 1,900 ;; TREADING WATER, PAGE 6A waterways.

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VOL. 136 NO. 327
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© 2018 The Gazette
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Sunday
For surgery in Cedar Rapids,
Nora Royer, MD, FACS
General and Trauma
© 2018 The Gazette

the
h surgery hospital.
h i l.
6A The Gazette ● Sunday, December 2, 2018

TREADING WATER
;; FROM PAGE 1A
state should complete a strat-
egy by 2013. But only four did.
Kentucky and Tennessee still
have only drafts.
l Only five states estab-
lished baseline numbers for
nitrate or phosphorus loads
in surface water, making it
impossible in the other seven
to know if improvements are
being accomplished.
l Five states haven’t updat-
ed their strategies after initial
publication, contrary to advice
from the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency.
l Only one state — Min-
nesota — requires farmers to
implement conservation strat-
egies to reduce runoff.
l All 12 states now require
water monitoring at some
facilities, usually large mu-
nicipal wastewater treatment
plants.
l All the states monitor wa-
ter quality at public beaches
to some degree, leading to
more than 1,400 closures or
advisories for high levels of
bacteria or toxins from algae
this past summer. More than
200 fish kills were reported in
the states in 2017, with many
caused by contaminants wash-
ing into waterways.
Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette
HOW STATES ARE FARING Water flows through the water treatment process at the Mankato Water Treatment Plant in Minnesota.
It’s impossible to make ap-
ples-to-apples comparisons be-
tween the states on how they
are living up to their goals
because the federal govern-
ment, which created the Gulf
Hypoxia Task Force, let each
chart its own path.
Without real pressure from
the EPA, few of the states
have consistent funding, some
aren’t documenting what steps
they’re taking and there’s lit-
tle urgency, despite the clock
ticking on an interim deadline
of seeing a 20 percent reduc-
tion in nitrate and phosphorus
by 2025.
Here’s a breakdown:
MINNESOTA
The 2,300-mile Mississippi Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette
River starts as a small stream A close-up of the interior of the ultra membrane filtration system at the Mankato
at Minnesota’s Lake Itasca. Water Treatment Plant shows how even the finest impurities are filtered out.
The Land of 10,000 Lakes, with
a $15 billion tourism industry,
has reason to worry about its
water quality, especially with
nitrates becoming a growing
problem in southern Minne-
sota.
Mankato, with just under
40,000 people, will spend about
$2 million next year digging
another well into the Mount
Simon aquifer. The city blends
aquifer water with draws
from the Blue Earth River and
the Minnesota River, both of
which flow into the Missis-
sippi River.
The federal nitrate limit for
safe drinking water is 10 mil-
ligrams per liter. Rivers and
Rebecca F. Miller/The Gazette Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette
streams running through ag-
ricultural areas often surpass Curt Zingula holds a stalk of big blue stem in September at his farm in rural Mankato, Minn., will spend about $2 million next year digging another well for
that in the spring, when melt- Marion. The prairie grass grows in a saturated buffer, which Zingula recently drinking water after seeing its nitrate levels increase sharply. One step in treat-
ing snow and rain wash fertil- installed, along with a tile flow regulator to help reduce the nitrate levels that ing drinking water for the city of nearly 40,000 involves putting it through a tank,
izer from the fields. run off his farmland. as seen Oct. 4.
In the early 2000s, nitrate
levels in the rivers supplying the 12 states to legally impose dischargers, such as tific modeling. But some water share isn’t from weather.
Mankato’s drinking water best management practices on scientists say it tells only half
wastewater treatment plants The Iowa Legislature ear-
started to climb, officials said. farmers. A 2015 law requires the story.
and factories, since 2011, lier this year passed a bill
The Blue Earth River aver- farmers to create perennial The estimates don’t account
according to its 2013 Nutrient providing $282 million over
aged 10.1 milligrams per liter vegetation buffers between Reduction Strategy. for other agricultural prac- 12 years toward nutrient re-
in 2015 and 12.2 mg/l in 2016 their crops and lakes, rivers tices, such as an increased
This emphasis on slash- duction goals, with $4 million
— up from 4.9 mg/l in 2011, ac- and drainage ditches. A 2017 use of underground drainage
ing phosphorus has helped in available in the first year.
cording to data from the plant. amendment allows alterna- tiling in Iowa, Minnesota, Il-
Wisconsin, where a long-term Critics say it’s barely enough
The Minnesota River rose to tives with equivalent water linois, Indiana and Ohio, that
trends database created by to make a dent in the multibil-
9.3 mg/l in 2016, an increase quality benefits. may be working against the
the state shows phosphorus in lion dollar problem.
from 3 mg/l in 2011. goals.
decline since the 1960s. But the
A consultant told city offi- WISCONSIN “I think that’s a valid criti- ILLINOIS
database shows nitrate rising
cials in 2017 that drilling a new Wisconsin focused its strat- cism,” said Nancy Stoner, who
— a troubling trend Wiscon- Illinois, one of only two
well was one of the least ex- egy on phosphorus, mainly served as acting assistant
sin’s strategy doesn’t address. states reporting nutrient re-
pensive options for safe drink- because that is what’s causing administrator for the EPA’s duction results compared with
ing water, with other plans algal blooms on Green Bay. IOWA Office of Water from 2011 to baseline numbers, said nitrate
ranging from $3.4 million to “In freshwater systems like Iowa in 2017 reported it had 2014 and wrote a 2011 memo loads fell 10 percent during
$23 million. Green Bay, it’s the phosphorus reduced annual nitrate loss by widely used as guidance by the the 2011-2015 period from 1980-
“Hopefully, the nitrate that’s the primary driver,” 1,375 tons in 2016 through the states. “We need to account 1996. Because the measure-
levels won’t get totally out said Kevin Fermanich, a 302,000 acres of cover crops for land that is newly tiled, ments were taken in average
of hand, and we’ll be able to professor of geoscience and planted with state or federal newly cropped and newly de- precipitation years, officials
handle it with just the new environmental science at the subsidies. These same acres veloped.” are pretty sure the decline
well,” said Mark Winson, the University of Wisconsin-Green cut phosphorus going into wa- University of Iowa research- isn’t due to low water flows
city’s public utilities director. Bay. terways by 104 tons, the state ers reported last spring Iowa’s from 2011 to 2015.
“The first well will probably Wisconsin, which reported said. nitrate discharge is dispropor- Preliminary estimates of
take us through the next five a phosphorus baseline of This type of estimate, made tionate to the amount of water 2014 to 2018 show even more
to six years.” about 4,750 tons in 1995, has by several other task force flowing into bordering rivers,
Minnesota is the first of put limits on phosphorus states also, uses credible scien- signaling the increased nitrate ;;CONTINUES ON PAGE 7A
© 2018 The Gazette

“Hopefully, the nitrate levels won’t get totally out of hand, and we’ll be able to handle it with just
the new well. The first well will probably take us through the next five to six years.”
Mark Winson, public utilities director in Blue Earth, Minn.
Sunday, December 2, 2018 ● The Gazette 7A

TREADING WATER
;; FROM PAGE 6A by the slow pace of the Gulf
Hypoxia Task Force and the
progress — a decrease of state-led efforts to reduce
16 percent from baseline, ac- nitrate and phosphorus.
cording to Greg McIsaac, a The Mississippi River
University of Illinois emeritus Collaborative in 2012 sued the
professor who continues to EPA in federal court, alleging
track nutrient loading for the the agency was letting states
state. get away with doing nothing.
But it’s not all good news The groups want the EPA
for Illinois. Average annual to put the entire basin on a
phosphorus loads were up 17 pollution diet that sets limits
percent between the baseline for pollutants and requires
and 2011 to 2015. dischargers, both industrial
MISSOURI and agricultural, to reduce the
flow.
Missouri has not established The EPA had used this
baseline numbers nor numeric regulatory approach on the
limits for water pollution. East Coast’s Chesapeake Bay
“Missouri is focused on in 2010.
finding out what the effective- “The Chesapeake Bay is
ness is of the practices before being cleaned up,” said Stoner,
having numeric goals,” said the former EPA official now
Kurt Beckman, the Missouri president of the Potomac
Department of Natural Re- Riverkeeper Network. “It’s
source’s agricultural liaison. not a perfect process, but it’s
Missouri is one of the few a very successful process for
task force states with regular making nutrient reduction.
funding for nutrient reduc- The same thing could be done
tion efforts. A one-tenth of in the Mississippi River.”
1 percent sales tax, in place Short of putting the Missis-
since 1984, funneled $635 mil- sippi River basin or the Gulf
lion from 1986 to 2014 to help Rebecca F. Miller/The Gazette
on a pollution diet, the EPA
Missouri farmers implement Curt Zingula removes plastic dams in September from a flow regulator in a field near a saturated buffer at his farm in could step up enforcement of
conservation practices. rural Marion. By removing a series of plastic dams within the drain, he is able to regulate the flow of field runoff into a discharger permits or force
The program provides 75 nearby creek. states to set numeric limits for
percent of the cost of conser- lakes and rivers.
vation strategies, including Regulating the Mississippi
expensive projects like biore- game, with officials claiming
River watershed, which drains
actors — big mulch pits that
filter water from underground
Gulf of Mexico’s dead zone the state is the “leader in the
development and implemen- 40 percent of the continental
An annually recurring area of low oxygen in the Gulf of Mexico was measured this year at its tation of nutrient reduction United States, would be a
drainage tile — estimated to much bigger challenge than
fourth-smallest size since 1985, but the five-year average of its fluctuation in scope still is three times strategies” in its 2012 draft
cut nitrates by half. larger than the goal that was set for 2015. the Chesapeake Bay. Such
strategy.
OHIO But that document never a project would be “unprec-
Texas Louisiana has been adopted, and there edented and complex” as well
Ohio is the farthest task
are no reports since on what as “highly resource and time
force state from the Missis-
sippi River. But since the Ohio state officials are doing to intensive,” argued President
River is the largest tributary, clean up the river that shares Barack Obama’s EPA in a 2011
what happens in Ohio is im- the state’s name. response to environmental
portant to the Gulf. “At this time, MS (Missis- groups.
The primary water qual- sippi) does not publish annual The EPA under President
ity focus in Ohio is Lake Erie, updates to the strategies,” Donald Trump has been even
which has had large algal Natalie Segrest, who works for more disinterested, leaving
blooms for eight of the last 10 MILLIGRAMS OF OXYGEN PER LITER the Mississippi Department of two of seven federal seats on
summers, according to the Environmental Quality, said the Gulf Hypoxia Task Force
National Weather Service. In
Greater than 5 4 to 5 3 to 4 2 to 3 Less than 2 in an email. vacant.
2014, microcystins from the al- State officials meet once “Looking at the full suite of
Source: Louisiana State University Gazette graphic
gae contaminated the drinking or twice a year to talk about data available, EPA is pleased
water of 400,000 residents in progress within three geo- with the progress being made
and around Toledo. graphic regions: delta, coastal by the Hypoxia Task Force,”
Ohio Republican Gov. John Agricultural Water Quality pal wastewater facilities in a and upland, Segrest said. The an agency spokeswoman said
Kasich, who again may run for Plan that includes which best 2015-16 pilot project showed state has seven years of data in an email Wednesday after
president in 2020, has signed management practices will be the ability to reduce nitrate from the delta region and now declining a Nov. 12 Gazette re-
a host of bills to monitor and used to protect waters. or phosphorus levels just by is beginning to analyze it, Seg- quest for an interview.
regulate fertilizer application But farmers don’t have to using existing equipment dif- rest said. When asked what the EPA
to improve water quality. In turn in their plans. And a state ferently. Mississippi doesn’t have could do to make sure the
July, he issued an executive survey showed only about 25 Some Tennessee officials baselines, but officials esti- states reach nutrient reduc-
order declaring eight water- percent of farmers actually had don’t see a need to update the mate conservation projects tion goals, she said:
sheds in distress, but it was implemented their plans, said state’s 2015 draft strategy. from 2007 to 2014 cut phos- “We are facilitating
stalled after the Ohio Farm Pete Goodmann, Kentucky Di- “When you look at the phorus by 217,873 pounds per dialogues with states across
Bureau and some Ohio Repub- vision of Water director. models, Tennessee (is) about year and nitrogen by 506,406 the country to determine the
licans complained. “Now, to get cost-share, you 5 percent of the problem,” pounds per year. feasibility of approaches to
While Ohio doesn’t have have to show you have an ag said Forbes Walker, a profes- reducing excess nutrients
water quality plan,” Good- sor and environmental soil
LOUISIANA that complement existing
historical baseline numbers
for nitrate and phosphorus, mann said. But “we have to The state has not computed
specialist at the University regulatory programs, such
officials did compute five-year figure out ways to incentivize a statewide baseline for nitrate
of Tennessee. “You guys (in as using market-based
averages of nutrient loading it that isn’t just tied to money. and phosphorus, officials said,
Iowa) grow 13 or 14 million mechanisms.”
in the Ohio River from 2013 Maybe some pressure from but the U.S. Geological Survey
acres of corn. You still do the Environmental groups
to 2017. Compared with those the Walmarts of the world to has at least six monitoring
tillage thing. Mostly your initially won their case in U.S.
numbers, Ohio has seen “no say ‘This milk comes from a sites in Louisiana, including
landscape is tile drained so District Court, but an appeals
clear decrease in loading yet,” certified farm.’ ” on the Mississippi River-
anytime you put fertilizer on court sent it back down,
a 2018 Nutrient Mass Balance Goodmann is talking about Atchafalaya Delta, where the
soil, it comes out in the tile where Judge Jay Zainey in the
Study found. a program like Minnesota’s river pours into the Gulf. That
water. Compared with Iowa, Eastern District of Louisiana
voluntary water quality certi- monitoring site shows a
we’re really in good shape.” sided with the EPA on Dec. 15,
INDIANA fication, which offers farmers 1980-96 baseline of a little over 2016.
Indiana hasn’t set a base- who implement conservation ARKANSAS 1 million tons of nitrate per “Presumably, there is a
line, instead equating conser- practices incentives like rec- Arkansas plans to update year and about 150,000 tons of point in time at which the
vation practices with nitrate its 2014 nutrient reduction
ognition and priority for tech- phosphorus per year. agency will have abused its
and phosphorus losses, said strategy in the next few years.
nical and financial assistance The five-year average phos- great discretion by refusing
Jordan Seger, deputy director from the state. The revision should include phorus load has been climb- to concede that the current
of the Indiana State Depart- Kentucky has not computedbaseline numbers, said Ryan ing since the baseline period, approach — albeit the one of
ment of Agriculture. baseline numbers and has justBenefield, deputy director of while the nitrate load has been first choice under the (Clean
The 2008 Action Plan rec- the state Natural Resources
started putting nutrient limits pretty flat. Water Act) — is simply not
ommends states create water Commission.
on some discharging facilities, The Gulf Restoration Net- going to work,” he wrote.
quality trading programs Goodmann said. Arkansas is the largest work, Sierra Club and other “But for now, Plaintiffs have
that allow nitrate and phos- producer of rice in the United environmental groups have not demonstrated that EPA’s
phorus-generating facilities TENNESSEE States, harvesting 1.1 million been pushing the Louisiana assessment was arbitrary,
to purchase credits to pay Another state skipping dis- acres in 2017, according to the Department of Environmental capricious, or contrary to
for agricultural conservation charger permit limits except University of Arkansas Agri- Quality for years to step up law.”
practices. So far, Indiana, Ken- in cases where required by the cultural Research and Exten- protection of water bodies by Sigford, the retired Min-
tucky and Ohio are the only federal government, Tennes- sion. Rice production requires putting them on an impaired nesota environmental group
task force states to do this. see instead is identifying mu- extensive irrigation, with waters list and accelerating leader, fears it will take a
The Ohio River Basin Wa- nicipal wastewater treatment traditional methods calling for improvement plans. public health emergency like
ter Quality Trading Project, plants that can make small flooding rice paddies. Much of Matt Rota, senior policy di- the lead-tainted water in Flint,
which the three states formed changes without costing a lot. that water quickly drains into rector for the Gulf Restoration Mich., or an economic blow
in 2012, is the largest such pro- “We think the first step the groundwater supply, tak- Network, said Louisiana has like the tourism-killing algal
gram in terms of geographic should be optimization be- ing fertilizer with it. progressed in requiring water blooms in Florida, for Midwest
area and number of credits cause some plants have seen But rice farmers are using monitoring by all large dis- officials to push for changes.
available for purchase, said really good results,” said Jen- new practices to reduce the chargers, but officials need to “To me, I think you need
Jessica Fox, senior technical nifer Dodd, director of the amount of water used and set discharge limits and estab- terrible local problems to get
executive at the Electric Pow- division of water resources at participating in edge-of-field lish numeric limits for nitrate
action,” she said. “The out-
er Research Institute, which the Tennessee Department of water monitoring to see what and phosphorus.
standing question at this point
runs the program. Environment and Conserva- strategies might reduce nutri- is: How long do we have to
tion. “If it doesn’t work, we ent runoff. EPA SAYS IT’S ‘PLEASED’
KENTUCKY wait?”
may have to go to tax base and Environmental groups up
Kentucky requires agricul- raise money for upgrades.” MISSISSIPPI and down the Mississippi l Comments: (319) 339-3157;
tural facilities to complete an Ten of 15 Tennessee munici- Mississippi talks a good River have been maddened erin.jordan@thegazette.com

ABOUT THIS STORY


© 2018 The Gazette

Erin Jordan of The Gazette is researching month O’Brien Fellowship in Public Service Lisowski and John Steppe to travel to committed to trying to reduce nutrients.
and reporting on the progress — or lack of Journalism at Marquette University in both ends of the Mississippi River, review Marquette University and administrators
progress — in reducing the flow of nitrate Milwaukee, Wis. more than 1,000 pages of state nutrient of the program played no role in the
and phosphorus into the Mississippi River Over four months, Jordan worked with reduction strategies and interview dozens reporting, editing or presentation of this
and other lakes and rivers during a nine- Marquette students Meaghan Kaupe, Mark of officials in the 12 states that have project.
Sunday, December 2, 2018 ● The Gazette 9A

TREADING WATER
MINNESOTA
Law sets requirements for buffers
Many farmers say there are better methods than the mandate
By Mark Lisowski, soil health across the op-
for The Gazette eration, Rauenhorst said.

E
Increased water absorp-
ASTON, Minn. tion reduces nutrient
— While he leeching, enabling farm-
enjoys having ers to meet goals.
a “driveway” The buffer strip law
next to his does allow alternative
fields, Joel Rauenhorst practices to reduce the
doesn’t think the buffer size of buffers, but farm-
strip he’s required to ers chafe about the land
have between his soy- taken out of production.
beans and a drainage “I lost an acre and a
ditch is the best way to half, maybe 2 acres,”
reduce fertilizer runoff. Rauenhorst said. His
Gov. Mark Dayton buffer strips are 16.5 feet
“just threw out a 50-foot wide, since his land is
law, and there was no not next to a larger water
logic behind it,” said body.
Rauenhorst, 50. Andy Linder, 33, who
The Southern Minne- farms up the
sota farmer thinks that road, also
by scaling back tilling disagrees
instead, his fields can ab- with the buf-
sorb up to three times as fer strip re-
much water as farmland quirement.
tilled conventionally, Linder
reducing the need for a and his fa-
buffer strip. Andy Linder ther collec-
A 2017 amendment to Easton, Minn., tively farm
Minnesota law updated farmer 800 acres,
the requirements for all planted Jim Slosiarek photos/The Gazette
farmers like Rauenhorst in cover crops from fall Joel Rauenhorst stands Oct. 5 on a buffer strip next to a field of soybeans on his farm in Easton, Minn. A Minnesota law requires buffer
to create buffers, also to spring. Cover crops strips near waterways to reduce runoff, but Rauenhorst said there are less costly methods that would work.
known as riparian filter are known to benefit the
strips, between their health of a farmer’s soil
crops and public water- because of better water
ways to help prevent absorption and reduced
nitrate and phosphorus nutrient loss.
runoff from fertilizer. “If I’m in this level of
The Minnesota law conservation, I shouldn’t
is one of the first steps have to do the buffers,”
states have taken to force Linder said.
conservation on Ameri- The Linders have
can farmers, aiming to switched to no-till and
slow damaging nutrient strip till methods and
runoff into waterways. plan to purchase 15 steer
Most of the 12 states to graze their lands.
that have signed on the “The steer eat the
Gulf Hypoxia Task Force (cover) crops, they
still have only voluntary fertilize the soil, they
strategies, and some get fat and get sent off to Vegetation grows Oct. 5 on a buffer strip on both sides of a water- Cover crops grow Oct. 5 on farmland that Andy Linder and his
Minnesota farmers say way on farm field on Joel Rauenhorst’s land in Easton, Minn. “The father work in Easton, Minn. Linder also believes the requirement
market,” Linder said.
the 50-foot-wide buffer goal is to stop wind and water erosion, but there’s lots of ways you for buffer strips is excessive. “If I’m in this level of conservation, I
Linder’s conservation can do that,” Rauenhorst said. shouldn’t have to do the buffers,” Linder said.
requirement is excessive. practices save him time
Buffer strips can offer and money. “A fall and
environmental benefits, spring tillage pass costs percent of farmland
Rauenhorst agreed, but the same as planting next to public waters
may not be the best strat- cover crops,” he said, is compliant,” said
egy for reducing erosion. adding that he’s sold his Tom Gile, buffer and
“The goal is to stop tilling equipment. Linder soil loss coordinator
wind and water erosion, receives federal subsi- with the Minnesota
but there’s lots of dies to help pay for cover Board of Water and
ways you can do that,” crop seed. Soil Resources. About
Rauenhorst said. He and Most farmers across 80 percent of land next to
his father adopted no- Minnesota are compliant drainage ditches meets
tillage and strip tillage or are in the process of the law.
practices in the early becoming compliant with Farmers not working
1990s. Neighbors laughed the buffer strip law. toward compliance face
at the idea of leaving A 2017 deadline for up to $500 per parcel
crop residue in place buffers next to public fines on a recurring basis
instead of tilling, he said, waters and a Nov. 1 and other penalties.
but the family has reaped deadline for buffers “Buffers aren’t a
benefits. next to drainage ditches silver bullet,” Gile said.
These practices have have largely been met, But “we want to keep
reduced water erosion officials said. our waters fishable,
and encouraged greater “Ninety-nine drinkable and livable.”

“Ninety-nine percent of farmland next to public


waters is compliant. ... Buffers aren’t a silver bullet,”
but “we want to keep our waters fishable, drinkable
and livable.”
Tom Gile, Minnesota Board of Water and Soil Resources

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10A The Gazette ● Sunday, December 2, 2018

TREADING WATER
WISCONSIN

Green Bay sees dead zones, too


Academic: Excess manure from farmland is culprit
By John Steppe, for The Gazette

C
ASCO, Wis. — Vil-
lage Kitchen owner
Chris Jacobs got a
call no restaurant
owner wants to take:
Elevated nitrate levels in her
water made it unsafe for cus-
tomers to drink, the Wisconsin
Department of Natural Re- The Village Kitchen restaurant in
sources said in April. Casco, Wis., east of the city of Green
The state agency “just told Bay, had to stop serving drinking water
me I had to put signs up saying to pregnant women and children last
there were high nitrates in the year when nitrate levels in its private
water,” Jacobs said. “People well rose to levels as high as 24 mil-
ligrams per liter, more than double the
were bothered by it.”
federal drinking water standard. Owner
With nitrate levels rising as Chris Jacobs spent $11,000 to dig a
high as 24 milligrams per liter new well.
— more than double the safe
limit — Jacobs paid $11,000 to
dig a new well serving the Vil- The Lower Fox River Dem-
lage Kitchen. onstration Farms, a collabora-
The Green Bay watershed, tion between producers, crop
which makes up roughly a consultants and
third of Wisconsin’s total conservation offi-
acreage, is facing the same cials, has worked
water quality issues as the on educating
Mississippi River basin, where farmers and oth-
nitrate and phosphorus from ers about changes
industry and agriculture have in nutrient man-
created a dead zone in the Gulf John Steppe photos
agement and
of Mexico. Green Bay, an arm of Lake Michigan, develops hypoxic, or low-oxygen, zones in the summer because of agricultural tillage and use of
Green Bay, too, has summer runoff — mostly manure from dairy farms. The nutrients spur algae growth, which uses up the oxygen and leaves pockets cover crops, but Kevin
dead zones, and one research- of the bay without enough oxygen for wildlife to survive. Large fish can swim out of the dead zones, but smaller organisms these measures Fermanich
er says they are getting worse. get trapped and die. The problem eases in the fall, when this photo was taken Nov. 9. have not had University of
“That’s the same process Wisconsin-
much of an impact Green Bay
that’s occurring in the Gulf of nificantly in the past decade. fessor at the University of as fertilizer to corn and soy- yet, Fermanich professor
Mexico,” said Val Klump, dean Agriculture has been one of Wisconsin-Green Bay and an bean fields. But Fermanich said.
of the University of Wisconsin- the main contributors. expert in sustainable agricul- said there is more manure “There is definitely more
Milwaukee’s School of Fresh- “The major issue for Green ture, said excess manure from on fields than what is even cover crops than we’ve ever
water Sciences. “It’s the reoxi- Bay is how much nutrients dairy farms has been the pri- optimal for agricultural pro- had before, and there’s more
dation of that organic matter and particularly phosphorus mary culprit. ductivity. Persuading farmers movement to less tillage than
that consumes the oxygen.” is coming off the landscape,” “The piece of the story that to reduce applications and we’ve ever had before,” Fer-
Klump, who has mapped Klump said. “The effort by I still don’t think is fully ad- waiting for crops to take up manich said. “Whether it’s
hypoxia in the bay since 2009, the DNR and others is to take dressed is just the amount of those excess nutrients is not significant with the standpoint
published an article in Octo- steps to at least attenuate phosphorus, which is mostly an overnight process. of having an impact yet on the
ber’s edition of the Journal of how much is coming off related to manure in our “It’s going to take a long cumulative impact of the river
Great Lakes Research show- landscapes.” area,” Fermanich said. time,” Fermanich said. “Tens and the bay, I don’t think that
ing hypoxia has worsened sig- Kevin Fermanich, a pro- Farmers apply the manure of years.” has happened.”

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