April 2016
Perhaps best known for his research on the sources and fate of sediment impairing water quality, Dr. Shawn Schottler also recognizes the basic role of economics in the challenge of improving and protecting water quality. Without a market incentive for agriculture landowners to use cover crops, perennials, and other BMPs for water quality, we will not progress toward achieving water quality goals, Schottler says. "Markets are the biggest possibility for changing water quality," he said, speaking April 7 at the Chippewa River Watershed Project annual meeting in Starbuck. "If we don't do this, we can't get there." (Photo: Shawn Schottler, center, talks with Duane Ninneman of CURE, and Terry Vanderpol of Land Stewardship Project).
'We must create markets for perennials'
Despite
spending billions of dollars in recent decades, there has been little overall
improvement in water quality, Schottler says. "It's all about economics.
We must create markets for perennials." More regulation is technologically
cumbersome and expensive, he
says. Instead, there could be markets created for biomass, or incentives for
conservation linked to crop insurance,
Schottler says. "Improving water quality is only possible through farmers,
and they will grow what is profitable. The public needs to support the markets
that have water quality benefits." Schottler does water quality research
at the St. Croix
Watershed Research Station of
the Science Museum of Minnesota.
Perennial biomass bill
Reported April 8 in Farmers' Union legislative notes: The House Ag Finance Committee heard and
laid over HF 2881 authored by Rep. Clark Johnson that establishes a program to
compensate landowners who grow perennial crops either for livestock feed or for
use by a facility that produces electricity, advanced biofuel, renewable
chemicals, or biomass thermal energy from the perennial crops. The bill also
requires the Board of Water and Soil Resources (BWSR) to deliver a feasibility
study and program plan to the legislature. MFU is a part of the BioEconomy
Coalition which has been working on and supporting this bill. Sen. Matt Schmit
is the Senate author. More info on Coalition here: http://mnbioeconomy.org/
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Farmers describe efforts with cover crops, perennials
A panel of area farmers participating in the Chippewa 10 percent project, described their efforts to use cover crops, perennials and conservation tillage at the April 7 CRWP meeting. John Ledermann farms 1,000 acres where he is working to use cover crops. Greg Vold of Dorrich Dairy described their efforts with cover crops, crop rotation, and precision fertilizer management. The dairy was featured in the June 2015 edition of Feedlot Update. (Photo left to right: Greg Vold, 10 percent project coordinator Robin Moore, and John Ledermann).
In a brief update on the CRWP, director Kylene Olson reported that since 2001 more than 500 landowners have participated in about 750 best management practice projects. She said the CRWP is helping to develop and water and land use 'ethic' that was encouraged by Gov. Mark Dayton at the Feb 27 'water summit'.
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In response to a request from Gov. Dayton, groups have hosted meetings recently to engage citizens in creating a 'water ethic'. Clean Up the River Environment and Land Stewardship Project hosted meetings in Renville and Northfield. The effort will establish the moral and ethical foundations to guide decision-making around the use of water and the protection/stewardship of water basins and water resilient ecosystems. (Photo: Peg Furshong, CURE executive director, shows a graphic depiction of ideas generated at the meetings. She talked about the project at the Watershed Network spring meeting April 21 in Redwood Falls.)
More on the CURE website: "It is our intent that a water ethic for Minnesota, created by a broad community, will engender water policies and practices that are environmentally sustainable, economically responsible, socially just, respectful of culture and spiritual diversity, respectful of biological diversity, and that it must ultimately safeguard the welfare of future generations, states an article on the CURE website. We hope to begin the co-creation of a new, community-based set of beliefs that will guide our state’s water practices that are truly rooted in the wisdom, values and experience of those alertly living in, working on and caring for our land and water." More.
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Adapted from a March 30 report on Minnesota Public Radio: "The river, she doesn't do anything, except flow," said Ojibwe elder Sharon Day. "And it's we humans that pollute her. So we're the only ones that can clean it up." To highlight the problems, Day led a group of activists walking the length of the Minnesota River March 25-April 1, hoping to add a spiritual motivation to improve the waterway. A few years back she walked the length of the Mississippi River.
On each trip the group carries a bucket of water dipped at the source of the river. When the bucket is emptied into the more polluted river at the end of the journey, Day says the act sends a message. The 300-mile walk's primary message to Minnesotans, Day says, is "don't take water for granted." Their trek started in Ortonville near Big Stone Lake, the river's source, and ended near Fort Snelling, at the Minnesota-Mississippi confluence. More information about the walk is online at nibiwalk.org. (Photo: Jackson Forderer for MPR News: Sharon Day walks along Highway 68 near Courtland March 29 with Frankie Jackson. Day is carrying water from the headwaters of the Minnesota River to its meeting point with the Mississippi River. Jackson is carrying a staff that's for protecting the water carrier.)
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The CURE Board of Directors has chosen Brian Wojtalewicz of Appleton as this year's RiverKeeper. He received the award at CURE's 24th Annual Membership Meeting April 23 in Morris. The theme for the day was Act on Minnesota Water, with popular education, grassroots action, business, and celebration.
First awarded in 1994, the RiverKeeper goes to an individual(s), organization or government agency who has worked in an exemplary manner to carry out CURE's mission "to focus public awareness on the Minnesota River Basin and to take action to restore and protect its water quality, biological integrity, and natural beauty for all generations". More about Brian Wojtalewicz. (Photo by Brad Fernholz.)
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The annual Earth Day festival Saturday drew a large crowd of all ages to Prairie Woods Environmental Learning Center near Spicer. This year's festival featured a puppet show of “The Lorax” by Dr. Suess. Mark Hauck, groundwater expert with the Dept. of Natural Resources, talked about the importance of healthy
groundwater. With
the Dr. Seuss-inspired slogan “Glup glup, what’s up with the water in your
cup?,” visitors brought private well water samples for nitrate tests using equipment from the Minnesota Dept. of Agriculture.
Along
with Prairie Woods, the event is sponsored by the Crow River Organization of
Water, Middle Fork Crow River Watershed District, Kandiyohi Soil and Water Conservation
District, Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, North Fork Crow River Watershed
District, REDstar Creative, Jennie-O-Turkey Store, Minnesota Dairy Association,
Minnesota Pork Producers, Cash Wise Foods, Cub Foods, and the Youth Energy Summit. (Photo: Mark Hauck demonstrates the groundwater model.)
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With several different partners and 200
sites across Minnesota, the Watershed Pollutant Load Monitoring Network
strives to ensure consistency and accuracy in its water monitoring. Staffing
often changes on the local level, meaning monitors may have not been trained on
equipment or many months have passed since they conducted monitoring. To help
partners learn and stay current on techniques, including the basics, the MPCA
has produced the following training videos, available on YouTube:
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Reported in the Minneapolis Star Tribune, 3/24/16: Natalie Warren is now a 'river steward' employed by the St. Croix River Association through a three-year state grant. She will work with landowners, real estate developers and local governments to explain land-use regulations before misunderstandings turn into confrontations. In May, she will be on a team of six women that will paddle the Yukon River in Alaska for 444 miles nonstop, trying to beat a 39-hour record.
Warren, 27, doesn’t just talk about rivers. She practically lives on them. A saxophone student at an arts high school in downtown Miami, Warren came to Minnesota to study environmental policy at St. Olaf College in Northfield. In 2011 she and a friend paddled more than 2,000 miles on the Minnesota and Red rivers, among others, from Fort Snelling to Hudson Bay, Manitoba, and in 2013 she paddled the length of the Mississippi River. She is a co-founder of Wild River Academy. Recently she was named to the DNR Water Trails Citizen Advisory Committee. (Minneapolis Star Tribune photo) Full story.
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The MPCA and local partners
have completed intensive water monitoring in 69 of Minnesota’s 80 watersheds
(86%), according to the agency’s dashboard. The MPCA dashboard tracks environmental and
performance measures related to the agency’s work. Metrics include measures of
air pollutants, water restoration, polluted land cleanup, and how quickly
permits are issued.
As far
as lakes and streams, assessment is complete in 49 or 61% of watersheds with
projects to restore and protect waters underway in all 80 watersheds. However,
progress continues to be slow for restoring lakes and streams, with cleanup
projects expensive and taking years to see results. In general, 60% of lakes
and streams meet water quality standards designed to protect public health,
recreational use, and aquatic life.
For more statistics
on how the MPCA is doing, see the agency’s 2016 dashboard on its website.
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The Board of Water and Soil Resources (BWSR) is seeking public
comment on key components of its Buffer and Excessive Soil Loss programs. The Requests for Comment and supporting documents are available on the BWSR
Buffer Program website: http://bwsr.state.mn.us/buffers/ and include
specific questions related to program development. BWSR is looking for
feedback on:
- Program
timeline
- Technical
aspects of the program
- Administrative
processes‘Other Waters’ – waters not covered under the DNR’s mapping
process as determined by the local soil and water conservation district
- Process
for the Soil Erosion law implementation
The BWSR board will review draft policy and guidance for the
buffer program at its June 2016 Board meeting. The Soil Loss program will
undergo rulemaking in the fall. For information on the DNR Buffer Mapping
Project, visit http://www.dnr.state.mn.us/buffers/index.html.
Information and comments on buffer and soil loss program implementation will be
accepted until 4:30 p.m. on May 4, 2016. Comments may be submitted via email to
buffers.bwsr@state.mn.us
or via U.S. mail to David Weirens, Asst. Director for Programs and Policy,
BWSR, 520 Lafayette Road, St. Paul, MN 55155.
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The Board of Water
and Soil Resources celebrates Soil and
Water Stewardship Week, April 24-May 1, 2016. It recognizes the work of Minnesota’s 89 Soil and Water Conservation Districts. For more than 70 years, SWCDs have worked hard for our soil, water and wildlife, managing programs that work toward the conservation and healthy use and development of our natural resources.
“Soil and Water Conservation
Districts play a unique role because they provide soil and water conservation
services to private landowners at a local level,” says LeAnn Buck, Minnesota
Association of Soil and Water Conservation Districts Executive Director. “Seventy-eight percent of Minnesota’s lands are private, and
helping to increase conservation efforts on those lands is essential to keeping
Minnesota’s natural resources healthy and strong.” This is the 61st annual Soil
and Water Stewardship Week, organized by the National Association of
Conservation Districts.
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The Dept. of Natural Resources will hold a workshop July 25-29 in
Fergus Falls on the Fundamentals of Stream Restoration: Applied Geomorphology
and Ecology. Rivers and streams are formed by physical processes
that define their geometry and quality and quantity of habitat. Hydrology,
geomorphology, biology, water quality, and connectivity interact to determine
the overall health of the stream.
The course will discuss the interactions
between geomorphology and ecology in the context of ecosystem health. Attendees
develop the skills for field determination of bankfull stage, geometry and
stream type, which are essential to stream assessment and restoration. This
workshop is the first in the DNR’s Stream Restoration Series and is a
prerequisite to the three advanced courses. Cost is $1,000 per participant. See
the DNR workshops webpage for details.
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The Board of Water and Soil Resources-Southern Region is currently seeking
to fill a Clean Water Specialist-Hydrologist 3 position in Marshall or New Ulm. Current state employees can locate the position announcement
by searching the Job ID 4766 on Employee Self Service - Click
Here. All other applicants should apply through the Minnesota Management and Budget Careers
website: http://mn.gov/mmb/careers/ . The position is open for all applicants through May 9,
2016. For more information contact Jeff Nielsen, jeff.nielsen@state.mn.us, 507-359-6075. Job
Announcement.
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Minnesota citizens interested in influencing natural resources issues at the local level are encouraged to run for supervisor of their local Soil and Water Conservation District. SWCD supervisor positions are filled through general elections which will take place on Nov. 8. Those interested in running for Supervisor should file at the County Auditor’s office from May 17 through May 31.
Supervisors meet monthly to discuss the business of the SWCD, including state grant allocations to landowners, district conservation priorities, coordination with other local units of government and state and federal agencies. Supervisors do not receive a salary, although they do receive compensation for attending meetings and are reimbursed for expenses. Contact your local County SWCD for more information SWCD Directory.
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