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While There’S Been Much Focus
While there’s been much focus the past year on Flint, concern over clean drinking water isn’t limited to the confines of the Michigan town.
Des Moines has its own problem with clean water, and the issue has only escalated in recent months as unprecedented litigation drags on.
It all revolves around nitrate contamination in Iowa’s Raccoon River, but the details of the lawsuit demonstrate the delicate interplay between water utilities, citizens, and politics when it comes to safeguarding U.S. water.
What is the Des Moines Water Works Lawsuit?
The Des Moines Water Works lawsuit is a 2015 federal lawsuit made under the Clean Water Act and brought against three local Iowan counties (Calhoun County, Sac County, and Buena Vista County) and their respective Boards of Supervisors.
The plaintiff? The Des Moines Board of Water Works Trustees.
Des Moines Water Works offers water service to Des Moines, as well as the Warren County Water System, Windsor Heights, and Polk County. It is the Water Works’s assertion that the counties named in the lawsuit are ultimately responsible for farm runoff that has polluted the water, because the counties supervise the various drainage districts that appear to be at fault.
The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) declares that nitrates in drinking water must not exceed 10 milligrams per liter (10 mg/L). Once that limit is exceeded, water consumption can prove hazardous, particularly to infants six months and younger.
Des Moines Water Works insists they have spent decades of effort attempting to align with farmers and agriculture groups to reach a solution, but that the collaborative effort has spectacularly failed. So spectacularly, in fact, that not only has the drinking water deteriorated in the last 25 years, but there has been a state-assessed 15-percent increase in health concerns such as nutrient pollution and bacterial outbreaks in the area in the last two years alone.
Even more startling is that Sac County testing has revealed that toxic nitrogen levels in a number of its waterways emptying into the Raccoon River are at five times the standard the EPA considers safe.
Citing the failure of voluntary conservation efforts to safeguard the area’s drinking water—and the fact the Water Works spent $1.5 million in 2015 after lengthy operation of their nitrate removal system following the record-high Raccoon River nitrogen pollution—the Water Works filed the lawsuit. General manager of the Des Moines Water Works, Bill Stowe, elaborated further on the decision recently in this Environmental Working Group video.
Landmark Implications in Des Moines
Des Moines Water Works is contending within the lawsuit that the ultimate, primary source of the nitrate pollution is farm field and animal operations runoff moving from subsurface drains into various bodies of water before flowing into the Mississippi River.
The issue with this contention, of course, is the position it places farmers in.
Iowa is a farming state. Approximately one-third of its economy is fueled by agriculture.
University of Iowa professor of environmental engineering, David Cwiertny, elaborates on the tension thusly:
“It’s a really delicate subject because inevitably, with an issue like water quality, a source has to be identified; the cause of the problem. But at the same time, to have the best chance of reaching a solution you have to minimize the finger pointing and do as much on a unified front where multiple interests can align, and I think that might be where we are struggling a bit in Iowa right now.”
If the Water Works wins the case, it would be a landmark decision, as the suit claims the drainage districts are point-source polluters identifiable as a result of their infrastructure acting as the conduit carrying the farm runoff. The counties supervise the districts. However, normally agriculture runoff is considered non-point source pollution due to difficult-to-discern origins. This is why so many farming operations are Clean Water Act exempt.
A win for the Water Works may mean farmers are held accountable in the future for any polluted field runoff draining into canals and waterways. And not just in the state of Iowa, either—potentially throughout the entire United States.
It comes down to dollars and cents, too. A Water Works win puts farmers on the hook for pollution prevention items that include biofilters, cover crops, and buffer strips. Such conservation efforts would be costly for farmers.
As a result, farmers within the state began joining together in September to fund legal costs defending the drainage districts cited in the lawsuit. These include the Iowa Corn Growers Association and the Iowa Farm Bureau Federation.
However, it isn’t that farmers don’t want clean water. It’s that they’d need some help shouldering the load in the event of a Water Works lawsuit victory, says Cwiertny:
“Farmers want clean water, but… At the same time, the state must help farmers invest in clean water improvements to ensure success. The precise mechanism for success might be a mix of regulation, financial incentives and collaboration in varying parts, but it’s the commitment by all stakeholders to see it through that matters.”
A Deeper Problem Than Iowa
In November, The Mississippi River Collaborative issued a report taking to task the “weak and ineffective” efforts of the EPA to contain nitrate contamination.
The report examined efforts in Wisconsin, Illinois, Missouri, Kentucky, Minnesota, Iowa, Tennessee, Mississippi, Arkansas, and Louisiana, finding that eight of those states had insufficient nutrient reduction strategies. The Mississippi River Collaborative blames the EPA for lackluster funding and unenforceable regulations.
Kris Sigford, water quality director at the Minnesota Center for Environmental Advocacy, elaborates:
“The results of the EPA’s hands-off approach with the Mississippi River basin states are massive algae blooms and nitrate contamination that make our drinking water unsafe and render lakes and rivers unfit for recreation.”
The EPA’s response highlights the dire challenges that remain. They contend they \"cannot solve nutrient pollution by top-down federal action.”
It’s clear that regardless of the conclusion of the Des Moines Water Works case, state and nationwide resolution of the threat posed by nitrates in drinking water is not on the immediate horizon.
Freelance Writer
I’m a freelance writer with a bachelor’s degree in Journalism from Boston University. My work has been featured in publications like the L.A. Times, U.S. News and World Report, Farther Finance, Teen Vogue, Grammarly, The Startup, Mashable, Insider, Forbes, Writer (formerly Qordoba), MarketWatch, CNBC, and USA Today, among others.