In an effort to stem the rise of nitrate pollution in rural Minnesota, Gov. Mark Dayton on Tuesday laid out a plan to balance farmers' use of fertilizer with the protection of groundwater and drinking water supplies.
The latest version, released by Dayton and Agriculture Commissioner Dave Frederickson, relies on both voluntary and mandatory measures to limit farmers' use of nitrogen fertilizers. It follows more than a year of heated debate among farmers, farm organizations, drinking water advocates and environmentalists, plus 11 public meetings and 820 comments.
Nitrate contamination in drinking water has emerged in the past decade as one of Minnesota's most vexing pollution problems. Dozens of community water systems have tested with high nitrate levels, and one in 10 private wells are seriously contaminated, mainly in southeastern and central Minnesota.
Yet curbing farm chemicals is not easy in a state where agriculture contributes $19 billion annually to the economy — much of it tied to the 800,000 tons of fertilizer farmers use on some 16 million acres.
"After receiving substantial feedback, and going through each and every one of them, we made significant revisions to the rule," Frederickson said. If it's adopted, by December at the earliest, "We will see far-reaching positive impacts in our state's water quality, while also recognizing the needs of the agricultural community," he said.
But leading Republican legislators quickly dismissed the new version, describing it in a statement as a "reactionary re-branding of a vastly unpopular rule." Lawmakers have already introduced half a dozen proposals to redefine its scope or restrict the Agriculture Department's power to implement it.
Dayton should abandon the effort and work "through the legislative process," said House Agriculture Finance Chairman Rod Hamilton, R-Mountain Lake, and Agriculture Policy Chairman Paul Anderson, R-Starbuck.
Environmental advocates, however, said the agency has listened to farmers and followed their advice, while taking steps to protect vulnerable drinking systems in small towns across the state that face rising threats from nitrates and enormous costs to protect their customers.