Half the lakes and rivers in southern Minnesota are too polluted much of the time for safe swimming and fishing, according to a new state survey that could intensify efforts to protect Minnesota's surface waters.
The finding emerged from a five-year assessment of Minnesota's watersheds by the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA), which concluded that the problems are worsening and will require 20 to 30 years to address.
"This is further indication that our water challenges continue to increase," said Shannon Lott- hammer, who heads the MPCA's environmental analysis division.
Gov. Mark Dayton, appearing at the news conference where the study was released, said it underscores the need for water-quality legislation that now faces a tough battle at the Capitol. Dayton is fighting for a law that would require farmers to plant 50-foot-wide strips of natural vegetation between streams and their fields to slow the runoff of fertilizers implicated in the water problems in farm areas.
He said water quality policy should reflect science, not who can shout the loudest at the Legislature. "We can't allow it to get worse," Dayton said.
The state's leading farm groups have opposed Dayton's bill, arguing that their members have already taken steps to control farm runoff and that the new rules are excessive and confusing.
Lotthammer and MPCA Commissioner John Linc Stine said the findings also underscore the need to slow the flow of water from urban areas, where heavy drainage from storm sewers is speeding up streams and rivers and destabilizing their banks, creating sediment pollution.
Lotthammer said that in the past five years researchers also have seen an increase in subsurface drainage systems in southern Minnesota farm fields. Also known as "tiling," the systems carry excess water, sometimes loaded with nitrogen, phosphorus and pesticides, into watershed ditches and streams.