When the aging nitrate-removal plant in Clear Lake, Minn., started failing, the city took its problem well offline and decided it had to dig a new one. That's an expensive undertaking for a town of 610 people described by public works director Dustin Luhning as a "bedroom community with a lot of farms."
Now, with a $1.3 million loan from the state, Clear Lake has finally broken ground on a well it hopes will rid them for good of the farm chemicals — a triumph for Luhning.
"I've been trying to get this drilled since roughly 2013," he said.
Clear Lake is one of at least 10 Minnesota communities forced to install costly nitrate-removal systems or drill new wells to find clean water in the state's ongoing battle with growing nitrate pollution. Many more now face undertaking the burdensome projects.

A report released Tuesday morning by a national environmental group says that one in eight Minnesotans are drinking nitrate-tainted tap water.
Years of unchecked pollution from farm chemicals have brought Minnesota "to the brink of a public health crisis," according to the Environmental Working Group, which based its findings on public records from the state Department of Health and Department of Agriculture.
"We should be moving faster to prevent it from entering crisis mode," said Sarah Porter, a senior mapping analyst in the organization's Minneapolis office and co-author of the study.
The group's one-in-eight count includes wells where at least one test in recent years detected nitrate above 3 milligrams per liter, the level at which the state Department of Health deems nitrate concentrations to be from a human source. The state and federal health limit for nitrate is 10 milligrams per liter, or 10 parts per million.