CANTON, Minn. — Water shoots up from the hills of Vance and Bonnie Haugen’s idyllic dairy farm here in a valley close to the Iowa border. That’s why they named it Springside Farm in the ‘90s.
Unfortunately, the nitrate shoots up here, too.
Nitrate levels in the Haugens’ water have steadily increased for the past 30 years, now ranging somewhere from 6 to 9 milligrams per liter of water every time they test their private well. The federal limit is 10 milligrams — any more and the pollution becomes dangerous for humans, especially infants.
Minnesota promised the federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in December that it would act quickly to help residents in southeast Minnesota with dangerous levels of nitrate in their wells after the EPA urged the state to take action to protect people with polluted water.
State efforts are underway to inform farmers and landowners of the dangers in their water, and agencies have put together a timeline to address the issue. But four months after the promises, Minnesota has yet to deliver clean drinking water to people most in danger. Moreover, some residents worry about how seriously the state will treat nitrate pollution in the future.
“I want to have good, safe drinking water for myself and my children and grandchildren,” Vance Haugen said. “And I want to farm, to be able to do both of those things. And I don’t think they should be mutually exclusive.”
Nearly 100,000 private well owners in the region are waiting for Minnesota to make good on its promises to the EPA. The state is finalizing a contract to provide drinking water over the next few months to residents who are pregnant or have infants. Officials say they were initially hampered by funding issues but have since allocated about $25,000 toward the water.
Starting in July, state agencies plan to provide free well testing and inventory all known private wells in the region. They’ll also provide emergency fixes in areas where nitrate pollution is highest, meaning filtration systems and possibly new wells for landowners in some cases.