AUSTIN, Minn. – Last summer Nancy Dolphin joined her Mower County neighbors in an unusual science experiment: They headed out every week and after every heavy rainstorm to measure E. coli bacteria in the nearby Cedar River and its tributaries.
They believed no one was doing enough to fight pollution in the streams that flow through their backyards, so they took matters into their own hands.
They found the infectious bacteria, often in dangerously high concentrations, almost everywhere they looked, including the creek that flows by Dolphin's house. It came from hogs, cows and — in surprisingly high numbers — human waste.
"Our grandchildren, they can't help but be drawn to the creek," she said last week in a tearful plea to the Mower County Board of Commissioners. "But the water that flows by our house is not safe for them. I'm a grandma. What do I do?"
Joining a determined group of community activists was clearly one place to start. The grass-roots Cedar River Watershed Project now stands as a case study in the most effective way to succeed in the daunting struggle to improve water quality across the southern part of Minnesota, where it is most polluted, said Mae Davenport, a professor of environmental social science at the University of Minnesota.
Protecting Minnesota's waters comes down to citizens stepping up to change community standards, Davenport said.
"They tap into our emotional selves and our ethical sense of responsibility," she said of the group's plea to clean up a popular recreational river basin. "That's what motivates."
And at least last week, it appeared to be working. By the end of the meeting, which was packed with supporters, the county commissioners agreed to try to figure out a way to accelerate the cleanup of leaky septic systems in the county.