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Is Iowa the next Flint, Michigan?
Steve Corbin, guest columnist
Apr. 24, 2016 8:00 am
Since the atrocities of Flint, Michigan's water crisis, my father's occasional saying to me as a child, 'get the lead out,” has taken on a new meaning. While lead exposure has been found in 18 Iowa public water supplies, nitrates are the major problem in 260 of Iowa's 880 municipal water systems (30 percent).
For example, the Des Moines Water Works has spent $1 million to remove nitrates for their 500,000 customers and anticipate spending an additional $180 million.
Nitrates affect more than Iowa's drinking water. Iowa's landscape touches five percent of the Mississippi River yet contributes 25 percent of the nitrate pollution to the Gulf of Mexico's Dead Zone.
The EPA has ruled that farm waste is toxic if it comes out of a pipe. With 40 percent of Iowa's farm land being underpinned with drainage pipes, we indeed have a problem.
Besides chemical fertilizers creating a problem, the disposal of livestock manure is also affecting our water quality. Iowa's 20 million hogs, 60 million laying chickens and 3.9 million cattle produce the manure equivalent of 178 million people. Let's face it, we are in deep doo-doo.
Ag experts have espoused that if Iowa's 30 million acres of fertilizer runoff and 977 tons of livestock manure would flow into permanent wetland pastures, the litany of problems would be dramatically mitigated.
Multiple authorities note that 3 acres of wetland can effectively treat the toxic runoff from 100 acres of land. For the health safety of Iowans, each farmer should be required to set aside three percent of their crop land to a permanent wetland.
But, there's a political side to a somewhat easy solution.
Eighty percent of Iowa's 90,000 farmers collectively received $1.3 billion in farm subsidies last year; #2 in the USA. Currently, there's 1.8 billion bushels of excess corn in storage. USDA forecasts that American farmers will use more chemical fertilizer and manure to grow 2 million acres more corn this year than previously. Subsidizing farmers to produce excess corn is not a wise fiscally responsible decision.
It's obvious why the 'volunteer” Nutrient Reduction Strategy by farmers to mitigate fertilizer use and manure runoff isn't working. As long as subsidizing continues, look no further than the farmer's billfold.
If we must subsidize farmers, let's pay them, at fair-market price, to set aside 3 percent of their currently-under-plow farm land for permanently converted wetlands.
Another political problem is that the Renewable Fuel Standard mandates ethanol production. Since 40 percent of America's corn goes to gas tanks, no longer can one assert that agriculture is about food. When you hear ethanol mogul Bruce Rastetter, Iowa Farm Bureau Federation, Iowa Ag Summit attendees, Eric Branstad (Director, Iowa Renewable Future) and Gov. Branstad poo-poo Iowa's statewide water problem, remember they don't want any voluntary cutback in the production of corn as that would hurt their purse.
Gov. Branstad continues to call for city-folk and farmer collaboration. In reaction to Branstad, Des Moines Water Works Director Bill Stowe says 'What we see every time we hear collaboration is buying time, a defense for the status quo. The status quo will ultimately bankrupt our rivers and seriously jeopardize the public health of our consumers.”
As I reflect on our evolving drinking water problem and political reality, I can only surmise the phrase 'after me, you come first” must be the mantra of uncaring farmers, Renewable Fuel Standard proponents, lobbyists and the politicians who protect them.
I tip my hat to those farmers who have incorporated wetlands into their farm waste reduction program. I hope their neighbors will peak over the fence to view holistic farm and production management as a model to emulate.
Kudos are also extended to the smart farmers who are planting cover crops after the harvest season as this reduces erosion, suppresses weeds, increases carbon and nitrogen in the soil, and provides a five percent yield gain.
Be reflective the next time you draw a glass of water. Without immediate intervention, a line from The Rime of the Ancient Mariner will come to fruition: 'water, water, everywhere, nor any drop to drink.”
' Steve Corbin; Professor Emeritus of Marketing, University of Northern Iowa, Cedar Falls; Steven.B.Corbin@gmail.com; 319-290-9779; 4116 Maryhill Drive, Cedar Falls, IA 50613-5781
Michigan National Guard members help to distribute water to a line of residents in their cars in Flint, Michigan January 21, 2016. REUTERS/Rebecca Cook
Steve Corbin is emeritus professor of marketing at the University of Northern Iowa.
Steve Corbin is emeritus professor of marketing at the University of Northern Iowa.
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