Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumAfter Decades Of Growing Nitrate Pollution, GQP In Iowa Introduces "Too Little, Too Late" Funding For Water Treatment
In a press conference at the state capitol on Friday, Gov. Kim Reynolds announced a comprehensive legislative package that will boost funding for utilities struggling to meet federal drinking water standards and combat high nitrate pollution from agriculture. The plan would have the state spend more than $100 million on water treatment infrastructure over the next decade, including a one-time $25 million investment to expand the Central Iowa Water Works nitrate removal facility, which serves more than 600,000 residents in the states largest metropolitan area.
The state-of-the-art removal facility has operated for more than 100 days in 2026 so far, as the Des Moines and Raccoon rivers reach near-record levels of nitrates that exceed the U.S. Environmental Protection Agencys legal limit of 10 milligrams per liter. Research has linked long-term exposure to nitrates in drinking water, even at low levels, to various cancers and serious health risks for infants. And while nitrate contamination of surface water is not limited to central Iowa, many of the states smaller communities lack the infrastructure to remove the pollution.
Since the start of 2024, public water supplies for at least seven communities have exceeded the EPAs maximum contaminant level, according to documents maintained by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources. The water package announced by Reynolds, a Republican, allocates $76 million to grant and loan programs to help Iowas rural communities upgrade their water treatment facilities.
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Reynolds water quality proposal ignores the root causes of pollution and is too little too late, said Jennifer Breon, a senior organizer in Iowa for Food & Water Action, in a statement released by the political and lobbying arm of the environmental watchdog group Food & Water Watch. The state will boost funding for water conservation efforts on farms in the Des Moines watershed, Iowa Agriculture Secretary Mike Naig announced at Fridays press conference. The Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship will receive an additional $52 million to expand the adoption of cover crops, no-till and strip-till farming and nitrate-reducing wetlands in the region. But all of that is voluntary.
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https://insideclimatenews.org/news/01052026/iowa-water-treatment-from-fertilizer-pollution/
gab13by13
(32,601 posts)that forbids anyone from suing the maker of Roundup for giving people cancer.
Krasnov and Congressional and state Magats don't give a shit about unwashed Americans. Citizens United gives them boat loads of money to get reelected.
mopinko
(73,834 posts)i cd b wrong.