I strongly recommend reading Beeman's whole story. Excerpt:
The draft report, which the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ordered the state to undertake in 2008 to address concerns about pollution that flows into the Mississippi River, is the result of nearly two years of meetings held largely behind closed doors. [...]
The Des Moines Register obtained a copy of the report, dated Oct. 8, which has not been released to the public.
Portions of the report detailing agricultural runoff already have been fiercely criticized by key Iowa Department of Natural Resources staffers, who fired off a 62-page letter describing the plan as flawed, fraught with errors and too agriculture-friendly.
Others, including the nonprofit Iowa Environmental Council, have criticized the secrecy surrounding the negotiations over what many consider one of the most important environmental policy initiatives the state has seen.
The Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship prepared the portion of the report intended to address agricultural runoff, while the DNR took the lead on the sewage-treatment proposals.
DNR spokesman Kevin Baskins said it's important to note that the document is just a draft, and the public will have a chance to chime in over perhaps 45 days after its release.
Beeman's article includes passages from Iowa Farm Bureau publications, alongside nearly identical passages in the unreleased new state document. DNR officials were not impressed with the policy as a whole:
"We are not willing to endorse this document as written," a group of DNR runoff-pollution experts wrote in a lengthy comment letter after reviewing the plan. "Major fundamental flaws permeate the 'strategy' while concrete ideas for implementation are not provided."
The objections include what the staffers saw as a one-sided, agriculture-friendly strategy for solving long-standing pollution problems disrupting the Gulf's lucrative fishing industry as well as fouling waterways throughout the Iowa and other Midwest states.
"This document reflects a narrow view not appropriate for a state-issued document," the DNR letter reads. "This is evidenced by entire paragraphs being copied from an Iowa Farm Bureau comment letter (without proper citation) submitted in response to the Raccoon River Master Plan, and all costs and benefits being based on production of a single commodity crop."
It's ludicrous to shut out DNR staff when writing policy on farm runoff. Pesticides, herbicides, fertilizer, and manure spills from livestock operations are major water pollutants in Iowa.
The DNR's past enforcement of water quality rules has been weak. Earlier this year, an analysis by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency found that the DNR failed to enforce compliance with the federal Clean Water Act. Environmental advocates consider the DNR's response to that analysis inadequate. The Iowa Policy Project recently called for the EPA to apply leverage to hold the DNR accountable.
Click here to read Beeman's previous reporting on how Iowa agriculture contributes to the Dead Zone in the Gulf of Mexico. Last year the EPA declined to develop and enforce a plan to clean up the Dead Zone.
A new Iowa Environmental Council report on manure spills in Iowa can be found here. |