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Another senate debate about water quality bill that’s already cleared legislature

Ag/Outdoor, News

January 25th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa Senate had a heated debate about the water quality bill Governor Kim Reynolds has pledged to sign into law. A bill that passed the Republican-led Senate LAST YEAR got final legislative approval in the Iowa HOUSE on Tuesday. Senator Rob Hogg a Democrat from Cedar Rapids, says the bill fails to target the state money to where it would do the most good and fails to restart the state’s water monitoring program.”It is a facade. It is not a bill that helps water quality in this state…There is no monitoring, reporting or accountability,” Hogg says. “If you don’t measure it, you don’t really care about it.”

Senator Jerry Behn, a Republican from Boone, says he’s using conservation tillage practices on his farm.”The Iowa Soybean Association right now has been monitoring my tile, just exactly to find out what’s good coming out of that stuff, so don’t tell me that I’m not monitoring because I don’t care, “Behn says. “We are monitoring because we do care.” Senator David Johnson of Ocheyedan, the lone independent in the legislature, says the bill was “bought and paid for by the Farm Bureau.”

“You know I could spit in the Little Sioux River in Spencer and think I made an impact,” Johnson said. “…This isn’t a water quality bill. It falls far short of what this state needs.”Senator Randy Feenstra, a Republican from Hull who’s a banker, accused Johnson and other critics of “tramping” on farmers. “Farmers are good people and the ag economy, it’s the number one economy we have in this state and so I’m standing up here,” Feenstra says. “I’m standing up for the farmers.”

The bill’s backers say it will provide 286 million dollars for water quality projects over the next 12 years. However, there’s just a four-million dollar allotment for next year. Iowa Ag Secretary Bill Northey expects most of that will be used as incentives to farmers for “edge of field” projects that prevent run-off from cropland. “That’s the bio-reactors, saturated buffers, nutrient-reduction wetlands,” Northey says.

And Northey says the four million dollars in state money can leverage far more in federal funds along with the investments from landowners. As for measuring how voluntary nutrient management is working on farms, Northey says in “a big state with billions of gallons of water moving all the time,” it’s hard to chart progress at “scores” of locations.

(Radio Iowa)