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Recovered gloves, wanted Ring doorbell footage highlight Guthrie case latest; Georgia's 988 crisis line faces gaps as demand grows; IL college works to close the rural pharmacy gap; NC explores child care solutions for community college students.

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The EPA rescinds its long-standing authority to regulate greenhouse gases, Congress barrels toward a DHS shutdown and lawmakers clash with the DOJ over tracking of Epstein file searches. States consider ballot initiatives, license plate readers and youth violence.

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The crackdown on undocumented immigrants in Minneapolis has created chaos for a nearby agricultural community, federal funding cuts have upended tribal solar projects in Montana and similar cuts to a college program have left some students scrambling.

State to Rewrite Manure Rules for CAFOs

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Wednesday, June 21, 2023   

The Iowa Department of Natural Resources is updating the rules defining how manure is stored at animal feeding operations.

For generations, groundwater has been threatened by soil runoff from these operations, and environmental advocates want to see tougher standards. Farmers routinely apply the manure to their land as fertilizer. But erosion, unpredictable weather and rules that are difficult to enforce leave the manure contaminating ground and surface water.

Michael Schmidt, staff attorney for the Iowa Environmental Council, is calling for greater separation between manure storage facilities and karst soil, which contains porous rock, limestone and underground caves.

"And if you build a manure storage structure on top of that, it can basically all run into those caves and get into the groundwater and the surface waters," Schmidt explained.

The DNR said despite its existing rules, there are still hundreds of streams, lakes and private wells teeming with high levels of fecal coliform and other pollutants.

Schmidt pointed out the environmental council is also asking the DNR to modernize manure management plans for farmers, so they are an up-to-date reflection of what is happening on their land. Right now, plans are submitted on paper, which Schmidt argued means a less than accurate account of what really takes place at confinements across the state.

"We have roughly 9,000 animal feeding operations in Iowa," Schmidt noted. "And so, it is an overwhelming task to try to provide oversight for all of these. And having the contents be electronic and geospatial would let DNR and the public have a much better sense of where the manure should be applied and how much should be applied."

The DNR plans to hold a public hearing on its proposed new rules at the end of September.


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