Thursday, August 20, 2015

Mississippi River Basin Water Resource Weekly News

~Most of the Water News - None of the Spin~

Noteworthy @UpperMiss Twitter Postings for the Week  
Photo: Getty Images/iStockphoto

Water Quality -
  • A federal judge in North Dakota has granted a Friday hearing on states' request to block Waters of the U.S. rule http://ow.ly/R8DEx
  • Toxic algae closing Iowa beaches at record numbers http://ow.ly/QZfUB
  • North Dakota Departments of Health and Agriculture urge avoidance of blue-green algae http://ow.ly/QZgrI
  • U.S. Geological Survey researchers find neonicotinoid pesticides in over half of U.S. urban and agricultural streams; abstract: http://ow.ly/R5s45 and story:  http://ow.ly/R5GYg
  • New University of Nebraska-Lincoln study suggests that nitrates may play a key role in increasing uranium contamination in groundwater http://ow.ly/R5HzG
  • Abandoned coal mines throughout Ohio still taint state rivers and streams with polluted water http://ow.ly/QU9tZ
  • Wood County (Wisconsin) Board poised to pass groundwater protection ordinance; op-ed: it's the "right thing to do" in fight against nutrient pollution http://ow.ly/QUnjM
  • Environmentalists and coal operators at odds over proposed Department of Interior mining stream protection rules http://ow.ly/QZeaw
  • Investigators from several Minnesota agencies seek answers to cause of substantial Whitewater River fish kill three weeks ago http://ow.ly/R2CVw
  • EPA settles with Iowa Fertilizer Company and Orascom E&C USA for Clean Water Act (stormwater) violations http://ow.ly/R8FlU
  • One of last executives charged in West Virginia spill that left 300,000 without tap water pleads guilty to federal violations http://ow.ly/R5qtW
  • Army Corps confirms radioactive contamination in yards by Coldwater Creek (St. Louis County, Missouri) http://ow.ly/R8O8E
Source: Wisconsin DNR
Water Resource Management (Floodplains, Dams, Navigation, Wetlands, Flooding, Supplies, etc.) -
  • A decade after Katrina, are America's flood frequency estimates dangerously wrong? http://ow.ly/R5q6P
  • Groundwater: Diminishing Resource, Increasing Conflict - As high-capacity wells proliferate in Wisconsin, water in groundwater-fed streams and lakes is being diverted http://ow.ly/R3LfP
  • Voters to decide whether Papio-Missouri River Natural Resources District needs more borrowing power to finance flood-control projects http://ow.ly/QUjnD
  • Canal proposed for Arkansas River through south Tulsa; called less costly than more dams and lakes http://ow.ly/QUkNl
Agriculture -
  • Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education (SARE) Program funding now available nationwide; proposals and pre-proposals due in October and November (grant- and region-dependent) http://ow.ly/QUrv3 (also see this from NSAC: http://ow.ly/QUs0A)
  • Federal Reserve: Farmland values dip in Midwest http://ow.ly/QZjtn
Source: CNN (click to enlarge)
Climate and Weather -
  • Weekly drought update: dryness introduced in upper Ohio Basin, Oklahoma, elsewhere in the River Basin: status quo or drought relief http://ow.ly/wmTdv
  • Op-ed: "El Niño: Why now is the time to act" http://ow.ly/QZdA4
Biodiversity, Wildlife and Invasives -
  • There's some good news and bad regarding aquatic invasive species in Minnesota lakes and rivers contains http://ow.ly/R2txD
  • MPR News: Upper Mississippi River mussels making a comeback http://ow.ly/QZaTl
  • Wildlife officials grapple with Yellowstone park's surging bison population 
  • Western Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies: sage grouse numbers rebound from 2007-2013 free fall http://ow.ly/R2swT
Photograph: Alec Soth
In the Cities -
  • The New Yorker photo essay: "City of Water" - the spirit of New Orleans is rooted in the city’s below-sea-level precariousness http://ow.ly/R2pDO
  • Rebuilt confidence in New Orleans flood controls fuels rebuilding, but the new flood controls never addressed the wild card of climate change http://ow.ly/R5IAU
In the States-
  • Illinois commits to pay out nearly 90 percent of the cash it normally spends even though there’s no budget in place http://ow.ly/R2oKe
  • Six weeks into the current state budget cycle, Louisiana is forced to cut $4.6 million from state services; more cuts likely as oil revenues fall http://ow.ly/R3476
  • Proposed Colorado constitutional amendment would allow local governments more power over oil and gas regulations http://ow.ly/R2IVe
Gulf Coastal Region-
  • The Great Boot Debate: Why do all Louisiana maps look essentially the same as they did in the
    Photo: NOAA
    1930s? Is it time for a change? http://ow.ly/QZiJN
  • FEMA press release: "Mississippi Hurricane Katrina: A Decade of Progress through Partnerships" http://ow.ly/R0sie
  • The Acadiana Advocate editorial: "Threat to Louisiana’s people, heritage due to coastal erosion, rising seas is real" http://ow.ly/R2o1F
  • New NOAA National Habitat Policy affirms that healthy habitat is “vital to resilient coastal and ocean ecosystems and communities” http://ow.ly/R8FAK
Resource Development -
  • Arkansas officials consider expanding hydropower to make up for lost coal capacity, contending that "the rivers are not producing as much as they can" http://ow.ly/QZzFn
  • Environmentalist seeks to take over mines from bankrupt Patriot Coal Corp. in effort to turn coal green, revive Appalachia http://ow.ly/R8DjO
  • Kentucky town wants Republican politicians to stop blocking federal efforts to help local economies adapt to coal's decline http://ow.ly/QU98w
  • Dane County leaders consider ways to work around Wisconsin budget provision blocking a local requirement that Enbridge Energy pipeline company purchase oil spill insurance http://ow.ly/R2DIB
  • Public comment sought on application for Wisconsin's Green Tier program by Badger Mining Corporation's industrial sand operation http://ow.ly/R3GB1
  • Advocates in Houston County (southeastern Minnesota) seek to ban large-scale frac sand mining http://ow.ly/R5Vfi
  • Landowners new lawsuit contends that the Iowa Utilities Board has no authority to allow company access to private property to build pipeline http://ow.ly/R5Ug6
Federal Budget (You can follow the status of all of the fiscal year 2016 appropriation bills on this Congress.gov web page) -
  • When Congress returns from its August recess, it faces a tangle of fiscal deadlines and contentious partisan battles http://ow.ly/QZqYI
Events - Information on all past and future events listed here each week can be viewed in the on-line calendar, located above and to the right (and here as a stand-alone calendar)
  • Minnesota Landscape Arboretum 2015 Clean Water Summit: "Reconnecting Rainwater and Groundwater" September 15, 8:30 AM-4:30 PM; MN State Hwy. 5 http://ow.ly/R0Ar1
  • Gulf Coast Ecosystem Restoration Council public meeting on draft Initial Funded Priorities List; September 15, 5:30 PM CT, Homer L. Hitt Alumni Center, New Orleans http://ow.ly/R8BFN
  • Ohio State University-sponsored Farm Science Review, September 22-24, Molly Caren Agricultural Center, London, Ohio http://ow.ly/QUpco (background: http://ow.ly/QUpex)
  • Minnesota Water Resources Conference; October 13-14, St. Paul RiverCentre http://ow.ly/R0B4H
e-Newsletters, Publications, Journals, Multimedia  -
  • St. Croix River Association e-newsletter with upcoming events http://ow.ly/QZkqA
  • Montana Watershed Coordination Council's August 14 Watershed News http://ow.ly/QZm3P
  • Lower Mississippi River Dispatch No. 301; August 17: 80 years in 80 Days http://ow.ly/QZrTI
  • Minnesota Pollution Control Agency's Waterfront Bulletin for August http://ow.ly/QZPGE
  • Green Lands Blue Waters e-newsletter; re: Continuous Living Cover on agricultural land in the Mississippi River Basin http://ow.ly/R5Thm
Illustration: Brian Stauffer
Other news-
  • Chippewa group's plan to gather wild rice on Hole-in-the-Day Lake in Nisswa runs afoul of Minnesota DNR http://ow.ly/R5ulS
  • You can now rate the quality of federal government services (such as the US EPA and US Forest Service) on Yelp http://ow.ly/R5sWx
  • Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell announces $42 million in funding from the Land and Water Conservation Fund to states http://ow.ly/R0xCd
  • Corn wars: The farm-by-farm fight between China and the United States to dominate the global food supply http://ow.ly/QZoES
  • USDA to invest $20 million to help 15 states increase recreational public access on private farm, ranch, and forest lands http://ow.ly/R0nAl
  • Supreme Court raisin ruling may have breathed new life into the public trust of ownership doctrine for wildlife http://ow.ly/R8CZc
Politics and People-
  • Iowa Democrat Jim Mowrer will challenge freshman GOP Rep. David Young for the U.S. House 4th District seat; Kim Weaver (D) looks to face off against Steve King (R) in Iowa 3rd District http://ow.ly/R2nmq
  • Democratic state Sen. Karen Tallian drops out of Indiana's gubernatorial race, leaving John Gregg as the sole Democratic contender http://ow.ly/R2PK5
  • Kentucky Coal Association plans second closed-door meeting with state’s leading gubernatorial candidates: Matt Bevin (R) and Jack Conway (D) http://ow.ly/R2RfP
  • At the Iowa State Fair, Presidential contenders spoke with voters, played festival games, and ate an array of food on a stick http://ow.ly/R2q4a
Your Moment of Zen - 
Photograph: Greg Morgan/Barcroft Media

What We Learned This Week - "Things on a Stick"

Blue-green algae plagued Iowa and North Dakota waters, raising cyanotoxin-related health concerns.  Researchers found neonicotinoid pesticides in over half of the U.S. streams they sampled.  A federal judge in North Dakota ordered a Friday hearing on a thirteen-state request to block the new Waters of the United States rule. The cause behind a significant Whitewater River fish kill three weeks ago has yet to be determined.  Upper Mississippi River mussels and High Plains sage grouse are making a comeback, and that's a good thing. Yellowstone River region bison are making a comeback, too, but some say that's not so good. At the Iowa State Fair, Presidential contenders spoke with voters, played festival games, and pretended to be normal by eating things on a stick.  The new flood control structures that are fueling a New Orleans rebuilding burst ignore the impacts of climate change. In the wake of falling oil revenues, Louisiana was forced to cut $4.6 million from state programs. Louisiana maps today look essentially the same as they did in the 1930s, but the River delta landscape they represent don't.  A Chippewa group's plans to gather wild rice from a Central Minnesota lake drew warnings from the state DNR.  A second round of closed-door meetings between the Kentucky Coal Association and the state’s leading gubernatorial candidates drew media criticism, and one candidate won’t say whether he plans to attend. And last but not least, the culprit in an ongoing, "novel" pollution event in the Boulder Creek watershed was finally nabbed.

Friday, August 14, 2015

Mississippi River Basin Water Resource Weekly News

~Most of the Water News - None of the Spin~

Noteworthy @UpperMiss Twitter Postings for the Week

Water Quality -
Waters of the United States
  • 13 states ask federal judge to issue a preliminary injunction against Waters of the U.S. rule before its August 28 implementation date; news stories: http://ow.ly/QLXfj and http://ow.ly/QLVHz; North Dakota press release: http://ow.ly/QLVsQ; states' motion: http://ow.ly/QLV2C
  • American Farm Bureau Federation says new maps show how Clean Water Act (WOTUS) rule will affect Pennsylvania, Virginia and Montana waterways' regulation http://ow.ly/QQRXw
  • EPA: Farm Bureau maps “are highly inaccurate depictions” that  “visually exaggerate the waters covered” by WOTUS rule http://ow.ly/QREuA
Other Water Quality News

  • Minnesota Court of Appeals upholds new water quality standards for rivers; story:
    Source: Wikimapia
    http://ow.ly/QKJEf and ruling: http://ow.ly/QKJKA
  • Bipartisan coalition of downstate Illinois state lawmakers wants Interior Department to extend public comment period on new stream protection rule http://ow.ly/QCdWH
  • Scientific American: analysis shows that several thousand near-surface fracking wells pose threat to U.S. drinking water supplies http://ow.ly/QCr6L
  • Federal judge approves $5 million settlement among Exxon Mobil, Arkansas and the federal government over 2013 Pegasus pipeline crude oil spill http://ow.ly/QR920
  • Federal judge rules in favor of plaintiffs in case brought against Fola Coal over conductivity pollution from West Virginia mines http://ow.ly/QRdvF (ruling: http://ow.ly/QRdD4)
  • Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals warns of high PCB and mercury in Devil's Swamp Lake and Bayou Baton Rouge biota (along Mississippi River) http://ow.ly/QRgpC
  • Draft USDA-FSA environmental assessment: Arkansas hog farm not likely to have significant detrimental impact on Buffalo National River basin; story: http://ow.ly/QHJL1; draft report: http://ow.ly/QHKai
  • ORSANCO considers extending mixing zone policy to allow power plants and other industry to exceed Ohio River wastewater mercury standards http://ow.ly/QHSLG
  • Minneapolis Star Tribune op-ed: "From runoff to ruin: The undoing of Minnesota's lakes" http://ow.ly/QL7pt
  • Targeted changes to agriculture practices in Wisconsin result in significant reduction in surface water phosphorus http://ow.ly/QOprS
  • Allegheny County, Pa., (Pittsburgh metro area) emphasizes 'green' infrastructure in $2 billion antiquated sewer network upgrade http://ow.ly/QQTJx
  • Study: blue-green algae pose increasing threat to U.S. drinking, recreational water http://ow.ly/QU07V
Water Resource Management (Floodplains, Dams, Navigation, Wetlands, Flooding, Supplies, etc.) -
  • Louisiana state leaders renew calls to fix wetlands outside New Orleans destroyed by Mississippi River-Gulf Outlet shipping channel http://ow.ly/QQPeS and http://ow.ly/QQPnU
  • Army Corps of Engineers cost-benefit analysis: Replacing aging Chickamauga Lock (Tennessee River) would cost over twice the initial estimate http://ow.ly/QS1rS
  • Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-TN) disputes new Army Corps' economic assessment; backs Chickamauga lock project completion http://ow.ly/QS1PT
  • Army Corps of Engineers partners with Riverlife to study options to restore degraded Ohio River banks near Pittsburgh http://ow.ly/QRHTt
Agriculture -
  • USDA ERS: number of U.S. farmers markets tripled over the past 15 years to 8,476 in 2014 http://ow.ly/QIz9A
  • Rapidly shifting consumer preferences are causing visible fractures within Minnesota agriculture http://ow.ly/QKJh0
  • MinnPost Op-ed: U.S. needs a strong Renewable Fuel Standard http://ow.ly/QL0SB
  • Monsanto Co. petitions Agriculture Department to deregulate corn variety that withstands weedkillers dicamba and glufosinate http://ow.ly/QO0r5 (PDF file of petition)
  • Northeast Arkansas town residents seek to resurrect their school system as a K-12 agriculture academy http://ow.ly/QOrll
  • USDA stuns market watchers by forecasting large corn, soybean harvests; potentially hurting some cash-strapped farmers http://ow.ly/QQVEL
  • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences paper: Co-managing fresh produce for nature conservation and food safety http://ow.ly/QRpnj
Climate and Weather -
  • US drought update: some dry areas of the Midwest and Plains recovered over the past
    Source: NASA
    week http://ow.ly/wmTdv
  • NOAA updates their El Niño outlook: it looks like this year’s will be the strongest since 1997-1998 http://ow.ly/QTO8X
  • Investigating organizations report that FEMA fails to adapt its response programs to predicted and observed climate-induced changes http://ow.ly/QQNYv
Biodiversity, Wildlife and Invasives -
  • Native moth damaging cherry trees, turning large swaths of the Allegheny National Forest brown http://ow.ly/QIMQu
  • Pilot program next summer "will put a substantial number" of walleye in Lake Mille Lacs; let Minnesota conservation officials assess the impact http://ow.ly/QHyoA
  • Next steps uncertain for Minnesota special legislative Mille Lacs walleye working group http://ow.ly/QTVau
  • South Dakota Game, Fish and Parks Commission removes bald eagle from the state’s threatened species http://ow.ly/QHAZ3
  • The first comprehensive plan to protect bees and other pollinators in Wisconsin is being developed http://ow.ly/QL22h
  • USDA's APHIS to lead 'nationally coordinated program' to manage feral swine http://ow.ly/QL3yr
  • Newly identified tadpole disease found across the globe, threatening already-declining frog populations further http://ow.ly/QO7YP
  • Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-MI) supports permanently severing Great Lakes-Mississippi River basin connection in Chicago to hold Asian carp at bay http://ow.ly/QRIpa
The Historic New Orleans Collection
In the Cities -
In the States-
  • Op-ed: If Wisconsin is going to kill DNR's Water Division, let's make sure that our water resources don't die with it http://ow.ly/QILHn
  • Milwaukee Journal Sentinel editorial: Wisconsin DNR reorganization holds promise, but
    River Basin States in the News This Week
    agency needs more employees http://ow.ly/QIM87
  • In Illinois, separate agency budgets cover half the pay for Gov. Rauner's staff, in a process known as "off-shoring" http://ow.ly/QHEg3
  • As the Pennsylvania budget impasse stretches into its second month, Legislature explores to do when reserves are gone http://ow.ly/QCOCL
  • Pennsylvania state budget: No deal in sight as Harrisburg goes into dog days of summer http://ow.ly/QLUEf
Gulf Coastal Region-
  • Outside of levee-protected New Orleans, efforts have lagged to protect small towns and villages losing land every year to coastal erosion http://ow.ly/QU0JD
  • Gulf Coast Ecosystem Restoration Council releases Gulf of Mexico restoration projects recommended to receive first round of BP oil spill fine funding under RESTORE act http://ow.ly/QRZ2Q
  • How to save a sinking coast? Hurricane Katrina created a Louisiana laboratory http://ow.ly/QHunX
  • Louisiana Eats: Conservation and conscience on two Gulf Coast farms http://ow.ly/QHwqk
Photo: LaCrosse Tribune
Resource Development -
  • State judge rules that West Virginia pipeline planners cannot access private property for surveys without a landowner's permission http://ow.ly/QCcb7
  • As a new frac sand mining operation grows around their farm, Wisconsin owners protect it from future development http://ow.ly/QCpmk
  • New residential lofts in Minneapolis will be powered mostly by hydropower that once fed historic mill built in 1880s http://ow.ly/QCqwy
  • Company about to start strip mining for coal on 741 acres of 18,011-acre Egypt Valley Wildlife Area (eastern Ohio) http://ow.ly/QHS0P
  • Washington Post op-ed: Five myths about coal http://ow.ly/QHToF
  • An analysis of the federal pipeline approval process shows a decision on Keystone XL is taking far longer than usual http://ow.ly/QR5Iy
  • Study: Railroads are more than 4 ½ times riskier than pipelines for moving oil http://ow.ly/QTPYh
Federal Budget (You can follow the status of all of the fiscal year 2016 appropriation bills on this Congress.gov web page) -
  • The U.S. is once again coming close to hitting the "ceiling" for overall debt http://ow.ly/QHsfe
Events - Information on all past and future events listed here each week can be viewed in the on-line calendar, located above and to the right (and here as a stand-alone calendar
  • Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority of Louisiana meeting; August 19, Baton Rouge, LA http://ow.ly/QQQyt
  • Webinar: Wisconsin's Healthy Lakes Initiative Grant Program, August 20, noon - 1 pm CT http://ow.ly/QL4kx
  • EPA Board of Scientific Counselors Safe and Sustainable Water Resources BOSC Subcommittee meeting, August 27-28, Cincinnati, OH http://ow.ly/QHIoY
  • DOI's Office of Surface Mining announces Schedule of Public Hearings from September 1 through 17 for its proposed Stream Protection Rule (in Denver, Colo.; Lexington, Ky.; St. Louis, Mo.; Pittsburgh, Pa.; Big Stone Gap, Va.; and Charleston, W.Va.) http://ow.ly/QLh6S
  • Public Listening Session for Water Resources and Climate Change Adaptation Group (via webinar), September 9, 2-4 PM ET http://ow.ly/QO6Oo
  • National Water Quality Monitoring Council Webinar: "Effective Science Communication with emphasis on visual science communication tools" September 15, 2 pm ET http://ow.ly/QHzoB
  • Upper Mississippi River Conference and Student Summit, October 14-16, Davenport, Iowa http://ow.ly/QOUX8
  • Convening: "The City Upstream and Down: How integrated water resources management can help cities manage water resources sustainably;" October 28 - 30, Racine, WI (NOTE: convening participation is limited to 25 cities) http://ow.ly/QIGfw
  • Wildlife Habitat Council Conservation Conference 2015 - November 11-12, Hilton Baltimore, MD http://ow.ly/QRy91
e-Newsletters, Publications, Journals, Multimedia  -
  • Montana Watershed Coordination Council's August 7 Watershed News http://ow.ly/QHBzU
  • Lower Mississippi River Dispatch No. 300, August 10, "Wild Miles on the Big River" http://ow.ly/QKF5F
  • Minnesota Pollution Control Agency's August 11 Basin Alliance for the Lower Mississippi in Minnesota (BALMM) "Currents" http://ow.ly/QL65v
  • EPA launches new Clean Water State Revolving Fund web site http://ow.ly/QTYLC
Photo: Des Moines Register file
Other news-
  • Tulane University opens registration for $1 million Nutrient Reduction Challenge to develop plan to reduce amount of nutrients entering world's waters http://ow.ly/QCeXQ
  • Here's a 10-point checklist to help you get ready for another Iowa State Fair, including a guide to selfies, how to avoid politicians, and where to find the fabled butter cow http://ow.ly/QRN3p
  • Welcome To Cancer Alley: the 85-mile stretch between Baton Rouge and New Orleans, home to more than 150 industrial plants and refineries http://ow.ly/QL577 - an interactive look at the effects of poverty and pollution in Louisiana
  • Report: despite pushing to do so, states are ill-prepared to administer public lands within their boundaries; story: http://ow.ly/QRbxl report: http://ow.ly/QRbCA
  • The Guardian: "Reading American cities: books about the Twin Cities" - Minneapolis and St Paul have a compelling and distinctive literature http://ow.ly/QTLi8
  • The National Geographic Society meets with tourism community representatives over its Mississippi River rebranding initiative http://ow.ly/QRGkH
  • Veterans on Mississippi River trip find paddling eases pain of war http://ow.ly/QTVm0
Source: Gallup
Politics and People-
  • 14 percent of U.S. adults approve of the way Congress is doing its job, according to a new Gallup survey http://ow.ly/QOesP
  • Rep. Ron Kind (D-Wisconsin) leads New Democrat Coalition seeking autumn movement on often-stymied issues http://ow.ly/QHFTv
  • Nashville mayoral race results mean there will be a September 10 runoff between top two finishers: Megan Barry and David Fox http://ow.ly/QCgoc
Your Moment of Zen -
Photograph: NPL/Rex Shutterstock

Thursday, August 13, 2015

What We Learned This Week - "Push 'em back. Push 'em back. Way back."

Thirteen states asked a federal judge to issue a preliminary injunction to halt the Waters of the U.S. rule before its August 28 implementation. The National Corn Growers Association wrote a letter to the EPA asking that the agency push back that effective date.  Downstate Illinois state lawmakers want the Interior Department to extend the public comment period on its new mining stream protection rule.  The Farm Bureau said its maps depict an EPA Clean Water Act regulatory overreach.  EPA disagreed, calling the Farm Bureau maps "highly inaccurate depictions.” A Minnesota Court of Appeals upheld the state's new water quality standards. Exxon Mobil will pay $5 million to Arkansas and the federal government over its role in a 2013 Pegasus pipeline crude oil spill.  Several thousand near-surface fracking wells pose a threat to U.S. drinking water supplies.  The  number of U.S. farmers markets tripled over the past 15 years.  An Army Corps of Engineers' analysis indicates that replacing the Tennessee River's aging Chickamauga Lock would be twice as costly as originally estimated; however, Tennessee Sen. Lamar Alexander believes that the project should be completed.  Louisiana state leaders and environmental groups renewed their demand that the federal government fix wetlands outside of New Orleans destroyed by the Mississippi River-Gulf Outlet shipping channel. A list of Gulf of Mexico restoration projects recommended to receive the first round of BP oil spill fine funding was released for public comment. The federal Keystone XL pipeline decision process is taking far longer than usual. An analysis by federal agencies found that an Arkansas hog farm is not likely to have significant detrimental impacts on the Buffalo National River.  A newly identified tadpole disease has been found to be impacting frogs worldwide.  A coal strip mining operation is set to start on a sizable portion of an eastern Ohio wildlife area.  And last but not least, five percent more U.S. adults approve of the way Congress is doing its job today than did in 2013 (meaning that a total of 14 percent now approve).

Friday, August 7, 2015

Mississippi River Basin Water Resource Weekly News

~Most of the Water News - None of the Spin~

WOTUS Rule Lawsuits Are Consolidated
On July 31, a Judicial Panel on Multi-District litigation agreed to consolidate 12 lawsuits brought against the Waters of the United States (Clean Water) rule into one case to be heard before the 6th Circuit Court in Cincinnati, Ohio. Because the lawsuits against the rule address common issues, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and Army Corps of Engineers requested to have the petitions consolidated by the Judicial Panel, which agreed and then randomly selected a circuit court to hear the challenges. The random lottery "winner" - the 6th Circuit Court - covers parts of Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio and Tennessee, and is characterized as relatively moderate, compared to the traditionally more liberal 9th and 2nd Circuit Courts, where environmental groups filed petitions against the rule at the outset.  You can find links to this and other rule-related news, below, under "Water Quality."

U.S. Senate Passes Algal Toxin and National Estuary Program Bills
Before fleeing Washington for five weeks, the U.S. Senate passed two fairly non-controversial water-related bills.  One bill (H.R. 212) directs the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to develop and submit to Congress a strategic plan for assessing and managing risks associated with algal toxins in drinking water provided by public water systems. H.R. 212 was previously passed by the House, and will now be sent on to the President for his signature. The second bill (S. 1523) reauthorizes through fiscal year 2020 the EPA National Estuaries Program, a place-based program to protect and restore the water quality and ecological integrity of 28 estuaries of national significance, including the Barataria-Terrebonne National Estuary in southeastern Louisiana (bounded on the east by the Mississippi River).  A related reauthorization bill (H.R. 944) passed the House in June, but it differs somewhat from the Senate bill.  Those differences will need to be resolved before a consensus bill is considered and potentially passed into law.

New USGS On-Line Water Quality Tool Reports on Mississippi River Basin Tributary Relative Nutrient Loading
The U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) Program launched a
new online graphical data tool at the end of July to provide data on national ambient water-quality conditions by annually summarizing nutrient and sediment concentrations and loads, along with flow information for 106 river and stream sites across the country, including in the Mississippi River Basin. Throughout the Mississippi River Basin, the tool can be used to evaluate nutrient loading to coastal areas and large tributaries.  Persons can contact NAWQA Program Chief William Wilber with questions or feedback regarding the online tool or any other components of the NAWQA Program (telephone: (703) 648-6878; email: wgwilber@usgs.gov).

Noteworthy @UpperMiss Twitter Postings for the Week

Water Quality -
(Click to enlarge)
  • This year's Gulf of Mexico "dead zone" area is above the historic average, at 6,474 square miles http://ow.ly/Qwa1H (also see this related Mississippi River Collaborative release: http://ow.ly/QwacN)
  • Dead zone off Louisiana coast slightly larger than last summer, but triple the size of the target set by a task force http://ow.ly/QzuyO
  • Voluntary measures haven't stopped algae blooms in Gulf of Mexico http://ow.ly/QtznZ
  • Des Moines business group offers to broker deal settling Water Works' water quality lawsuit against three Iowa counties http://ow.ly/QzzkC
  • Op-ed: “middle ground” farm-level water quality plans supported as solution to Iowa's ag-related water quality problems http://ow.ly/QC1Qa
  • Senate passes bills reauthorizing National Estuary Program; requiring EPA to develop strategic plan to protect drinking water from algal toxins http://ow.ly/Qzeod
  • Humans spike ecosystems with active pharmaceuticals, feminizing male fish, confusing birds, and worrying scientists http://ow.ly/QpULJ
  • Minnesota Pollution Control Agency: too much road salt is winding up in Twin Cities lakes and streams; story: http://ow.ly/QsYpM (news release: http://ow.ly/QsYuX)
  • EPA issues Final 2014 Effluent Guidelines Program Plan re: control of industrial wastewater discharges http://ow.ly/Qt6OG
  • No cause determined yet for fish kill last week on the south branch of the Whitewater River, Minnesota http://ow.ly/Qt94Q
  • North Dakota Department of Health notified of August 6, 4,260 barrel-produced water (brine) spill http://ow.ly/QC0jW (August 7 update: No surface waters were impacted http://ow.ly/QCdh0)
  • Farmers near Dyersville, Iowa show off efforts to reduce impaired Hewitt Creek watershed pollution http://ow.ly/QzrR6
  • Government Accountability Office: Improved Financial Indicators Could Strengthen EPA Oversight of Clean and Drinking Water SRFs http://ow.ly/QzvZa
  • Arch Coal Inc. and 14 subsidiaries settle with Obama administration to resolve over 1,000 Clean Water Act violations in several states, including Kentucky, Pennsylvania,and West Virginia http://ow.ly/QC2sI
Waters of the United States Rule

  • 12 lawsuits brought against Obama administration “waters of the US” rule to be heard as one case before 6th Circuit Court in Cincinnati, Ohio http://ow.ly/Qqk96
  • Five agricultural groups request that U.S. EPA and Army Corps of Engineers delay new clean water rule effective date; letter: http://ow.ly/QqawI and story: http://ow.ly/QllqX
  • Internal Army Corps documents on clean water rule may open door to environmental group legal challenges citing National Environmental Policy Act http://ow.ly/QzxWN

Water Resource Management (Floodplains, Dams, Navigation, Wetlands, Flooding, Supplies, etc.) -
  • Op-ed: Hydropower industry attempting power grab to make it difficult-if not impossible-to ensure
    Wikimedia commons
    fish passage, other modern dam improvements http://ow.ly/QBYLL
  • House bill introduced to give developers more options to mitigate wetlands damages under federal requirements; conservationists say bill's approach would gut the government's no-net-loss policy; story:  http://ow.ly/Qw4OL and bill: http://ow.ly/Qw4Fi
  • Sensors, satellites and software helping to grow more crops with less water http://ow.ly/Qt8bG
  • La Crosse County judge halts train traffic on new rail line until court can look at how traffic could potentially harm La Crosse River wetland http://ow.ly/QtArp
  • "Fishermen" oppose Mississippi River diversions to fix Louisiana coast http://ow.ly/Qzuh2
Agriculture -
  • Revolutionary political, economic and social shifts are necessary to avoid unprecedented food system chaos http://ow.ly/Qwbnb
  • With Idaho law gone, attention turns to other "ag-gag" states, including Montana, North Dakota, Missouri, Kansas and Iowa http://ow.ly/Qz6VF
  • University of Minnesota researchers say agriculture is expected to be the first big beneficiary of drone technology http://ow.ly/Qw4f9
  • South Dakota State University researchers find that corn pests are less of a problem when there's a diverse population of bugs http://ow.ly/Qq2U8
  • State farming organizations plan to put Illinois at forefront of worldwide agriculture; develop Food and Agriculture RoadMap http://ow.ly/Qt0q6
Click to enlarge
Climate and Weather -
  • US Drought update: a week of heat after a period of general dryness brought advance of dryness across central Wisconsin into northeastern Iowa, western and northern Louisiana, southeastern Oklahoma and southwest Arkansas http://ow.ly/QzPwi
  • NOAA: most likely area for drought development in August is the Lower Mississippi Valley and East Texas http://ow.ly/Qq0cH
  • It's almost a certainty that we're headed for the strongest El Niño of the past 100 years http://ow.ly/QpZLl
Photo: Conrad Wilson | MPR News
Biodiversity, Wildlife and Invasives -
  • Minnesota Department of Natural Resources updates its list of lakes and rivers infested with aquatic invasive species http://ow.ly/QkYAN
  • Walleye fishing on Lake Mille Lacs, Minnesota closes, as catch exceeds tight seasonal quota http://ow.ly/QpQ7A (see related articles, below, under "In the States")
  • Yellowstone National Park fisheries managers moving ahead with plan to destroy invasive brook trout in Soda Butte Creek http://ow.ly/Qr5wQ
  • Public comment sought on strategic plan addressing St. Croix River watershed aquatic invasive species http://ow.ly/QtCAL
  • Zebra mussels reported in Lake Stella in Central Minnesota http://ow.ly/Qu3Ki
In the Cities -
  • New York Times: Is New Orleans Safe? The state’s master plan could avert a watery demise. But it would cost many billions http://ow.ly/QpV6I
  • Ten years on, Hurricane Katrina's scars endure for black New Orleans http://ow.ly/QC4Ut
  • New metric is being used by Williston, North Dakota to measure oil boom-bust population changes: sewage flow http://ow.ly/Qzpl7
In the States-
  • Center for State and Local Government Excellence: Nearly three-quarters of states and
    Mississippi River Basin States in the News
    localities reported making new hires in the past year http://ow.ly/QqFro
  • Mille Lacs walleye decline may spell trouble for Minnesota DNR, as Republican state legislators zero in on agency http://ow.ly/QsXZw
  • Minnesota Legislative Working Group on Mille Lacs Lake focused on the how and why of the walleye problem http://ow.ly/QvXfd
  • Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton partially revives environmental citizen's board eliminated during 2015 legislative session http://ow.ly/QvXD8
  • Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources releases list of 118 DNR land parcels under review for possible sale in second year of efforts resulting from Wisconsin Act 20 http://ow.ly/QwcBV
  • Amid Illinois’ budget stalemate, scores of workers begin receiving layoff notices http://ow.ly/QC5A5
Photograph: OLI/Landsat-8/Nasa
Gulf Coastal Region-
  • Study: Sea defenses not enough to protect delta cities from rising flood risk; ‘Eco-based’ engineering systems may be key to protecting cities; those on the Mississippi may become up to eight times more at risk from rising tides, storm surges or catastrophic downstream floods; The Guardian story: http://ow.ly/QC3cW (study abstract: http://ow.ly/QC38K)
  • Report assesses impacts of Outer Continental Shelf activity on coastal communities' public infrastructure, services and populations following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita http://ow.ly/Qu5Gx (large PDF file)
Forestry -
  • U.S. Forest Service warns that two-thirds of its budget could go to fighting wildfires within a decade http://ow.ly/QvZiW
  • Department of Natural Resources monitoring shows forestry operations are protective of Wisconsin water quality http://ow.ly/Qwdy9
Source: Washington Post
Resource Development -
  • Washington Post article and maps show all U.S. electricity capacity by source, including hydropower (hydropower map to right) http://ow.ly/QqcWq
  • Alpha Natural Resources, one of U.S.'s largest coal mining companies, files for federal Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection http://ow.ly/Qr4E5
  • Alpha Natural Resources Inc. expressed concern about mine-cleanup liabilities as it filed for federal bankruptcy protection http://ow.ly/QsTbR
  • Coal miners are "battling each other for scraps" in the Illinois and Powder River (coal) basins http://ow.ly/Qtx3g
  • Minnesota ublic Utilities Commission will require state to study the cumulative environmental impact of two new Enbridge Energy pipelines http://ow.ly/QtxCk
  • Oklahoma regulators tell energy companies to sharply reduce underground wastewater disposal in earthquake-prone area http://ow.ly/QwbTA
Federal Budget (You can follow the status of all of the fiscal year 2016 appropriation bills on this Congress.gov web page) - 
  • Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell says he will begin negotiations with Democrats to prevent a government shutdown at end of September http://ow.ly/QvYyB
Events - Information on all past and future events listed here each week can be viewed in the on-line calendar, located above and to the right (and here as a stand-alone calendar
  • Wisconsin August Natural Resources Board meeting, 8:30 AM, August 12 (streamed live; will be available on demand) http://ow.ly/QC0Rv
  • USGS webinar: Wisconsin Edge-of-Field Monitoring Experience: Perspectives and Lessons Learned; August 12, 2 pm ET http://ow.ly/Qzb90
  • EPA Green Infrastructure program webcast: Paying for Stormwater-The Benefits of a Utility; August 13, 1-2:30 PM ET http://ow.ly/QweGx (register here: http://ow.ly/QweOs)
  • National Academy of Science meeting: Effective Approaches for Monitoring and Assessing Gulf of Mexico Restoration Activities; August 24-26, New Orleans, LA http://ow.ly/QzLWQ
  • Missouri Water Protection Forum, Water Quality Standards Workgroup, September 15, 1 – 4 PM CT, Lewis and Clark State Office Building, 1101 Riverside Drive, Jefferson City http://ow.ly/Qq3yI
  • EPA-USDA National Workshop on Water Quality Markets, September 15-17, University of Nebraska (register by August 31) http://ow.ly/QzwOF
  • National Science Foundation meeting: Environmental Research and Education Advisory Committee; September 16-17, Arlington, VA (open to public) http://ow.ly/QztCM
  • National Conference on Ecosystem Restoration 2016 Conference - Call for Dedicated Session Proposals http://ow.ly/Qw5Ur (deadline October 1)
  • 8th Annual Growing Sustainable Communities Conference, October 6-7, Grand River Center, 500 Bell St., Dubuque, Iowa http://ow.ly/QzOl4
  • America's Watershed Initiative Mississippi River Watershed Caucus, October 14, from 8:30 AM- 4 PM, St. Louis, Missouri http://ow.ly/Qt54H
e-Newsletters, Publications, Journals, Multimedia  -
Other news-
  • Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-NM) introduces bill to permanently reauthorize and fully fund the Land and Water Conservation Fund at $900 million annually http://ow.ly/Qw2Mh (link to bill: http://ow.ly/Qw3cY)
  • Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-WI) introduces "Waterfront Community Revitalization and Resiliency Act" press release: http://ow.ly/QwGsx and bill link: http://ow.ly/QwGG2
  • PEER issues report on prehistoric burial site mismanagement and desecration at Effigy Mounds National Monument, Iowa http://ow.ly/QsSsR
  • Washington Post: Pursuing the unsettling question of how many cows contribute their parts to be in one hamburger http://ow.ly/QzCPL
Politics and People-
  • Washington Post ranks 2015's 364 acronym-named bills by acronym quality - and there are some pretty bad ones http://ow.ly/QsZEY
  • Pew Research Center: "Current Congress is looking a little more productive – so far" http://ow.ly/QC6ZH
  • Iowa and Arkansas AGs to co-chair newly formed National Attorneys General Agriculture Committee http://ow.ly/QC18y
  • Mississippi truck driver Robert Gray-a virtually unknown candidate-claims state's Democratic gubernatorial nomination http://ow.ly/Qw7gl
  • Renee Turner named new programs director for Army Corps of Engineers Mississippi Valley Division Civil Works Integration Division http://ow.ly/QtBhG
  • Democrat Katie McGinty to run for US Senate in Pennsylvania http://ow.ly/Qu2Im
  • September 10, Nashville, Tennessee mayoral race runoff vote anticipated, assuming none of seven candidates wins 50%+ of Thursday vote http://ow.ly/QzqtQ
Your Moment of Zen -
Photograph: Anuar Patjane

What We Learned This Week - "You say you want a revolution"

Like the children in Lake Wobegon, this year's Gulf of Mexico dead zone area is above average. Twelve lawsuits brought against the Obama administration over its “waters of the United States” rule will be consolidated into one case to be heard before the 6th Circuit Court. Agricultural groups requested that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and Army Corps of Engineers delay the effective date of that new clean water rule.  Humans have spiked the Earth with active pharmaceuticals, feminizing male fish, confusing birds, and worrying scientists.  Also being spiked: Twin Cities lakes and streams, with an overabundance of road salt. The New York Times asked, “is New Orleans is safe?”  And The Guardian answered, “not even close.” Sensors, satellites and software are helping to grow more crops with less water. That innovation may prove to be a tiny part of the political, economic and social revolution said to be needed to avoid unprecedented global food system chaos. We are almost certainly headed for the strongest El Niño of the past century. Minnesota utility regulators say the state needs to study the cumulative environmental impact of two proposed Enbridge Energy pipelines. Defying state lawmakers, Minnesota Governor Mark Dayton partially revived an environmental citizen's board that was eliminated during the recent state legislative session. A U.S. Senate bill was introduced to permanently reauthorize and fund the popular Land and Water Conservation Fund.  The Senate passed two non-controversial water-related bills hours before recessing for the month.  And last but not least, Washington, DC is sinking fast - in a very literal sense.

Thursday, August 6, 2015

Capitol Hill This Week - What to Watch For - UPDATED

Steve Helber, AP Photo
U.S. House members began their summer recess following last Wednesday's votes, not to return until September 8.  That exodus leaves only the Senate in session this week.  Below are the only two Senate activities currently scheduled for the week that relate to Mississippi River Basin water resources.  Links are provided to the relevant committee web pages. Many Congressional proceedings are webcast live, and these may be, as well (follow the respective meeting or hearing link).  All times are Eastern.  This information will be updated as warranted. 

Tuesday
  • Senate Environment and Public Works Committee hearing entitled, “Oversight of Litigation at the Environmental Protection Agency and Fish and Wildlife Service: Impacts on the U.S. Economy, States, Local Communities and the Environment;” 9:30 AM, room 406 Dirksen Senate Office Building.
Wednesday
  • NEW - Senate Environment and Public Works Committee meeting to markup the ARENA Act (an energy bill), will include a markup of  S.1523, a measure to reauthorize the National Estuary Program, S. 1500, to strip EPA of its authority to issue Clean Water Act permits for pesticide spraying over waterways, and S. 722, to amend the Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration Act to extend by 10 years a requirement that interest on wildlife restoration funds be allocated to finance certain North American wetlands conservation projects; 10:00 AM, room 406 Dirksen Senate Office Building.
Thursday
  • CANCELED - Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Subcommittee on Regulatory Affairs and Federal Management hearing on "Agency Progress in Retrospective Review of Existing Regulations," including testimony from and questioning of executive staff from the Department of Interior, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and U.S. Department of Agriculture; 9:00 AM, room 342, Dirksen Senate Office Building.