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Segment of Northwest Iowa river runs dry

cigaretteman

HR King
May 29, 2001
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A significant stretch of a Northwest Iowa river has run dry several times in the past seven years as a rural water utility has pumped more water from the ground — at least a quarter of which is sold out-of-state — with the approval of state regulators.


A 2-mile segment of the Ocheyedan River dried up this year in September amid drought conditions and increased pumping by Osceola County and the Osceola County Rural Water System, according to the Iowa Department of Natural Resources.


That led to the deaths of an undetermined, large number of fish and other aquatic life, diminished wildlife in the area and less available water for livestock.


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The Ocheyedan River runs for about 60 miles from Ocheda Lake in far southern Minnesota to Spencer in Iowa, where it joins the Little Sioux River. A segment of the river about 4 miles south of Ocheyedan has run dry at least four times since 2015.


“It’s surreal,” said Ed Jones, who owns 90 acres of pasture land that abuts the river. “There’s no water. There’s no mud. There’s no nothing. It’s just gravel.”


Jones said the Iowa DNR — which oversees the state’s water-use permits — has been slow to remedy the ongoing problem. State law says a permit for the large-scale withdrawal of water from the ground shall be denied or discontinued “if it will impair the navigability of any navigable watercourse” or “if it will unreasonably impair the long-term availability of water.”


Jones, an Osceola County supervisor, said the situation is especially egregious because so much of the water pumped from the ground by the rural water utility is sold for use in Minnesota.


A Northeast Iowa company abandoned its proposal last year to withdraw billions of gallons of water annually from the Jordan Aquifer — which lies beneath nearly all of Iowa — and ship it by rail to Western states. The idea drew widespread criticism and was rejected by the Iowa DNR because it didn’t meet a “beneficial use” requirement under state law.


State takes action​


In November, the Iowa DNR sent letters to the Osceola County Rural Water System and Osceola County — which periodically pumps water from a quarry near the Ocheyedan River to excavate rock from it — that asked them to develop plans to help prevent the river from running dry again.


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Osceola County Engineer Keith Brann said the county will confine its dewatering of the quarry to wetter months of the spring in future years. The work has the effect of lowering the water table in the area and affects flows of the river, the Iowa DNR has determined. The county typically dewaters the quarry once every several years.


It’s unclear what plan the rural water utility is developing. It draws water from relatively shallow wells near the river, three of which the state determined have a direct impact on river flows.


Doug Westerman, the general manager of the Osceola County Rural Water System, declined to comment for this article.


Jason Overby, manager of Lincoln Pipestone Rural Water — the Minnesota utility that buys water from the Iowa utility — said he had not been notified of the situation.


“That would be a big concern,” he said. “We do buy a good volume of water from our neighboring district in Iowa. We’ve invested heavily in the infrastructure there.”


Also in November, the Army Corps of Engineers released a public notice that Osceola County Rural Water System wants to construct a dam in the Ocheyedan River to artificially elevate its surface level in the area that went dry this year. It was unclear in the letter how that might affect the river downstream.


“The purpose of this project is to increase drought resiliency for the alluvial aquifer that supplies drinking water to the local populace,” the letter said. The water utility serves about 5,900 people, according to state records.


State doesn’t track out-of-state water sales​


The Osceola County utility is among nine in Iowa that sell water across state lines, according to Iowa DNR records.


The Rathbun Regional Water Association, based in Centerville in south-central Iowa, sells water to five other utilities across the state border in Missouri. Three Iowa utilities buy water from out-of-state sources in Nebraska and South Dakota.


The state does not require utilities to report the amount of water they sell for use in other states. Mark Moeller, the Iowa DNR’s Water Supply Engineering supervisor, said his department does not have the authority to require such reports.


“I think that would probably have to be a law change,” he said.


But documents associated with an Osceola County Rural Water System request to increase the amount of water it is allowed to withdraw from the ground show that it has agreed to sell about 440 million gallons of water annually to the Minnesota utility.


That means up to 38 percent of what the utility has pumped in Iowa in recent years is piped to Minnesota, based on water usage data documented by the state.


The water utility has a total of 20 wells. Two of them are deep — roughly 550 and 600 feet — that draw water from the Dakota aquifer. The other 18 are Ocheyedan River alluvial aquifer wells that range in depth from 36 to 59 feet.


The utility’s water usage has more than quadrupled in the past 30 years, state records show. In 1993, it pumped about 330 million gallons. In recent years, the utility has been pumping between 1.1 and 1.5 billion gallons annually. Its current permit allows the utility to pump up to 2.25 billion gallons each year.


That permit — issued in April 2021 — includes requirements to monitor stream flow of the Ocheyedan River. The utility is required to take photos of the river and document its daily pumping rates of wells near the river if its flow slows to 15 cubic feet per second, based on U.S. Geological Survey monitoring downstream of the current dry segment of the river.


Those requirements were a result of the river running dry in recent years, Moeller said.


In 2021, the stream flow dropped below that threshold in July and didn’t reliably regain sufficient flow until late September. That period coincided with a segment of the river drying out. In August 2021, the river’s flow was as low as about 2 cubic feet per second.


The county did not dewater its quarry in 2021.


This year, flow dipped below 15 cubic feet per second in September, when the river dried out again. It reached a low of about 5 cubic feet per second in October but recovered above the monitoring threshold in November.


Still, there is a dry segment of river, Jones said.


“How long does it have to go on like this?” he asked.


The Osceola County Rural Water System has a deadline of March 31 to submit a plan to potentially reduce its pumping rates when river levels are low. If it doesn’t, “the DNR may unilaterally proceed with other actions to protect the use of the water supply,” according to the letter the department sent to the utility in November.

 
A significant stretch of a Northwest Iowa river has run dry several times in the past seven years as a rural water utility has pumped more water from the ground — at least a quarter of which is sold out-of-state — with the approval of state regulators.


A 2-mile segment of the Ocheyedan River dried up this year in September amid drought conditions and increased pumping by Osceola County and the Osceola County Rural Water System, according to the Iowa Department of Natural Resources.


That led to the deaths of an undetermined, large number of fish and other aquatic life, diminished wildlife in the area and less available water for livestock.


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The Ocheyedan River runs for about 60 miles from Ocheda Lake in far southern Minnesota to Spencer in Iowa, where it joins the Little Sioux River. A segment of the river about 4 miles south of Ocheyedan has run dry at least four times since 2015.


“It’s surreal,” said Ed Jones, who owns 90 acres of pasture land that abuts the river. “There’s no water. There’s no mud. There’s no nothing. It’s just gravel.”


Jones said the Iowa DNR — which oversees the state’s water-use permits — has been slow to remedy the ongoing problem. State law says a permit for the large-scale withdrawal of water from the ground shall be denied or discontinued “if it will impair the navigability of any navigable watercourse” or “if it will unreasonably impair the long-term availability of water.”


Jones, an Osceola County supervisor, said the situation is especially egregious because so much of the water pumped from the ground by the rural water utility is sold for use in Minnesota.


A Northeast Iowa company abandoned its proposal last year to withdraw billions of gallons of water annually from the Jordan Aquifer — which lies beneath nearly all of Iowa — and ship it by rail to Western states. The idea drew widespread criticism and was rejected by the Iowa DNR because it didn’t meet a “beneficial use” requirement under state law.


State takes action​


In November, the Iowa DNR sent letters to the Osceola County Rural Water System and Osceola County — which periodically pumps water from a quarry near the Ocheyedan River to excavate rock from it — that asked them to develop plans to help prevent the river from running dry again.


Want a weekly dose of local environmental news?​


Sign up for the once-a-week Environment & Outdoor Newsletter written by your local environmental journalists Erin Jordan and Brittney J. Miller.
checkmark-yellow.png
Delivered to your inbox every Thursday






Osceola County Engineer Keith Brann said the county will confine its dewatering of the quarry to wetter months of the spring in future years. The work has the effect of lowering the water table in the area and affects flows of the river, the Iowa DNR has determined. The county typically dewaters the quarry once every several years.


It’s unclear what plan the rural water utility is developing. It draws water from relatively shallow wells near the river, three of which the state determined have a direct impact on river flows.


Doug Westerman, the general manager of the Osceola County Rural Water System, declined to comment for this article.


Jason Overby, manager of Lincoln Pipestone Rural Water — the Minnesota utility that buys water from the Iowa utility — said he had not been notified of the situation.


“That would be a big concern,” he said. “We do buy a good volume of water from our neighboring district in Iowa. We’ve invested heavily in the infrastructure there.”


Also in November, the Army Corps of Engineers released a public notice that Osceola County Rural Water System wants to construct a dam in the Ocheyedan River to artificially elevate its surface level in the area that went dry this year. It was unclear in the letter how that might affect the river downstream.


“The purpose of this project is to increase drought resiliency for the alluvial aquifer that supplies drinking water to the local populace,” the letter said. The water utility serves about 5,900 people, according to state records.


State doesn’t track out-of-state water sales​


The Osceola County utility is among nine in Iowa that sell water across state lines, according to Iowa DNR records.


The Rathbun Regional Water Association, based in Centerville in south-central Iowa, sells water to five other utilities across the state border in Missouri. Three Iowa utilities buy water from out-of-state sources in Nebraska and South Dakota.


The state does not require utilities to report the amount of water they sell for use in other states. Mark Moeller, the Iowa DNR’s Water Supply Engineering supervisor, said his department does not have the authority to require such reports.


“I think that would probably have to be a law change,” he said.


But documents associated with an Osceola County Rural Water System request to increase the amount of water it is allowed to withdraw from the ground show that it has agreed to sell about 440 million gallons of water annually to the Minnesota utility.


That means up to 38 percent of what the utility has pumped in Iowa in recent years is piped to Minnesota, based on water usage data documented by the state.


The water utility has a total of 20 wells. Two of them are deep — roughly 550 and 600 feet — that draw water from the Dakota aquifer. The other 18 are Ocheyedan River alluvial aquifer wells that range in depth from 36 to 59 feet.


The utility’s water usage has more than quadrupled in the past 30 years, state records show. In 1993, it pumped about 330 million gallons. In recent years, the utility has been pumping between 1.1 and 1.5 billion gallons annually. Its current permit allows the utility to pump up to 2.25 billion gallons each year.


That permit — issued in April 2021 — includes requirements to monitor stream flow of the Ocheyedan River. The utility is required to take photos of the river and document its daily pumping rates of wells near the river if its flow slows to 15 cubic feet per second, based on U.S. Geological Survey monitoring downstream of the current dry segment of the river.


Those requirements were a result of the river running dry in recent years, Moeller said.


In 2021, the stream flow dropped below that threshold in July and didn’t reliably regain sufficient flow until late September. That period coincided with a segment of the river drying out. In August 2021, the river’s flow was as low as about 2 cubic feet per second.


The county did not dewater its quarry in 2021.


This year, flow dipped below 15 cubic feet per second in September, when the river dried out again. It reached a low of about 5 cubic feet per second in October but recovered above the monitoring threshold in November.


Still, there is a dry segment of river, Jones said.


“How long does it have to go on like this?” he asked.


The Osceola County Rural Water System has a deadline of March 31 to submit a plan to potentially reduce its pumping rates when river levels are low. If it doesn’t, “the DNR may unilaterally proceed with other actions to protect the use of the water supply,” according to the letter the department sent to the utility in November.

Isn't Minnesota saturated with lakes that have water in them-maybe they should drain their own damn water:)
 
Land values in NW Iowa have increased faster than any other part of the state.
Northwest Iowa has been hitting $20,000 an acre-plus for several weeks in a row," said Jim Rothermich, vice president of Iowa Appraisal and Research Corp. in Des Moines. "Today blew past all those auctions. Incredible market conditions."

The strong increases are due to good commodity prices, higher exports, better-than- expected crop yields and low interest rates, Zhang said. Corn prices for Iowa are 60% higher than a year ago, he said, and soybean prices are 32% higher.
 
Land values in NW Iowa have increased faster than any other part of the state.
Northwest Iowa has been hitting $20,000 an acre-plus for several weeks in a row," said Jim Rothermich, vice president of Iowa Appraisal and Research Corp. in Des Moines. "Today blew past all those auctions. Incredible market conditions."

The strong increases are due to good commodity prices, higher exports, better-than- expected crop yields and low interest rates, Zhang said. Corn prices for Iowa are 60% higher than a year ago, he said, and soybean prices are 32% higher.
The continuous stream of federal money doesn't hurt, either.
 
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