User avatar
Fish Felon
Mergie Marauder
Posts: 5871
Joined: Thu Jan 30, 2014 7:22 pm

Turd Burglar Dayton Signs Turd Burger Bill

Wed Jun 17, 2015 9:44 am

OUTDOORS

Dayton signs bill to mandate buffers to improve water quality and habitat

Image

The Lincoln County Soil and Water Conservation District planted a buffer on private land last week along the Yellow Medicine River. The landowner has enrolled the land in the federal Conservation Reserve Program. — Photo courtsey Lincoln County Soil and Water Conservation District
By DOUG SMITH, STAR TRIBUNE
June 13, 2015 - 11:37 PM


But critics say law doesn’t do enough for clean water.

Most Minnesota rivers, streams and ditches will get grass buffers to reduce soil erosion, improve water quality and create wildlife habitat under the compromise passed Saturday by the Legislature and signed into law by Gov. Mark Dayton.

But the new policy — hailed by Dayton and others as landmark legislation — is weaker than the original proposal offered in January by the governor. Wildlife, in particular, might benefit less because of the changes.

But Dayton estimated 110,000 acres will be put into buffer strips, and he noted that just 20 percent of public ditches currently are required to have 16.5-foot buffers. “This will make it 100 percent,” he said.

Current law requires ­buffers on public waterways, but enforcement by counties has been inconsistent.

The governor said the ­buffer bill will be one of his most important legacies.

“I think we’ll see in the next couple of years a very significant expansion in the number and quality of buffers to make our water cleaner and increase wildlife habitat,” he said. “Given the predictions that were made at the beginning of the session, that nothing would happen, I think this is a very significant accomplishment.”

Still, some see it as an opportunity missed.

“It’s a moderate step toward improved protection of our waterways,” said Jill Bathke, a natural resource scientist with the Minnesota Center for Environmental Advocacy. “It definitely should have gone a lot further.”

Said Rep. Rick Hansen, DFL-South St. Paul, who supported Dayton’s original proposal: “It’s probably the best we could get. I wish it were stronger. But this will be a nation-leading event. It’s a big deal.”

Steve Morse, executive director of the Minnesota Environmental Partnership, said it will have a modest impact. “No one should be under the impression that this buffer law will clean up our waters,” he said. “The waters of southwestern Minnesota will remain unswimmable and undrinkable.”

Under the new law:

• The Department of Natural Resources will map all public waters and ditches that will be subject to buffers by next July, and will be given $650,000 from the Clean Water Fund to do so.

• Fifty-foot buffers must be installed on public waters by November 2017 and 16½-foot buffers on public ditches by November 2018. Dayton had wanted the buffers by 2016.

• Many small streams, headwaters and ditches aren’t “public.” Dayton’s original proposal would have required that some of them, too, have 50-foot buffers. Now it will be up to the state’s 90 county soil and water conservation districts to identify those that need buffers.

• Over the first two years, the districts will share $22 million from the Legacy Amendment’s Clean Water Fund for technical assistance costs. That’s an average of about $242,000 for each district. After the first two years, funding comes from the state’s general fund. (Hansen believes tapping the Clean Water Fund for the soil and water conservation districts is ­unconstitutional.)

• The state Board of Water and Soil Resources (BWSR) can withhold funds to soil and water conservation districts that fail to implement the law. The agency has been allocated $5 million from the Clean Water Fund to help with implementation.


• Counties, watershed districts or BWSR will enforce the law, and fines up to $500 can be issued; multiple fines could be issued. “You can’t just pay to not have a buffer,” said John Jaschke, BWSR executive director. (Under Dayton’s original proposal, the DNR would have enforced the law.)

• No new money is in the bill to pay landowners to take cropland out of production and plant buffers, but there is $33 million from the Clean Water Fund and the Outdoor Heritage Fund available for easements and other financial assistance to help landowners meet or exceed buffer requirements. The federal Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) and state Reinvest in Minnesota (RIM) program can provide annual or easement payments.

The Minnesota Farmers Union was among agriculture groups that opposed Dayton’s original proposal and lobbied for changes that are reflected in the final version.

“Most of our members can live with it, but some are not too happy,” said Thom Petersen, government relations director for the group, which represents 14,000 farm families.

Width of required buffer strips is one of the biggest changes from Dayton’s original proposal. Under the compromise, buffers on public waterways must average 50 feet, but public ditches will need only 16½-foot buffers, as Dayton noted. The difference going forward will be that rather than 20 percent of public ditches being buffered, now 100 percent should be.

“Most studies show the best water and habitat benefits start when a buffer is around 50 feet,” Bathke said.

Joe Duggan, a Pheasants Forever vice president, said some ditch buffers could end up being wider. Some farmers likely will connect with the federal CRP program, which pays annually for minimum 30-foot buffers.

“My guess is, in many cases when people do the math and see what CRP pays, we’ll get 30-foot buffers,” Duggan said. “I’m pretty confident that we’ll eventually have an extensive system of buffers that aren’t in place today, and they’ll provide nesting cover for pheasants, ducks and other wildlife. It’s not all we need to address water or wildlife issues, but it will be a major improvement.”

Said Dayton: “We put the deterioration of Minnesota’s water quality and wildlife habitat on the front burner. It directs attention to the fact that we need to be doing a lot more.

“It’s a very important first step, but it’s not the last step.”

Doug Smith • dsmith@startribune.com

Twitter: @dougsmithstrib
Hate Speech is Free Speech
"Ogaa-Gichi-Manidoo"

User avatar
Stute Slap
Mergie Marauder
Posts: 1015
Joined: Tue Dec 03, 2013 10:40 am

Re: Turd Burglar Dayton Signs Turd Burger Bill

Wed Jun 17, 2015 10:41 am

They should pass another bill on top of this one requiring buffers because this law about buffers is on top of the law already about buffers.

I can see the crystal clear waters dancing in the sun light already.

deet
Mergie Marauder
Posts: 266
Joined: Wed Oct 01, 2014 2:12 pm

Re: Turd Burglar Dayton Signs Turd Burger Bill

Wed Jun 17, 2015 11:20 am

Anyone know the criteria that the DNR will use to determine whether a river, creek, or ditch is "public"?

get-n-birdy
Mergie Marauder
Posts: 954
Joined: Sat Nov 30, 2013 8:38 pm

Re: Turd Burglar Dayton Signs Turd Burger Bill

Wed Jun 17, 2015 11:55 am

Smoke and mirrors, cigars and beers.
DENNIS ANDERSON, Then, about five years ago, in 2020, there were no more ducks in the state,

Quack
Mergie Marauder
Posts: 1397
Joined: Mon Dec 02, 2013 2:44 pm

Re: Turd Burglar Dayton Signs Turd Burger Bill

Wed Jun 17, 2015 12:34 pm

Determinations are already made, DNR just needs to put them on a map. There is a Public Waters Inventory. Generally, if the original surveyors mapped around a basin it's public. Aka meandered water. Smaller basins were surveyed straight through, aka non meandered, and generally private.

Don't know the details on creeks & rivers.

Drainage ditches are public when built & maintained with public money. I know it's hard to believe, but some farmers actually put up their own money to build ditches and those are private.

All this stuff is already documented, just a matter of compiling all the info on one map

tornadochaser
Mergie Marauder
Posts: 458
Joined: Tue Dec 03, 2013 12:51 pm

Re: Turd Burglar Dayton Signs Turd Burger Bill

Wed Jun 17, 2015 2:21 pm

Joint, judicial, and county ditches should fall under "public ditches," but since the ditch digging and maintenance costs are assessed to land owners benefiting from the drainage, it's hard to say what ditches will actually qualify when the dust settles. Most county websites have maps available showing drainage ditches.
uploadfromtaptalk1434568877811.png


Sent from my XT1080 using Tapatalk

HnkrCrash
Mergie Marauder
Posts: 323
Joined: Sun Jan 05, 2014 7:31 pm

Re: Turd Burglar Dayton Signs Turd Burger Bill

Wed Jun 17, 2015 2:46 pm

How much is the fine for tiling under these double dog required buffer strips? Maybe I missed it, but I don't see it mentioned.

Time to buy a backhoe and make my million.

At least the Morse guy has his head outta his ass and realizes this won't make a damn bit of difference. Farmers are shifty F'rs, especially when trying to stick it to "The Man."
"The less I know about other people's affairs, the happier I am. I'm not interested in caring about people."
- Ron Swanson

User avatar
Hansen
Mergie Marauder
Posts: 952
Joined: Sat Nov 30, 2013 3:48 pm
Location: Earth

Re: Turd Burglar Dayton Signs Turd Burger Bill

Wed Jun 17, 2015 3:13 pm

I was reading the comments section in the Star and Tribune, some interesting comments. There were several saying the idea spawned out of the pheasants forever summit in January. I think there will be major back-lash for guys knocking on doors this fall in western and SW MN. I would probably rip my PF sticker from the truck or suburban as well.

User avatar
greatwhitehunter3!
Mergie Marauder
Posts: 1602
Joined: Tue Nov 26, 2013 9:38 am
Location: Southwest Minnesota

Re: Turd Burglar Dayton Signs Turd Burger Bill

Thu Jun 18, 2015 8:09 am

Hansen wrote: I think there will be major back-lash for guys knocking on doors this fall in western and SW MN.


Yupp..

gimpfinger
Mergie Marauder
Posts: 2508
Joined: Mon Nov 25, 2013 7:29 pm
Location: Up in yo guts

Re: Turd Burglar Dayton Signs Turd Burger Bill

Thu Jun 18, 2015 9:02 am

There's no huntable land on farmers property around here anyway so I don't door knock. Not going to hurt my public land hunting.

Team Power Dump
Hate hate hate hate hate hate

Return to “MNFOWL's Misguided Children”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot] and 186 guests