ENVIRONMENT WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 22, 2020 HERMISTONHERALD.COM • A7 Activists want EPA to step in on groundwater ‘emergency’ Group concerned about nitrate levels in groundwater in Umatilla, Morrow counties By JADE MCDOWELL NEWS EDITOR A coalition of activist groups, known as Stand Up to Factory Farms, fi led a petition with the Environmental Protection Agency on Thursday asking the agency to take emergency action to address nitrate levels in the Lower Uma- tilla Basin Groundwater Manage- ment Area. The area, which was estab- lished in 1990 in response to ele- vated nitrate levels in the ground- water, covers 550 square miles of northwestern Umatilla County and northern Morrow County. Among the petition’s requested actions is banning all new Concen- trated Animal Feeding Operation (CAFO) permits in the affected area, which would block Easter- day Farms from its plans to open a dairy on the site of the former Lost Valley Farm mega-dairy outside of Boardman. “Raising and warehousing cows for milk and meat production — in extremely unnatural numbers for both the animals and the environ- ment — is contaminating drinking water in Eastern Oregon,” Cris- tina Stella, senior attorney at the Animal Legal Defense Fund, said in a written statement. “The EPA must act to stop the contamination and regulate factory farms like the industrial polluters that they are.” Lost Valley Farms went bank- rupt in 2018 after owner Greg te Velde faced various criminal charges and the dairy racked up hundreds of thousands of dollars in fi nes for wastewater permit vio- lations. Three weeks ago the Ore- gon Department of Agriculture declared that cleanup of the site was complete. The petition submitted to the EPA was signed by Food & Water Watch, Friends of Family Farmers, WaterWatch of Oregon, Colum- bia Riverkeeper, Humane Voters Oregon, Animal Legal Defense Fund, Center for Food Safety and the Center for Biological Diver- sity. They cite the possible nega- tive health effects from drinking water with nitrates above the EPA’s HH fi le photo Twin carousels simultaneously milk 80 cows on each side while slowly revolving in the milking parlor at the Columbia River Dairy outside of Boardman in 2016. Signers of a petition to the EPA blame dairies in the Lower Umatilla Basin Groundwater Management Area for elevated levels of nitrates in the area’s groundwater. recommended level and blame CAFOs for most of the problem. Local participation Eileen Laramore, a Hermiston resident who founded local envi- ronmental advocacy groups, such as Friends of Oxbow and Tour of Knowledge, is the only individual to sign. She said after she was contacted by one of the groups about signing, she had reservations about adding her name, since she doesn’t usually get involved with efforts by “out of town” groups and she formerly sat on the LUBGWMA committee. “The LUBGWMA people are great, they work really hard,” she said. “But they don’t have the peo- ple, don’t have the money to do anything.” She said reading the petition’s language describing the health effects of nitrates above the EPA’s recommended limit of 10 mg/L “hit hard.” The EPA has stated that young children exposed to high nitrate levels can experience dan- gerous “blue baby syndrome” from too-low oxygen levels in their blood. Research on other possible health effects cited in the petition, such as cancer and thyroid disor- ders, has been less conclusive. The Oregon Department of Environ- mental Quality states that “some” research has supported a link, but “little is known about the long- NEW 2020 TACOMA TRD DBL CAB SR5 4X4 $ term effects of drinking water with elevated nitrate levels.” Cities must conduct tests on their drinking water each year for a variety of substances, includ- ing nitrates, and the city of Herm- iston’s water reports for 2017 and 2018 show the highest levels of nitrates were at 5.97 mg/L and 5.11 respectively, falling below the EPA’s 10 mg/L limit. However, people living off of well water in the area could be drinking water with higher nitrate concentrations. Laramore said she doesn’t want to panic people about drinking well water or tap water in the area, but she does care about improving water quality in Umatilla and Mor- row counties. So she signed the petition in the hopes that the EPA will be able to provide some “mus- cle” to implement the policy pro- posals from the LUBGWMA advi- sory committee. NOWA response JR Cook, president of the Northeast Oregon Water Associ- ation, said there are “hot spots” of high nitrate levels through- out LUBGWMA, but provided a map using data from the Ore- gon Department of Environmental Quality that shows large swaths of the area painted in colors indicat- ing nitrate levels below the EPA’s recommended limits. There is still work to be done, he said, but progress has been made. He described dairies as one of the most highly regulated and monitored industries in the LUB- GWMA, and said that more local- ized data over years shows there is no “smoking gun” pointing to a single cause for the nitrate levels. He said the groups that wrote the petition used cherry-picked well numbers and over-generalizations to “attack one industry.” “This petition is not about fi x- ing the nitrate problems in the area the NOWA members live and raise families in,” he wrote in a state- ment from NOWA. “This petition is about trying to stop one specifi c development.” Cook told the East Oregonian that many of the nitrates in the groundwater came not from cur- rent operations, but from past prac- tices that have since been halted. Those include unlined washouts at the Umatilla Chemical Depot, well construction that didn’t use modern best practices, plumes from past unlined storage loca- tions along the railroad and old city wastewater systems that have since been upgraded. He said the desert climate means nitrates aren’t fl ushed out by rainwater regularly, making it “very hard to get out of the system without pumping and bioremedia- tion or through artifi cial recharge and artifi cial dilution.” NOWA has been working with other area stakeholders on an aqui- fer recharge project that would help with that. Another development on the horizon is a bill introduced by Sen. Bill Hansell, R-Athena, for the 2020 legislative session. The bill would appropriate money to the Oregon Department of Agri- culture for gathering and review- ing research on LUBGWMA and creating an “implementation plan to improve ground water quality and obtain full or partial removal of ground water management area designation.” The project would create a task force to help coor- dinate the efforts of stakeholders, such as irrigators, the tribes and state departments to reduce nitrates in the groundwater. Hansell said the idea came from a policy option package, or POP, from the Department of Agricul- ture in the last session. POPs are requests that aren’t an actual part of the budget, but are a suggestion that an agency hopes the Legisla- ture will take and fi nd funding for. “There really wasn’t opposi- tion to it, just in the budget pro- cess it got lost in the shuffl e ... The Department of Ag already did the research, they determined the need, I’m just trying to build on the work already done,” Hansell said. Petition requests The petition fi led with the EPA this week asks the federal agency to take six actions under the author- ity of the Safe Drinking Water Act: • Supply free, clean drink- ing water to all residents of LUB- GWMA whose well or public water source contains nitrate levels above the safe limit set by the EPA. • Conduct additional research to “more accurately trace the sources and quantities of nitrate-nitro- gen pollution, and work to iden- tify which CAFOs and manure management practices are causing nitrate contamination.” • Issue orders requiring farms and dairies to modify their prac- tices to “cease overburdening the area with nitrogen pollution.” • Issue an order to stop any new CAFOs from opening in LUB- GWMA until nitrate levels across the area consistently fall below 10 milligrams per liter. • Investigate why Oregon’s best management practices for CAFO nutrient management have not pro- tected groundwater, and what prac- tices would be necessary to do so. • Determine what enforce- ment action would “effectively reduce nitrogen pollution from these sources, and initiate those enforcement actions as soon as practicable.” Amy van Saun, Senior Attor- ney with Center for Food Safety, said in a statement the groups that signed the petition will not sit by as mega-dairies “treat communi- ties like a hazardous waste dump and sacrifi ce the health and safety of neighbors in the pursuit of profi ts.” “Mega-dairies externalize their signifi cant public health and environmental costs to the people of Oregon, and if our state legis- lators cannot protect Oregonians, we must enforce our federal laws to protect community drinking water,” she said. 329 PER MONTH WITH STANDARD SAFETY SENSE! 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