NEWS WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 2022 HERMISTONHERALD.COM • A3 Port of Morrow pollutes water for years State has taken little action on nitrate contamination By ALEX BAUMHARDT, COLE SINANIAN AND JAEL CALLOWAY Oregon Capital Chronicle Guadalupe Martinez points to a 24-pack of bot- tled water by her kitchen sink with just a few bottles left, one of thousands she’s brought home over the last 18 years. “Ever since we’ve been living here, we’ve been buy- ing water,” she said. The 54-year-old grand- mother knows she can’t drink the water that comes out of her tap. It would make her and her family sick. She is not alone. Thousands of Oregonians near the town of Board- man live atop an aquifer so tainted with farming chemi- cals that it’s not safe to drink. State offi cials have known that for more than 30 years. And so has one source of that contamination — the Port of Morrow. Offi cials at the Ore- gon Department of Envi- ronmental Quality have known nitrate pollution in area groundwater is putting the health of largely low-in- come, Latino and immigrant families at risk. An investi- gation by the Capital Chron- icle established that little has been done about the port’s contribution to area water contamination besides mod- est fi nes and engaging in agreements that the port in turn violated. For years, port offi cials illegally pumped millions of gallons of wastewater con- taining nitrogen in excess of what was DEQ deemed safe. They piped it out from their industrial complex in Boardman to nearby farm- ers, which used it on their cropland. The nitrogen-rich water is free — a vital com- modity for farmers who grow onions, potatoes, corn and more. Once applied to the farmland, nitrogen trans- forms into nitrate that in turn can make drinking water unsafe. Scientifi c reports show groundwater in Morrow and Umatilla counties has long been polluted with nitrates above safe levels, the major- ity of which comes from area farms. The port’s excess dis- posal, year by year, is sus- pected of making the water even worse, according to DEQ and the Lower Uma- tilla Groundwater Basin Management Area Com- mittee, tasked with tackling groundwater issues in the area for the last 30 years. Port authorities and reg- ulators knew all that, yet the port’s excess pumping has continued to this day, according to a three-month investigation by the Capi- tal Chronicle involving hun- dreds of pages of agency emails, records and more than a dozen interviews. The pollution grew as the port grew, records show. Its industrial customers came and expanded fast, and port authorities chose to continue applying more of the nitro- gen-rich water to more acres of land, rather than investing in treating the water and dra- matically reducing nitrogen levels. The nitrogen, originat- ing in crops and the fer- tilizers put on area farm fi elds, is washed off produce and fl ushed into the port’s system. Government regulators who could have put a stop to it instead dallied for years. They took only modest steps to rein in the port’s pollu- tion. And health agencies charged with protecting peo- ple such as Martinez have done little to directly warn them their water isn’t safe to drink, relying on websites, community groups and their participation in local fairs and public events to do that work. For the port, what enforcement was imposed appeared to be simply the cost of business. Two reg- ulators at DEQ wrote can- didly in an internal memo Kathy Aney for Oregon Capital Chronicle Guadalupe Martinez of Boardman says a reverse-osmosis fi lter installed under the sink doesn’t work properly, and the whole- house fi lter behind her has been broken for years. Her family drinks bottled water to protect themselves from nitrate-tainted groundwater. WHAT IS NITRATE? MORE ONLINE Nitrate is a naturally occurring chemical compound. Characteristics: Colorless, tasteless and odorless. Uses: Commonly used in fertilizers and in explosives. Human consumption: Nitrate occurs naturally at safe levels in some foods and can be in drinking water supplies at levels that pose no health risk. Limits: The federal Environmental Protection Agency set the limit of 10 parts per million for nitrate in drinking water before it becomes unsafe to drink over long periods. Nitrate levels over 10 parts per million may result in serious health defects that can aff ect all ages, but are especially harmful to infants and pregnant women. Health risks: Research from the National Cancer Institute reports that consuming water with nitrate up to even fi ve parts per million over long periods of time can increase the risk of colon cancer, stomach cancer and several other cancers A longer version of this story and more photo- graphs are available online at www. hermistonherald.com. that it was cheaper for the port to pay a state fi ne than to spend millions containing the pollution. As the state prepared recently to issue its largest fi ne yet to the port, those two DEQ water specialists wrote the excess nitrate was likely to impact a community that is “disproportionately com- prised by an undereducated populus, and also by peoples of color.” Port’s promise for Northeastern Oregon The Port of Morrow was founded in 1953 with the ambition of turning arid country on the shoulder of the Columbia River into a job-producing mecca about 150 miles east of Portland. It is one of 23 such agen- cies formed in Oregon along waterways to foster eco- nomic expansion. The port has acquired 12,000 acres of surround- ing land in the decades since. That land now hosts four industrial parks that include an ethanol fuel plant, food processing factories and a growing number of data-pro- cessing centers. The port and its industrial custom- ers account for about half of the jobs in Morrow County, according to the port’s recent economic analysis. Operating from headquar- ters in Boardman, a city of about 4,700, the port is man- aged day to day by an exec- utive director, and governed by a board of fi ve who are elected by those who live within the port’s boundaries. Today, that board includes Rick Stokoe, chair, Marv Pad- berg, Jerry Healy, John Mur- ray and Joe Taylor. Stokoe has served for seven years and is the Boardman police chief. Murray, a farmer and director of the Inland Devel- opment Corp., has served for 28 years. That nonprofi t pro- vides fi ber optic internet in Eastern Oregon. Healy has served on the board for 27 years and also is president of the Morrow Development Corp., which fi nances business and devel- opment projects in Morrow County. Taylor, a farmer and a former director of the Mor- row Soil and Water Conser- vation District, has served for 16 years. Murray, a pharma- cist, was elected in 2019 to replace Larry Lindsay, who had been on the board for 52 years. Most commissioners have been in their positions throughout the port’s explo- sive growth in size, profi t and wastewater. Growing by billions of dollars and gallons of wastewater At the confl uence of the Union Pacifi c Railroad line, the Columbia River and Inter- Got a great business idea for downtown Pendleton? Join the Path to Success Grant Challenge! Each winner receives $20,000 to fund their business. Apply at pendletonurbanrenewal.com/pts OR: Print and send/deliver your application to Pendleton City Hall. Application due by 5 p.m. May 24. To qualify for this challenge: You must have at least $5,000 available to you to invest in your new business. Learn more at: pendletonurbanrenewal.com/pts state 84, the port grew into a main distribution point for forest products, grains, root vegetables, cattle and dairy products produced in Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana and Wyoming, according to the port’s 2021 economic analysis. Between 2006 and 2021, the port’s annual economic output went from $896 mil- lion to more than $2.5 billion, the port reported. Locally and regionally grown crops are trucked to Boardman, where they are processed into food prod- ucts. That requires billions of gallons of water each year. The nitrogen from fertilized crops and food products gets washed into the processing water that is then pumped into one of two storage ponds at the port, according to port offi cials. From there, the wastewater is pumped out to fi ve farms through a system of pipes and pumps. In 2012, the port handled about 2.6 billion gallons of wastewater per year. Now, it’s up to about 3.6 billion gallons of wastewater each year, according to the port. The bulk of the nitrogen in that wastewater comes from two Lamb Weston facilities at the port where French fries, hashbrowns and other potato products are made, according to port and the port’s water discharge reports. The food processors, like Lamb Weston, pay the port to handle the wastewater. Pay- ments from the processors to the port for handling the wastewater make up 22% of the port’s operating revenue. In 2001, the port made about $2 million from the waste- water. By 2021, the fee was bringing in nearly $7 million. The farmers who receive the water don’t pay for it, but do share in the costs of get- ting it to their farms. One is Jake Madison, who owns 17,000 acres in Echo, about 16 miles from the port. He’s the fourth generation on the farm, and he and his dad, for decades, have put on their crops wastewater from a Lamb Weston French fry plant in Hermiston. “I was kind of born and raised in managing a reuse farm,” Madison said, using the reuse term that is pre- ferred by port offi cials in describing their wastewater. Around 2010, he wanted to get on the port’s wastewa- ter system as well, saving him hundreds of thousands of dol- lars in fertilizer and providing access to more water. It took him fi ve years to strike a deal, in large part because port offi - cials suddenly had a pressing need for more land to use for disposing of wastewater. “We said, ‘OK, you know, given your permit and the project that we can build, there should be a good long term fi x for you,” he said. The port invested $20 mil- lion in pipes and pumps that would move wastewater to a pond on Madison’s farm to then be spread over 2,800 acres of, at that time, onions, potatoes and grass seed. But it also meant he signed up to work within the limits DEQ imposed on the volume of nitrogen-rich wastewa- ter that could be applied. He had to track how much waste- water he applied and submit to annual soil and crop test- ing. That would tell the port and DEQ how much nitrogen the crops were taking up, and how much nitrate was mak- ing it to the groundwater. But the port, not Madi- son, is responsible for see- ing the DEQ conditions were obeyed — and for facing con- sequences when they aren’t. When the port is fac- ing potential trouble with its wastewater, farmers receiv- ing the water get a call from the port. Madison said such conver- sations start with Miff Devin, its water specialist. The water permit The port’s fi rst permit from DEQ to discharge water onto area farmland came in 1974. Since then, that government permis- sion to dump nitrogen-rich water has been modifi ed and renewed dozens of times. Now, the permit requires port offi cials to monitor every step in the process to detect and track nitrogen and nitrate. That duty falls to Devin. He was hired by the port in 1998 as an IT specialist. In 2011, he added water quality specialist to his duties. He took on both roles when the port automated its water system. “How a pump works is basically a giant computer, and then that evolved,” Devin explained. As water quality super- visor, he is tasked to ensure the port is within environ- mental regulations from DEQ, the Oregon Health Authority and Oregon Water Resources Department. Part of his job is to develop ways to improve and maintain water quality, according to the port. 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