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The Upper Mississippi River Initiative aims to empower local communities, restore soil, land, and water, and address concerns such as water quality decline, floods, erosion, and contamination. Through strategies like regenerative agriculture and community engagement, the initiative seeks to improve water quality, soil health, and habitat for future generations.
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Upper Mississippi RiverInitiativeCommunity Engagement for Clean Water
UMRI Mission:To empower local communities, cultivate conversations, and bring forth actions that will restore the soil, land and water of the Upper Mississippi River Watershed for generations here and yet to come.
Concerns UMRI Aims to Address • Millions spent on policy while water quality declines • Catastrophic flood events • Le Sueur River Assessment: River is changing • Infrastructure failures – washouts, culvert sedimentation • Erosion • Sedimentation • E-coli contamination • Eutrophication • Top soil depletion • Degraded soil, unhealthy communities, poor water quality, and little habitat
UMRI Strategies and Techniques • Learn from years of political ineffectiveness and listening to what works • Expand the reach of regenerative agriculture by re-initiating community conversations • Develop opportunities to engage rural and urban citizens on what affects water quality and how they can help improve it • Absentee landowner workshops and water monitoring, rain gardens, stormwater runoff education, etc • Build partnerships with organizations already working on the ground like LWV
Regenerative Agriculture“An approach to food and farming systems that aims to regenerate topsoil, increase biodiversity, mitigate changes in water cycle, enhance ecosystem services, and strengthen the health of farming communities." (Our Sustainable Future, www. csuchico.edu 2017)
Seth Watkins Video:Healthy Farms – Cleaner Water https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Snkrkgq4Uek
Building a model of neighbors working with neighbors • Learn from those who have been successful at protecting our waters and share their stories • Seek common ground and Respect the realities of others • Everyone is trying to make a living but we can still work together to improve water quality, soil and community health • Seek cost effective strategies • Boots on the ground - Izaak Walton League members working in their communities
Minnesota River Actions • Assessing upstream drainage • Assessing River’s hydrologic changes and causes: flooding, erosion, sediment, and drainage • Engaging communities in discussions on the impacts of sedimentation and drainage
Cedar River and Tributaries Monitoring: Learning and Action • Issue: • High levels of fecal contamination observed at 83 sites over many stream conditions. • Solutions: • “Monitoring with a purpose” using teams of high school and college students, and Ikes Chapters • DNA sampling – human, cow, or pig • Productive discussions with counties and corporations • Public release of results regarding sources and solutions. • Press coverage • Moving the model to Lake Pepin and Beyond
Winona County, MN: • Water quality monitoring outreach • Community engagement – Sustain Winona and college outreach • Learning from other non-profits – Finding our “niche” in the Driftless
Together We Can Make a DifferenceFor the river, for wildlife, for your children and grandchildren Visit our Website: www.umri.org
NUTRIENT POLLUTION & THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER DRAINAGE BASIN
The League of Women Voters has a long history of water work! LWV is nearly 100 years old. We have studies and advocated on water issues since the 1920’s.
And the work goes on today! • LWV Upper Mississippi River Region • Our territory is the river basin, from the Headwaters in northern Minnesota to southern Illinois, and all tributaries • We focus on water quality • Water quantity was added 2017 • Mission: LWV UMRR will engage regional residents to foster an informed, active stewardship ethic and pathway to sustain this nationally critical conservation area through efforts to reduce nutrients in the Upper Mississippi River region.
We all contribute to nutrients flowing into the Gulf of Mexico. •Nutrients flowing from these corn and bean fields into the Gulf have created a ‘dead zone’ where anoxic conditions affect fisheries, shellfish and shrimp; poor water quality also affects wildlife along the river’s route. In 2014 there were 5,052 square miles of dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico. 2018’s dead zone is the size of New Jersey. Our four states are major contributors of nutrients that cause the dead zone.
Health Effects of Nitrate on Humans • More than 10 milligrams of nitrates per liter causes blue babies • 10 grams and less is being aggressively studied for its effect on ovarian, bladder and thyroid cancer among 23,000 women in Iowa who drank the same water for 20 years and found: • 3-fold increase of bladder cancer • 2-fold increase of ovarian cancer, 2-6 fold thyroid problems risk • 2-fold increase in birth defects in babies such as spinal bifida. • From the Center for Health Effects of Environmental Contaminants by Dr. Peter Weyer, University of Iowa
What have we accomplished so far? • Collaborations • Member of the 75-member Minnesota Environmental Partnership and help determine their legislative priorities. • Partnership with Rotary Clubs in Upper Midwest for water quality education • Co-hosted two Land Stewardship Project workshops for absentee land owners • New partnership with Izaak Walton UMRI and Land Stewardship Project for 2018 • Advocacy • Testified in Minnesota Legislature, signs on to letters of support for clean water legislation, including groundwater protection and Forever Green funding • Moderated monthly legislative “cracker barrel” sessions in Dubuque • Outreach • Sponsored 25 x 25 Gov. Dayton’s policy workshop with 100 people attending in collaboration with local watersheds and the Anoka Conservation District. • Gave Power Point presentations to 20 Leagues of Women Voters and 25 community groups from churches to schools to Rotaries, Fishers and Farmers, city councils and watershed districts. • Partnered with LWV Lake Michigan Region to hold a Water Caucus at the LWV US convention in June 2018.
Benefits of Living Plant Cover • Diversify farming operations-increase economic opportunities • Reduced erosion • Reduce runoff and nutrient leaching • Builds organic matter-sequesters carbon • Increases water storage on the landscape • Increase habitat for bees, beneficial insects and wildlife
Developing New Perennial and Winter Annual Crops to Enhance Minnesota’s Soil and Water Resources Pg. 26 EQB Report
Women Landowners: Soil Health and Rented Farm Land