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Indiana - Fort Wayne Drinking Water, Local Partnerships
Fort Wayne's wake-up call came in 1996 with public reaction to a published
report that found pesticide residues in the city's drinking water, which comes
from the St. Joseph River. "We decided it wasn't good enough just to sit in
Fort Wayne and continue just treating the water without looking upstream and
helping make the system better there," says Doug Pooler, Superintendent of
the city's filtration plant. Pooler began reaching out to upstream counties and
organizations--such as the soil and water conservation districts (SWCD), Natural
Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), and others in the St. Joseph River
watershed--to organize a conference that eventually led to the formation of a
watershed-wide initiative.
It's complicated. The St. Joseph River, which rises in Michigan, flows
through northwest Ohio and drains portions of Steuben, DeKalb, and Allen
counties in the northeastern corner of Indiana (the western half of Allen County
flows west into the Mississippi system). In Fort Wayne (Allen County), the St.
Joseph joins the Ohio-born St. Mary's River to form the Maumee River, which
flows east into Lake Erie at Toledo, Ohio.
Since the early 1990s, miles of buffers have been installed in the Maumee
basin on both sides of the Indiana-Ohio border, primarily with funding through
two "319 grants" from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to the
Maumee River Basin Commission. These filter strips are under five-year contracts
and, although they allow some cropping and haying, may count in the National
Conservation Buffer Initiative's goal of 2 million miles. NRCS and the
conservation districts have been promoting filters and helping farm operators
design and install them. Allen County Executive Director Greg Lake says the
district targeted watersheds and contacted county surveyors to identify key
drainages, and then "made a concerted effort by mail, phone, and knocking
on doors to get a long, contiguous filter." In DeKalb County, NRCS District
Conservationist David Hines also directed his pitch. "First, we targeted
three different drainage areas and made sure everyone was contacted by letter
and a follow-up visit. We also got some locals to help, so we had
neighbor-to-neighbor contacts."
More recently, farmers in both counties have been enrolling land in the
continuous Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) for buffers, primarily in filter
strips and grassed waterways. In Allen County, NRCS District Conservationist
David Lamm says he's had quite a bit of success with CRP. "It's a simple
program and, with the dollars, easy to sell. There are several hundred acres of
CRP filter strips and 70 to 85 contracts." One farmer rents some of his
filter strips to the state for a snowmobile trail that runs along several miles
of creek-side filter strips; another has his filter strip used for the daily
walk of a neighbor who had a heart transplant.
In DeKalb County, Jack Ruger is one of the St. Joseph watershed farmers Hines
has been assisting. Ruger raises no-till corn, soybeans, and wheat on about 300
acres. Twelve acres are enrolled in CRP for a 99-foot-wide filter strip along
about 5/8 mile on both sides of a small tributary of Little Cedar Creek. Ruger
has planted trees, native prairie grass, and shrubs on the filter strip, and
restored a small wetland. "We should be thinking about restoring more of
our wetlands," Ruger says. "It would help Fort Wayne as far as
flooding is concerned, and it helps cleanse the water. Wetlands are good for
holding water and protecting groundwater, and they benefit wildlife. In terms of
my watershed, we need to restore some of the wetlands we've drained, although
it's a problem because that's our most productive farm ground."
Another St. Joseph tributary, Fish Creek, drains 70,000 acres--or 110 square
miles--is 30 miles long and has 90 miles of tributaries. Fish Creek also has
freshwater mussels--31 different species, three of them endangered--and 43
different species of fish. In other words, it's rich. The Nature Conservancy (TNC),
which often purchases land or easements, became interested in that wealth... and
in protecting it. TNC's Fish Creek Coordinator Larry Clemens says their approach
is evolving. "Strategically, we can buy a few locations, but we must work
with landowners. We can't buy the whole 110 square-mile watershed!" He's
been working with farmers on controlling soil erosion, which is the biggest
threat to mussels, and restoring the riparian corridor. In Fish Creek, as
elsewhere in the Maumee Basin, partnerships are crucial; and countless
individuals, agencies, and organizations are involved. "By combining
government programs for filter strips with special money given to TNC, the
National Turkey Federation, and Pheasants Forever," Clemens says,
"we've been able to put together some pretty attractive projects for
farmers. We're helping to buy no-till equipment and helping with BMPs [best
management practices]. We've also helped a small town upgrade its sewage
treatment plant and we have installed fencing. There are lots of community-based
projects."
The St. Joseph River Watershed Initiative is another group TNC is cooperating
with. This is the evolving coalition that grew out of the conference that Pooler
organized in Fort Wayne. Its purpose is to improve water quality "through
educational activities and voluntary actions of land users." By the spring
of 1998, what began with water quality assessment and monitoring, had a
15-member board of directors--one of them Clemens--from the three St. Joseph
states. It now has a project coordinator, April Ingle, who is a 1996 Purdue
University graduate in natural resources and environmental science. "We
have asked representatives from every interest group we could think of to serve
on the board," she says. "It's a great program and I'm really proud to
be a part of it." The Initiative is focused on locally led projects within
individual watersheds and sub-watersheds throughout the Maumee basin--up and
downstream from Fort Wayne. Says Pooler, "After all, everybody's downstream
from somebody!"
All the way downstream is Toledo, Ohio, and the mouth of the Maumee on Lake
Erie. There are 13.5 million tons of cargo shipped annually through the Port of
Toledo, and nearly 25 percent of that comes from farms. Farmers have been
shipping not just their grain, but also their topsoil to the Port of Toledo--the
sediment that must be dredged from the harbor to enable shipping comes from
farms throughout the Maumee basin, the St. Joseph and St. Mary's rivers, Fish
Creek, Cedar Creek, and all the other tributaries. These upstream "siltation
avoidance" practices are supported in part by the Army Corps of Engineers
and are designed to reduce the Corps' need to dredge Toledo Harbor. DeKalb
County's Ruger would like to see the interstate effort on the Maumee basin
continue. "If we can stop runoff, we shouldn't have to dredge." Buffer
strips, conservation tillage, and other upland conservation practices are making
another kind of difference--Lake Erie is healthier now than it was a decade ago.
Fort Wayne has been monitoring the results of the northeast Indiana projects
and pre-testing the raw water it treats, using immunoassay equipment that can
sample for specific chemicals and render results within hours. This enables the
city to adjust its filtration according to need and keep its customers informed;
but, it also provides watershed partners a measure of the success of their
efforts to reduce the raw water levels of nutrients, pesticides, pathogens, and
sedimentation in the first place.
As he considers improvements that may be needed to the Fort Wayne treatment
system, Pooler stresses the importance of watershed-wide cooperation. He says it
would be interesting "if we could take the money for those projects and
spread it around among the farmers to put in best management practices, filter
strips, grassed waterways, etc. But, the problem is it's a voluntary system.
We're trying to get the message to farmers to keep levels low, to improve water
quality without regulation. It's better for them--especially if it's true that
the 10 percent of farmers who do 80 percent of the best management practices are
also making the most money. The message we need to get to farmers is that these
things can be done, and they won't cost a lot of money. If they don't do it
voluntarily, eventually the government will regulate more. After all, Fort Wayne
treats only about 5 percent of St. Joseph River water; the other 95 percent
flows down untreated and joins other streams. Unless we do something for the
river, for habitat; if something doesn't get done, you won't be able to fish,
swim, or boat--and we won't make it. Things won't get any better unless we do
something about it."
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