U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 7
11201 Renner Boulevard, Lenexa, KS 66219
Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, and Nine Tribal
Nations
EPA Provides Comments on Iowa Nutrient
Reduction Strategy
Agency praises effort, urges additional steps
and pledges working partnership with state organizations
Contact Information: Kris Lancaster,
913-551-7557, lancaster.kris@epa.gov
Environmental
News
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
(Lenexa, Kan., Jan. 10, 2013) - U.S. EPA
Region 7 is providing comments on the draft Iowa Nutrient Reduction Strategy
released Nov. 19, 2012. Karl Brooks, regional administrator, in a letter
commends the Iowa Department of
Natural Resources (IDNR) and Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land
Stewardship (IDALS) for developing the strategy that embraces ambitious specific
nutrient reduction targets.
“The EPA views the draft Iowa Nutrient
Reduction Strategy as a great start to set in motion actions that will begin to
yield measurable nutrient pollution reductions from point and nonpoint sources,”
said Brooks. “EPA looks forward to working collaboratively with IDALS and IDNR
on implementation of the strategy to achieve our mutual goals of water quality
improvement in Iowa.”
Iowa based its draft
strategy on EPA’s 2011 memorandum that dealt with how states should achieve
long-term reductions in nitrogen and phosphorous pollution in water
bodies.
Brooks’ letter notes that EPA supports states
leading efforts to reduce nutrient loads from point and nonpoint sources but
stresses that EPA is not mandating specific strategies or solutions. The draft
strategy raised concerns about EPA’s ecoregional criteria published in 2000.
Since then, EPA and some states have identified a range of options that can be
appropriately used for development and implementation of numeric nutrient
criteria.
EPA does offer
recommendations to strengthen the policy considerations and point and nonpoint
source sections of the document. And the Agency makes a number of
recommendations to be addressed during implementation of Iowa’s nutrient
reduction efforts.
EPA’s letter provides a more detailed
description of EPA’s comments. The letter is available at www.epa.gov/region7/water.
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