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Nitrate’s Season of Reckoning

Ag Pollution in Karst Country Offers a Critical Opportunity for Soil-Friendly Farming

By Brian DeVore
January 20, 2024

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For residents of southeastern Minnesota, the past few months must seem like “The Season of the Nitrate.” It turns out nitrogen, that critical source of crop fertility, is quite adept at escaping our farm fields, and, in the form of nitrate, polluting groundwater. So much so that scientists, government officials, and physicians now recognize it as a significant threat to human health in the eight — Dodge, Fillmore, Goodhue, Houston, Mower, Olmsted, Wabasha, and Winona — counties that make up the “karst region” of southeastern Minnesota. More than 9,000 residents in that region were or still are at risk of consuming water at or above the EPA standard for nitrates (10 milligrams per liter), according to a letter the agency released in November.

The Land Stewardship Project has spent much of the past several months working with our members and allies in the region to help them grapple with this issue, and for good reason: virtually all of the drinking water in the area comes from underground aquifers, which are extremely vulnerable to being contaminated by pollutants such as nitrate. And when nitrate is detected in the water, it’s a safe bet that other chemicals, such as pesticides, are also polluting the aquifer.

Much of the media attention related to this issue has focused on how it puts people concerned about clean water at odds with the agricultural community. Actually, this offers a prime opportunity for farmers to put in place practices that will not only keep nitrates and other ag pollutants out of our drinking water, but begin the process of disrupting the corn-bean-feedlot machine in a way that it helps them build soil health profitably.

 

Farmers in southeastern Minnesota are utilizing practices like cover cropping to build soil health profitably while keeping nitrates out of the water. (Photo by Dodd Demas)

 

But there is a reason the majority of Midwestern farmers have abandoned diversity and are focusing on input-intensive crops like corn: government incentives make it just about the only way to remain viable. Building agricultural systems based on diversity and healthy soil requires non-farmers to support ag practices that create a public good. In other words, it’s time for a little teamwork.

That doesn’t mean focusing completely on proactive incentives and rewards for good farming practices to the exclusion of everything else. After all, the first step in addressing a problem is acknowledging that you have one in the first place. And it’s pretty clear what the source of the problem is: fertilizer and liquid manure runoff from crop fields. According to the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, 70% of nitrate pollution in Minnesota comes from commercial fertilizer escaping cropland alone.

That’s what prompted LSP and our allies to file a petition in April calling on the Environmental Protection Agency to use its emergency authority under the Safe Drinking Water Act to address the fact that nitrate contamination is causing “an imminent and substantial endangerment to public health” in the karst region of southeastern Minnesota. The EPA responded by requesting that the state’s Department of Agriculture, Department of Health, and the Pollution Control Agency address the issue. Earlier this month, those agencies, in turn, released an “Addressing Nitrate in Southeast Minnesota”  work plan. Like I said — it’s been a busy few months for discussing nitrate pollution.

So, the fall of 2023 (and now the winter of 2024) will be remembered as a time when the nitrate pollution issue got the attention of regulatory agencies, which is good news for southeastern Minnesota residents and anyone else who is drawing their drinking water from farm country aquifers. But what is equally exciting are the results emerging from an effort to incentivize proactive solutions to the problem.

The Olmsted County Soil and Water Conservation District, which is in the heart of karst country, has launched an innovative effort to create the kind of year-round root structure that soaks up nitrates while making farming less reliant on continuous plantings of fertilizer-intensive crops like corn. Providing farmers incentives to put in place soil-friendly practices like cover cropping is nothing new: SWCDs, the USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service, and even nonprofit environmental and regenerative ag organizations have been providing such assistance for years. But as the recent Land Stewardship Letter reports, the Olmsted County Groundwater Protection and Soil Health Program takes a more holistic approach to building soil that is water-friendly.

For sure, the program pays farmers for planting cover crops, but it goes a couple steps further by providing financial incentives to convert corn and soybean ground to soil-friendly crops such as oats or hay, as well as perennial pasture that’s rotationally grazed (under a managed rotational grazing system, livestock manure and urine evolve from being waste products to fuel for building healthy soil biology). A key part of the cover cropping portion of the Olmsted County program is that farmers get paid for allowing the covers to grow at least 12 inches high before terminating them. That’s important: research shows that the taller you allow a cover crop to grow, the better it is at soaking up excess nitrates and building the soil’s overall health.

This past fall, I spent time talking to farmers enrolled in the program and seeing firsthand what practices they had put in place, and I came away impressed with how this initiative is helping producers take a big picture view of building soil health and doing it in a way that bolsters their financial bottom line. Overall, the program is based on promoting the five principles of soil health that were popularized by soil health pioneers in North Dakota: armor the soil, minimize disturbance, increase plant diversity, keep roots in the soil as long as possible, and integrate livestock.

A little over a year into its implementation, the Olmsted County Groundwater Protection and Soil Health Program has resulted in thousands of acres of cover crops being planted, as well as land diversified into small grains, hay, and pasture. The SWCD estimates that as a result of acres enrolled in the program, along with fields managed under similar practices that aren’t officially part of the initiative, over half-a-million pounds of nitrates have been kept out of the area’s water.

This is exciting stuff. It remains to be seen what the overall, long-term results of such a program will be (it’s scheduled to be a five-year initiative), but if it keeps striking that balance between clean water and profitable farming, it could serve as a statewide, or even national, model for promoting the kind of holistic farming systems that are truly regenerative. This comes at a time when farmers LSP works with through our Soil Builders’ Network are proving they can build soil health profitably, even in a year like 2023, when extreme drought threw a monkey wrench into a lot of people’s plans. In addition, as LSP outlined in a recent Myth Buster, there are increasing signs that farmers may not need to be applying as much commercial nitrogen fertilizer as once thought in order to be productive and profitable; it turns out we’re not giving biologically active soil enough credit for cooking up its own fertility. The practices promoted by the Olmsted SWCD program can help soil develop that kind of self-sufficiency.

The timing of nitrate pollution’s moment in the spotlight couldn’t be better. The problem has been clearly defined — now let’s show the public and policymakers how innovative farmers can address this issue long into the future. As the letter LSP and its allies sent to the MDA, MDH, and MPCA stated: “Our region’s farmers are the solution to cleaning up our region’s drinking water.”

And there are farmers who are up to the challenge.

“It’s not demonizing to be realistic about the problems we face in agriculture,” Martin Larsen, a crop farmer and Olmsted County SWCD conservation technician, told a standing room-only crowd at a Water Quality Forum held in Lanesboro a week before Thanksgiving. “As a farmer…I’m very real about my role. I do think as farmers there are many of us who play a role and contribute to the science and want to be part of the solution. There are solutions that are collective.”

The crowd, which was acutely aware of all the bad water news flowing through their area these days, responded with thunderous applause.

LSP managing editor Brian DeVore can be reached via e-mail. For more on LSP’s work related to clean water in southeastern Minnesota, contact LSP organizer Martin Moore. For more on our work helping farmers adopt practices that build soil health profitably, contact LSP’s Alex Romano.

Category: Blog
Tags: cover crops • EPA • groundwater • karst • managed rotational grazing • MDA • MDH • MPCA • nitrates • Olmsted County Groundwater Protection and Soil Health Program • Olmsted County SWCD • soil health • water quality

Upcoming Events

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October 2025

Tuesday October 7

6:30 pm – 8:00 pm
Book Event: We Can Do Better: Collected Writings on Land, Conservation, and Public Policy
Tuesday October 7
6:30 pm – 8:00 pm
Book Event: We Can Do Better: Collected Writings on Land, Conservation, and Public Policy
The Landing Market, 211 College Dr, Decorah, IA 52101, USA

The Johnson Center for Land Stewardship Policy is excited to share that one of our its primary pillars of work — a published collection of Paul Johnson’s writings —  is set for release on Oct. 2.  The book features a brief biography and a discussion of Paul’s ideas within the historical and future contexts of private lands conservation. Details on the event are available here.

For details on We Can Do Better: Collected Writings on Land, Conservation, and Public Policy click here.

 

Friday October 10

8:30 am – 3:00 pm
Weaving a Wider Community: Seeing & Countering Racism in Our Backyard
Friday October 10
8:30 am – 3:00 pm
Weaving a Wider Community: Seeing & Countering Racism in Our Backyard
111 N 1st St, Montevideo, MN 56265, USA

Join LSP and CURE for a community event at the Land Stewardship Project office in Montevideo (111 N. First St.), from 8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m., on Friday, Oct. 10. This event includes lunch catered by El Mana; please register by Oct. 3 to be included in the food count.

You can RSVP here.

The Racial Equity Conference, organized by the Greater Minnesota Partnership of the Facilitating Racial Equity Collaborative, has been specifically designed to bring engaging content to local communities through a unique pairing of online speakers and in-person local sessions. The morning’s online content will include a conversation focused on seeing and countering racism in rural communities, moderated by Eryn Gee Killough, paired with two outstanding keynote speakers, Jenna Grey Eagle and Ron Ferguson, who have experience working in rural communities. 

This online content will be exclusively available to local community gatherings. Each gathering will gear their in-person activity to their specific community with the goal of extending the impact of the conference to others throughout the following year. Join LSP and CURE for this western Minnesota gathering, or if a different location works better for you, check out all the local gatherings on the FREC site,

If you have any questions, do not hesitate to reach out. LSP’s Nick Olson can be reached via e-mail at nicko@landstewardshipproject.org.

9:00 am – 3:00 pm
Intensive Small-Scale Market Gardening Bus Tour
Friday October 10
9:00 am – 3:00 pm
Intensive Small-Scale Market Gardening Bus Tour
Leatherdale Equine Center, 1801 Dudley Ave, St Paul, MN 55108, USA

Explore profitable small-scale farming (1–5 acres) and soil care. Visit a cooperative incubator farm and a thriving suburban market garden. Learn about cover crops, reduced tillage, high tunnel soil health, and support for growers.

This is the second tour in a three-part soil health bus tour series. Participants can sign up for just one, two, or all three tours. Register at https://z.umn.edu/vegetablebustours. The cost is $15 (flat fee, covers 1, 2, or 3 tours). There are more details in the attached flyer.

Saturday October 11

11:00 am – 2:00 pm
LSP-COPAL Visita a la Granja | Farm Tour
Saturday October 11
11:00 am – 2:00 pm
LSP-COPAL Visita a la Granja | Farm Tour
36919 County 57 Blvd, Dennison, MN 55018, USA

Building off the success of last year’s farm event with COPAL in Austin, Minn., this year Land Stewardship Project and COPAL members and supporters will gather at the Young-Walser Family Farm in Dennison, Minn. for a festive and delicious farm tour on Saturday, Oct. 11, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. We invite you to come and meet new folks, learn new skills, and try new food! 
 
This year’s COPAL-LSP farm event offers a little something for everyone: 
 
🍯 Honey sampling and the opportunity to purchase from Homestead Honey Farm. 
 
🍎 Apple cider pressing and tasting. (BTW, we’re still looking for an apple press if you or a farmer friend have one nearby we could borrow for this event!) 
 
🌽 Nixtamalization workshop and fresh, homemade tortillas, made with corn grown by LSP and COPAL members at the Young-Walser Family Farm! 
 
🍅 Salsa making and cricket-eating competitions! Yes, you heard that right —we’ll have the opportunity to sample crickets, a delectable crispy and savory snack commonly enjoyed throughout Mexico and Central America. Stay tuned for details on how to enter either competition. 
 
🥾 A tour of the Young-Walser farm, nestled in the beautiful Sogn Valley not far from Cannon Falls, Minn. Enjoy a tromp through the corn and squash fields and hike in the nearby woods. 
 
🌮 A shared meal and opportunity to hear from LSP and COPAL organizers about our participation in the Immigrant Defense Network. 

Let us know you can make it to ensure we order enough food and supplies! Carpools from Minneapolis and Rochester will be available to all attendees. 

________________________________________________

¡Únete a LSP + COPAL para nuestro recorrido anual comunitario en la granja!
Un espacio divertido para tod@s donde exploraremos la agricultura, aprenderemos sobre el campo y participaremos en actividades prácticas. ¡Uno de los momentos más especiales será hacer tortillas frescas junt@s!

Compartiremos un delicioso almuerzo comunitario, preparando tacos en estilo potluck (tipo convivio). Te invitamos a traer un platillo o acompañamiento para compartir.

También estás invitado@ a llegar temprano (desde las 9 AM) para ayudar a cosechar calabazas que sembramos. Puedes llevarte algunas a casa, y el resto se donará a un banco de alimentos local.

El Land Stewardship Project (LSP) es una organización aliada de COPAL que trabaja por sistemas alimentarios y agrícolas más sostenibles y justos. LSP y COPAL están unidas en su lucha por instituciones democráticas sólidas, comunidades saludables y acogedoras, y una ética de cuidado hacia la tierra y las personas que nos alimentan.

Tuesday October 14

11:00 am – 12:00 pm
Birds as Pest Control Allies on the Farm
Tuesday October 14
11:00 am – 12:00 pm
Birds as Pest Control Allies on the Farm
Online

This 10-lesson Wild Farm Alliance virtual course teaches agricultural professionals and farmers how to support beneficial birds and manage pest birds on farms. By learning how to assess the farm’s avian needs and opportunities, farms can be designed to provide for a diversity of beneficial birds. 

If pest birds are a problem, they can be discouraged with specific practices during the shorter periods when they cause damage. The sessions cover the latest research, tools and resources, and are given by experts in avian pest control, entomology, ornithology and conservation. While many topics and species are specific to the Midwest, most of the principles discussed are applicable across regions. 

Continuing Education Credits have been requested and are expected to be approved from American Society of Agronomy.

For details and to register, click here. 

The Course Schedule:

LESSON 1

Why Birds Belong on the Farm: Biodiversity, Pest Control & A Thriving Landscape

Tuesday, September 23, 2 p.m. CT


LESSON 2

Birds as Pest Control Allies on the Farm

Tuesday, October 14, 11 a.m. CT


LESSON 3

Birds in the Balance: Pest Control Services Across Crop Types

Tuesday, November 4, 11 a.m. CT


LESSON 4

Integrating Habitat into Croplands: Prairie Strips and Bird Conservation

Tuesday, December 2, 11 a.m. CT


LESSON 5

Birds on the Farm: Balancing Biodiversity and Food Safety

Tuesday, January 13, 11 a.m. CT


LESSON 6

Beyond the Crop: Birds, Biodiversity, and the Power of Edge Habitat

Tuesday, February 3, 11 a.m. CT


LESSON 7

Bridging Forestry, Farming, and Habitat

Tuesday, February 24, 11 a.m. CT


LESSON 8

Perennial Pathways: Agroforestry for Birds and Biodiversity on Farms

Tuesday, March 17, 11 a.m. CT


LESSON 9

Birds on the Range: How Grazing Practices Shape Habitat for Grassland Species

Tuesday, April 7, 11 a.m. CT


LESSON 10

Birds at Risk: How Pesticides Shape Safety on Agricultural Lands

Tuesday, April 28, 11 a.m. CT

View Full Calendar

Recent Posts

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  • Area Farmers Share Land Access & Marketing Concerns with Legislators From 9 States September 23, 2025
  • Land Line: Monopolies, Crop Rut, MISA, Soil Microbes, Corn Production Costs, Nitrates, Kernza September 15, 2025
  • Land Line: MAHA, Bumper Corn Crop, Oats, Defining Regenerative Ag, Feeding the World, CAFO Hotspots August 28, 2025

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