455E.1 Title.
This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Groundwater Protection Act".
455E.10 Joint duties--local authority.
1. All state agencies shall consider groundwater protection policies in the administration of their programs. Local agencies shall consider groundwater protection policies in their programs. All agencies shall cooperate with the department in disseminating public information and education materials concerning the use and protection of groundwater, in collecting groundwater management data, and in conducting research on technologies to prevent or remedy contamination of groundwater.
2. Political subdivisions are authorized and encouraged to implement groundwater protection policies within their respective jurisdictions, provided that implementation is at least as stringent but consistent with the rules of the department.
455E.11 Groundwater protection fund established--appropriations.
1. A groundwater protection fund is created in the state treasury. Moneys received from sources designated for purposes related to groundwater monitoring and groundwater quality standards shall be deposited in the fund. Notwithstanding section 8.33, any unexpended balances in the groundwater protection fund and in any of the accounts within the groundwater protection fund at the end of each fiscal year shall be retained in the fund and the respective accounts within the fund. Notwithstanding section 12C.7, subsection 2, interest or earnings on investments or time deposits of the moneys in the groundwater protection fund or in any of the accounts within the groundwater protection fund shall be credited to the groundwater protection fund or the respective accounts within the groundwater protection fund. The fund may be used for the purposes established for each account within the fund.
The director shall include in the departmental budget prepared pursuant to section 455A.4, subsection 1, paragraph "c", a proposal for the use of groundwater protection fund moneys, and a report of the uses of the groundwater protection fund moneys appropriated in the previous fiscal year.
The secretary of agriculture shall submit with the report prepared pursuant to section 7A.3 a proposal for the use of groundwater protection fund moneys, and a report of the uses of the groundwater protection fund moneys appropriated in the previous fiscal year.
2. The following accounts are created within the groundwater protection fund:
a. A solid waste account. Moneys received from the tonnage fee imposed under section 455B.310 and from other sources designated for environmental protection purposes in relation to sanitary disposal projects shall be deposited in the solid waste account. Moneys shall be allocated as follows:
(1) One dollar and seventy-five cents of the tonnage fee shall be used for funding alternatives to landfills and shall be allocated as follows:
(a) Fifty thousand dollars to the department to implement the special waste authorization program.
(b) Sixty-five thousand dollars to the waste management assistance division of the department to be used for the by- products and waste search service at the university of northern Iowa.
(c) The remaining funds shall be used by the department to develop and implement demonstration projects for landfill alternatives to solid waste disposal including recycling programs.
(2) The remaining one dollar and fifty-five cents shall be used as follows:
(a) Forty-eight percent to the department to be used for the following purposes:
(i) Eight thousand dollars shall be transferred to the Iowa department of public health for departmental duties required under section 135.11, subsections 20 and 21, and section 139.35.
(ii) The administration and enforcement of a groundwater monitoring program and other required programs relating to solid waste management.
(iii) The development of guidelines for groundwater monitoring at sanitary disposal projects as defined in section 455B.301.
(iv) The waste management assistance division of the department.
(b) Sixteen percent to the university of northern Iowa to develop and maintain the Iowa waste reduction center for the safe and economic management of solid waste and hazardous substances.
(c) Six and one-half percent for the department to establish a program to provide competitive grants to regional coordinating councils for projects in regional economic development centers related to a by-products and waste exchange system. Grantees under this program shall coordinate activities with other available state or multistate waste exchanges, including but not limited to the by-products and waste search service at the university of northern Iowa. The department shall consult with the Iowa department of economic development and the waste reduction center at the university of northern Iowa in establishing criteria for and the awarding of grants under this program. The department shall expend not more than thirty thousand dollars of the moneys appropriated under this subparagraph subdivision to contract with the by- products and waste search service at the university of northern Iowa to provide training and other technical services to grantees under the program. If regional economic development centers cease to exist, the department shall transfer existing contracts to one or more community colleges or councils of governments and shall revise the criteria and rules for this program to allow community colleges or councils of governments to be applicants for competitive grants.
(d) Nine and one-half percent to the department to establish permanent household hazardous waste collection sites so that both urban and rural populations are served and so that collection services are available to the public on a regular basis.
(e) Three percent to the department for payment of transportation costs related to household hazardous waste collection programs.
(f) Eight and one-half percent to the department to provide additional toxic cleanup days and for the natural resource geographic information system required under section 455E.8, subsection 6. Departmental rules adopted for implementation of toxic cleanup days shall provide sufficient flexibility to respond to the household hazardous material collection needs of both small and large communities.
(g) Three percent for the Iowa department of economic development to establish, in cooperation with the department of natural resources, a marketing initiative to assist Iowa businesses producing recycling or reclamation equipment or services, recyclable products, or products from recycled materials to expand into national markets. Efforts shall include the reuse and recycling of sawdust.
(h) Five and one-half percent to the department for the provision of assistance to public and private entities in developing and implementing waste reduction and minimization programs for Iowa industries.
b. An agriculture management account. Moneys collected from the groundwater protection fee levied pursuant to section 200.8, subsection 4, the portion of the fees collected pursuant to sections 206.8, subsection 2, and 206.12, subsection 3, and other moneys designated for the purpose of agriculture management shall be deposited in the agriculture management account. The agriculture management account shall be used for the following purposes:
(1) Nine thousand dollars of the account is appropriated to the Iowa department of public health for carrying out the departmental duties under section 135.11, subsections 20 and 21, and section 139.35.
(2) Two hundred thousand dollars of the moneys deposited in the agriculture management account is appropriated to the department of agriculture and land stewardship for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1987, and ending June 30, 1988, for the demonstration projects regarding agriculture drainage wells and sinkholes. Any remaining balance of the appropriation made for the purpose of funding such demonstration projects for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1987, and ending June 30, 1988, shall not revert to the account, notwithstanding section 8.33, but shall remain available for the purpose of funding such demonstration projects during the fiscal period beginning July 1, 1988, and ending June 30, 1990.
(3) Of the remaining moneys in the account:
(a) Thirty-five percent is appropriated annually for the Leopold center for sustainable agriculture at Iowa state university of science and technology.
(b) Two percent is appropriated annually to the department for the purpose of administering grants to counties and conducting oversight of county-based programs for the testing of private rural water supply wells, private rural water supply well sealing, and the proper closure of private rural abandoned wells and cisterns. Not more than thirty-five percent of the moneys is appropriated annually for grants to counties for the purpose of conducting programs of private rural water supply testing, private rural water supply well sealing, the proper closure of private rural abandoned wells and cisterns, or any combination thereof.
A county applying for grants under this subparagraph subdivision shall submit only one application. To be eligible for a grant, a county must have adopted standards for private water supply and private disposal facilities at least as stringent as the standards adopted by the commission. During each fiscal year, the amount granted each eligible applicant shall be the total funds available divided by the number of eligible counties applying. Upon receipt of the grant, the county may apply the funds to any one or more of the above three programs.
Not more than six percent of the moneys is appropriated annually to the state hygienic laboratory to assist in well testing. For purposes of this subparagraph subdivision, "cistern" means an artificial reservoir constructed underground for the purpose of storing rainwater.
(c) The department shall allocate a sum not to exceed seventy-nine thousand dollars of the moneys appropriated for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1987, and ending June 30, 1988, for the preparation of a detailed report and plan for the establishment on July 1, 1988, of the center for health effects of environmental contamination. The plan for establishing the center shall be presented to the general assembly on or before January 15, 1988. The report shall include the assemblage of all existing data relating to Iowa drinking water supplies, including characteristics of source, treatment, presence of contaminants, precise location, and usage patterns to facilitate data retrieval and use in research; and detailed organizational plans, research objectives, and budget projections for the anticipated functions of the center in subsequent years. The department may allocate annually a sum not to exceed nine percent of the moneys of the account to the center, beginning July 1, 1988.
(d) Thirteen percent of the moneys is appropriated annually to the department of agriculture and land stewardship for financial incentive programs related to agricultural drainage wells and sinkholes, for studies and administrative costs relating to sinkholes and agricultural drainage wells programs. Of the moneys allocated for financial incentive programs, the department may reimburse landowners for engineering costs associated with voluntarily closing agricultural drainage wells. The financial incentives allocated for voluntary closing of agricultural drainage wells shall be provided on a cost-share basis which shall not exceed fifty percent of the estimated cost or fifty percent of the actual cost, whichever is less. Engineering costs do not include construction costs, including costs associated with earth moving.
c. A household hazardous waste account. The moneys collected pursuant to section 455F.7 and moneys collected pursuant to section 29C.8A which are designated for deposit, shall be deposited in the household hazardous waste account. Two thousand dollars is appropriated annually to the Iowa department of public health to carry out departmental duties under section 135.11, subsections 20 and 21, and section 139.35. The remainder of the account shall be used to fund toxic cleanup days and the efforts of the department to support a collection system for household hazardous materials, including public education programs, training, and consultation of local governments in the establishment and operation of permanent collection systems, and the management of collection sites, education programs, and other activities pursuant to chapter 455F, including the administration of the household hazardous materials permit program by the department of revenue and finance.
The department shall submit to the general assembly, annually on or before January 1, an itemized report which includes but is not limited to the total amount of moneys collected and the sources of the moneys collected, the amount of moneys expended for administration of the programs funded within the account, and an itemization of any other expenditures made within the previous fiscal year.
d. A storage tank management account. All fees collected pursuant to section 455B.473, subsection 5, and section 455B.479, shall be deposited in the storage tank management account, except those moneys deposited into the Iowa comprehensive petroleum underground storage tank fund pursuant to section 455B.479. Funds shall be expended for the following purposes:
(1) One thousand dollars is appropriated annually to the Iowa department of public health to carry out departmental duties under section 135.11, subsections 20 and 21, and section 139.35.
(2) Twenty-three percent of the proceeds of the fees imposed pursuant to section 455B.473, subsection 5, and section 455B.479 shall be deposited in the account annually, up to a maximum of three hundred fifty thousand dollars. If twenty-three percent of the proceeds exceeds three hundred fifty thousand dollars, the excess shall be deposited into the fund created in section 455G.3. Three hundred fifty thousand dollars is appropriated from the storage tank management account to the department of natural resources for the administration of a state storage tank program pursuant to chapter 455B, division IV, part 8, and for programs which reduce the potential for harm to the environment and the public health from storage tanks.
(3) The remaining funds in the account are appropriated annually to the Iowa comprehensive petroleum underground storage tank fund.
e. An oil overcharge account. The oil overcharge moneys distributed by the United States department of energy, and approved for the energy related components of the groundwater protection strategy available through the energy conservation trust created in section 473.11, shall be deposited in the oil overcharge account as appropriated by the general assembly. The oil overcharge account shall be used for the following purposes:
(1) The following amounts are appropriated to the department of natural resources to implement its responsibilities pursuant to section 455E.8:
(a) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1987 and ending June 30, 1988, eight hundred sixty thousand dollars is appropriated.
(b) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1988 and ending June 30, 1989, six hundred fifty thousand dollars is appropriated.
(c) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1989 and ending June 30, 1990, six hundred thousand dollars is appropriated.
(d) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1990 and ending June 30, 1991, five hundred thousand dollars is appropriated.
(e) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1991 and ending June 30, 1992, five hundred thousand dollars is appropriated.
(2) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1987 and ending June 30, 1988, five hundred sixty thousand dollars is appropriated to the department of natural resources for assessing rural, private water supply quality.
(3) For the fiscal period beginning July 1, 1987 and ending June 30, 1989, one hundred thousand dollars is appropriated annually to the department of natural resources for the administration of a groundwater monitoring program at sanitary landfills.
(4) The following amounts are appropriated to the Iowa state water resources research institute to provide competitive grants to colleges, universities, and private institutions within the state for the development of research and education programs regarding alternative disposal methods and groundwater protection:
(a) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1987 and ending June 30, 1988, one hundred twenty thousand dollars is appropriated.
(b) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1988 and ending June 30, 1989, one hundred thousand dollars is appropriated.
(c) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1989 and ending June 30, 1990, one hundred thousand dollars is appropriated.
(5) The following amounts are appropriated to the department of natural resources to develop and implement demonstration projects for landfill alternatives to solid waste disposal, including recycling programs:
(a) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1987 and ending June 30, 1988, seven hundred sixty thousand dollars is appropriated.
(b) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1988 and ending June 30, 1989, eight hundred fifty thousand dollars is appropriated.
(6) For the fiscal period beginning July 1, 1987 and ending June 30, 1988, eight hundred thousand dollars is appropriated to the Leopold center for sustainable agriculture.
(7) Seven million five hundred thousand dollars is appropriated to the agriculture energy management fund created under chapter 161B for the fiscal period beginning July 1, 1987 and ending June 30, 1992, to develop nonregulatory programs to implement integrated farm management of farm chemicals for environmental protection, energy conservation, and farm profitability; interactive public and farmer education; and applied studies on best management practices and best appropriate technology for chemical use efficiency and reduction.
(8) The following amounts are appropriated to the department of natural resources to continue the Big Spring demonstration project in Clayton county.
(a) For the fiscal period beginning July 1, 1987 and ending June 30, 1990, seven hundred thousand dollars is appropriated annually.
(b) For the fiscal period beginning July 1, 1990 and ending June 30, 1992, five hundred thousand dollars is appropriated annually.
(9) For the fiscal period beginning July 1, 1987 and ending June 30, 1990, one hundred thousand dollars is appropriated annually to the department of agriculture and land stewardship to implement a targeted education program on best management practices and technologies for the mitigation of groundwater contamination from or closure of agricultural drainage wells, abandoned wells, and sinkholes.
455E.2 Definitions.
As used in this chapter, unless the context otherwise requires:
1. "Active cleanup" means removal, treatment, or isolation of a contaminant from groundwater through the directed efforts of humans.
2. "Commission" means the environmental protection commission created under section 455A.6.
3. "Contaminant" means any chemical, ion, radionuclide, synthetic organic compound, microorganism, waste, or other substance which does not occur naturally in groundwater or which naturally occurs at a lower concentration.
4. "Contamination" means the direct or indirect introduction into groundwater of any contaminant caused in whole or in part by human activities.
5. "Department" means the department of natural resources created under section 455A.2.
6. "Director" means the director of the department.
7. "Groundwater" means any water of the state, as defined in section 455B.171, which occurs beneath the surface of the earth in a saturated geological formation of rock or soil.
8. "Passive cleanup" means the removal or treatment of a contaminant in groundwater through management practices or the construction of barriers, trenches, and other similar facilities for prevention of contamination, as well as the use of natural processes such as groundwater recharge, natural decay, and chemical or biological decomposition.
455E.3 Findings.
The general assembly finds that:
1. Groundwater is a precious and vulnerable natural resource. The vast majority of persons in the state depend on groundwater as a drinking water source. Agriculture, commerce, and industry also depend heavily on groundwater. Historically, the majority of Iowa's groundwater has been usable for these purposes without treatment. Protection of groundwater is essential to the health, welfare, and economic prosperity of all citizens of the state.
2. Many activities of humans, including the manufacturing, storing, handling, and application to land of pesticides and fertilizers; the disposal of solid and hazardous wastes; the storing and handling of hazardous substances; and the improper construction and the abandonment of wells and septic systems have resulted in groundwater contamination throughout the state.
3. Knowledge of the health effects of contaminants varies greatly. The long-term detriment to human health from synthetic organic compounds in particular is largely unknown but is of concern.
4. Any detectable quantity of a synthetic organic compound in groundwater is unnatural and undesirable.
5. The movement of groundwater, and the movement of contaminants in groundwater, are often difficult to ascertain or control. Decontamination is difficult and expensive to accomplish. Therefore, preventing contamination of groundwater is of paramount importance.
455E.4 Groundwater protection goal.
The intent of the state is to prevent contamination of groundwater from point and nonpoint sources of contamination to the maximum extent practical, and if necessary to restore the groundwater to a potable state, regardless of present condition, use, or characteristics.
455E.5 Groundwater protection policies.
1. It is the policy of the state to prevent further contamination of groundwater from any source to the maximum extent practical.
2. The discovery of any groundwater contamination shall require appropriate actions to prevent further contamination. These actions may consist of investigation and evaluation or enforcement actions if necessary to stop further contamination as required under chapter 455B.
3. All persons in the state have the right to have their lawful use of groundwater unimpaired by the activities of any person which render the water unsafe or unpotable.
4. All persons in the state have the duty to conduct their activities so as to prevent the release of contaminants into groundwater.
5. Documentation of any contaminant which presents a significant risk to human health, the environment, or the quality of life shall result in either passive or active cleanup. In both cases, the best technology available or best management practices shall be utilized. The department shall adopt rules which specify the general guidelines for determining the cleanup actions necessary to meet the goals of the state and the general procedures for determining the parties responsible by July 1, 1989. Until the rules are adopted, the absence of rules shall not be raised as a defense to an order to clean up a source of contamination.
6. Adopting health-related groundwater standards may be of benefit in the overall groundwater protection or other regulatory efforts of the state. However, the existence of such standards, or lack of them, shall not be construed or utilized in derogation of the groundwater protection goal and protection policies of the state.
7. The department shall take actions necessary to promote and assure public confidence and public awareness. In pursuing this goal, the department shall make public the results of groundwater investigations.
8. Education of the people of the state is necessary to preserve and restore groundwater quality. The content of this groundwater protection education must assign obligations, call for sacrifice, and change some current values. Educational efforts should strive to establish a conservation ethic among Iowans and should encourage each Iowan to go beyond enlightened self-interest in the protection of groundwater quality.
455E.6 Legal effects--liability.
This chapter supplements other legal authority and shall not enlarge, restrict, or abrogate any remedy which any person or class of persons may have under other statutory or common law and which serves the purpose of groundwater protection. An activity that does not violate chapter 455B does not violate this chapter. In the event of a conflict between this section and another provision of this chapter, it is the intent of the general assembly that this section prevails.
Liability shall not be imposed upon an agricultural producer for the costs of active cleanup, or for any damages associated with or resulting from the detection in the groundwater of any quantity of nitrates provided that application has been in compliance with soil test results and that the applicator has properly complied with label instructions for application of the fertilizer. Compliance with the above provisions may be raised as an affirmative defense by an agricultural producer.
Liability shall not be imposed upon an agricultural producer for costs of active cleanup, or for any damages associated with or resulting from the detection in the groundwater of pesticide provided that the applicator has properly complied with label instructions for application of the pesticide and that the applicator has a valid appropriate applicator's license. Compliance with the above provisions may be raised as an affirmative defense by an agricultural producer.
455E.7 Primary administrative agency.
The department is designated as the agency to coordinate and administer groundwater protection programs for the state.
455E.8 Powers and duties of the director.
In addition to other groundwater protection duties, the director, in cooperation with soil and water conservation district commissioners and with other state and local agencies, shall:
1. Develop and administer a comprehensive groundwater monitoring network, including point of use, point of contamination, and problem assessment monitoring sites across the state, and the assessment of ambient groundwater quality.
2. Include in the annual report required by section 455A.4, the number and concentration of contaminants detected in groundwater. This information shall also be provided to the director of public health and the secretary of agriculture.
3. Report any data concerning the contamination of groundwater by a contaminant not regulated under the federal Safe Drinking Water Act, 42 U.S.C. § 300(f) et seq. to the United States environmental protection agency along with a request to establish a maximum contaminant level and to conduct a risk assessment for the contaminant.
4. Complete groundwater hazard mapping of the state and make the results available to state and local planning organizations by July 1, 1991.
5. Establish a system or systems within the department for collecting, evaluating, and disseminating groundwater quality data and information.
6. Develop and maintain a natural resource geographic information system and comprehensive water resource data system. The system shall be accessible to the public.
7. Develop and adopt by administrative rule, criteria for evaluating groundwater protection programs by July 1, 1988.
8. Take any action authorized by law, including the investigatory and enforcement actions authorized by chapter 455B, to implement the provisions of this chapter and the rules adopted pursuant to this chapter.
9. Disseminate data and information, relative to this chapter, to the public to the greatest extent practical.
10. Develop a program, in consultation with the department of education and the department of environmental education of the University of Northern Iowa, regarding water quality issues which shall be included in the minimum program required in grades seven and eight pursuant to rules adopted by the state board of education under section 256.11, subsection 4.
455E.9 Powers and duties of the commission.
1. The commission shall adopt rules to implement this chapter.
2. When groundwater standards are proposed by the commission, all available information to develop the standards shall be considered, including federal regulations and all relevant information gathered from other sources. A public hearing shall be held in each congressional district prior to the submittal of a report on standards to the general assembly. This report on how groundwater standards may be a part of a groundwater protection program shall be submitted by the department to the general assembly for its consideration by January 1, 1989.
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