Require that a new manure storage facility be
inspected and issued a "certificate of use" by the county before it is
put into operation, and only with an approved nutrient management plan.
Fines for a leaking manure storage facility would range from
$250 to $500 on the first offense and from $500 to $1,000 on the second
offense. The former minimum fine was $100.
To be included on the fall ballot, the referendum would
need to pass through several county committees and the Manitowoc County
Board.
Last week, two Manitowoc County diaries, Maple Leaf
Dairy Inc., of Cleveland, and Sunnyside Dairy Farm LLC, of Valders,
were referred by the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources to the
state Justice Department for possible legal action in alleged manure
spills.
Maple Leaf Dairy faces allegations of violating its
wastewater discharge permit and hazardous substance spill management
laws at its facility.
Sunnyside Dairy Farm faces allegations of a failure to
notify of a hazardous substance discharge and failure to minimize the
effects of the spill into the environment.
If found guilty of the allegations, the dairies would
pay forfeitures for violations and additional penalties including costs
for water remediation.
The owners of Right Way Applications — Brandon Vogel and
Nick Stoudinger — said that farmers hiring them to apply manure should
identify land areas where manure should not be spread, such as
sinkholes and near waterways.
"Drivers should know where these areas are," Vogel said.
"We also work at night and those areas need to be clearly identified so
drivers can see them."
Mike Wendt, with the Soil and Water Conservation Department, outlined best management practices for animal manure.
He called for reduced application of manure in
susceptible areas, creating barriers or buffers to keep runoff away
from sinkholes and other karst features, timing of applications to
reduce the possibility of runoff, and applying at least 50 feet from
any well and 200 feet from any karst feature, sinkhole or drain tile
inlet.
Wendt said the Branch River Priority Watershed Project,
which includes most of the Towns of Morrison (in Brown County) and
Franklin (in Manitowoc County), has money to subsidize farmers' efforts
to protect ground and surface waters.
"We can pay 70 percent for nutrient management
(planning), diversions, vegetative buffers and well abandonment," Wendt
said. "But you need to do them now, because our Branch River program
ends next year."
The Pigeon River Priority Watershed, in southern Manitowoc County in the Town of Meeme, expires in 2009, Wendt said.
Ed Byrne writes for the Wrightstown Post-Gazette.