Animal feeding operations, amendments to ch 65
ARC 2496C
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION COMMISSION[567]
Notice of Intended Action
Twenty-five interested persons, a governmental subdivision, an agency or association of 25 or more persons may demand an oral presentation hereon as provided in Iowa Code section 17A.4(1)"b."
Notice is also given to the public that the Administrative Rules Review Committee may, on its own motion or on written request by any individual or group, review this proposed action under section 17A.8(6) at a regular or special meeting where the public or interested persons may be heard.
Pursuant to the authority of Iowa Code sections 459.103 and 459A.104, the Environmental Protection Commission (Commission) hereby gives Notice of Intended Action to amend Chapter 65, "Animal Feeding Operations," Iowa Administrative Code.
The purpose of the proposed amendments to the animal feeding operation rules is to:
1. Adopt changes due to recent legislative action as follows:
2012 Iowa Acts, Senate File 2172: This legislation exempts swine farrowing and gestating operations from the definition of "qualified confinement feeding operation" and the operating requirements associated with this type of facility if the swine farrowing and gestating operations meet this definition solely because they added replacement breeding swine as defined in Iowa Code section 459.102(46).
2012 Iowa Acts, House File 2292: This legislation allows fish production facilities the option to operate as confinement feeding operations or as facilities regulated by the wastewater regulations.
2013 Iowa Acts, House File 512: This legislation allows confinement feeding operations to discontinue use of buildings, without dismantling the livestock production components of the buildings, in order to meet the definition of a small animal feeding operation (SAFO).
2015 Iowa Acts, House File 583: This legislation allows animal truck wash facilities to meet animal feeding operations regulations for design, construction and operation. It also incorporates by reference the applicable federal National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit requirements for open feedlot operations, as had previously been done in statute for confinement feeding operations.
2. Allow solids from open feedlot operations to be regulated by the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship (IDALS) as bulk dry animal nutrient products (Iowa Code chapter 200A).
3. Provide better clarification of requirements in rules and rescind unnecessary and outdated rules, lists and Internet addresses. The proposed amendments will implement a portion of the five-year rules review plan that the Department of Natural Resources (Department) is carrying out to accomplish the requirements of Iowa Code section 17A.7(2).
Some of the proposed changes designed to provide clarification of the rule requirements include: (1) a revised version of the definition of "public use area" in an effort to better define the term; (2) an updated listing of Iowa lakes (Table 2 of Chapter 65) to ensure that all the lakes are accounted for and properly protected through the facility-siting requirements; (3) clarification regarding which structures are to be used for measuring separation distances; (4) clarification of the scope of any landowner waiver of a separation distance; and (5) additional language regarding NPDES permit requirements to be consistent with the federal rule.
Anyone may make written suggestions or comments on the proposed amendments on or before June 3, 2016. Written comments should be directed to Gene Tinker, Department of Natural Resources, Wallace State Office Building, 502 E. 9th Street, Des Moines, Iowa 50319; or by e-mail to gene.tinker@dnr.iowa.gov.
Public hearings at which persons may present their views either orally or in writing will be held as follows:
May 23, 2016 |
10 a.m. |
DNR Air Quality Building Roosevelt Room 7900 Hickman Road Windsor Heights |
May 24, 2016 |
10 a.m. |
Carroll County Courthouse Downstairs Meeting Room 114 E. 6th Street Carroll |
May 25, 2016 |
10 a.m. |
Clay County Administration Building Boardroom 300 W. 4th Street Spencer |
May 26, 2016 |
10 a.m. |
Muse-Norris Conference Center North Iowa Area Community College 500 College Drive Mason City |
May 31, 2016 |
10 a.m. |
Washington County Conservation Board Education Center, Marr Park 2943 Highway 92 Ainsworth |
June 3, 2016 |
10 a.m. |
Northeast Iowa Community College Dairy Center, Room 115 1527 Highway 150 South Calmar |
At the hearing, persons will be asked to give their names and addresses for the record and to confine their remarks to the subject of the proposed amendments.
Any person who intends to attend a public hearing and has special requirements, such as those related to hearing or mobility impairments, should contact the Department to advise of specific needs.
Jobs Impact Statement
After analysis and review of this rule making, the Commission has determined that most of the proposed amendments will have no impact on private sector jobs; however, there are some proposed changes that may have a positive financial impact. The complete jobs impact statement is available from the Department upon request.
These amendments are intended to implement Iowa Code sections 459.102, 459.103, 459.301, 459.312A, and 459.320 and Iowa Code chapter 459A.
The following amendments are proposed.
Item 1. Rescind rule 567—65.1(459,459B) and adopt the following new rule in lieu thereof:
567—65.1(459,459B) Definitions and incorporation by reference. In addition to the definitions in Iowa Code sections 455B.101, 455B.171 and 459.102 and in 567—Chapter 60, the following definitions shall apply to Division I of this chapter:
65.1(1) Definitions.
"Abandoned confinement feeding operation structure" means the confinement feeding operation structure has been razed, removed from the site of a confinement feeding operation, filled in with earth, or converted to uses other than a confinement feeding operation structure so that it cannot be used as a confinement feeding operation structure without significant reconstruction.
"Adjacent—air quality" means, for the purpose of determining separation distance requirements pursuant to 567—65.11(459,459B), that two or more confinement feeding operations are adjacent if they have animal feeding operation structures that are separated at their closest points by less than the following:
1.1,250 feet for a confinement feeding operation having an animal unit capacity of less than 1,250 animal units for swine maintained as part of a farrowing and gestating operation, less than 2,700 animal units for swine maintained as part of a farrow-to-finish operation, less than 4,000 animal units for cattle maintained as part of a cattle operation, or less than 3,000 animal units for any other confinement feeding operation, or for a confinement feeding operation consisting of dry bedded confinement feeding operation structures.
2.1,500 feet for a confinement feeding operation having an animal unit capacity of 1,250 or more but less than 2,000 animal units for swine maintained as part of a swine farrowing and gestating operation, 2,700 or more but less than 5,400 animal units for swine maintained as part of a farrow-to-finish operation, 4,000 or more but less than 6,500 animal units for cattle maintained as part of a cattle operation, or for any other confinement feeding operation having an animal unit capacity of 3,000 or more but less than 5,000 animal units.
3.2,500 feet for a confinement feeding operation having an animal unit capacity of 2,000 or more animal units for swine maintained as part of a swine farrowing and gestating operation, 5,400 or more animal units for swine maintained as part of a farrow-to-finish operation, or 6,500 or more animal units for cattle maintained as part of a cattle operation, or for any other confinement feeding operation with 5,000 or more animal units.
4.The distances in "1" to "3" above shall only be used to determine that two or more confinement feeding operations are adjacent if at least one confinement feeding operation structure was constructed on or after March 21, 1996.
5.To determine if two or more confinement feeding operations are adjacent, for the purpose of determining the separation distance requirements, the animal unit capacity of each individual operation shall be used. If two or more confinement feeding operations do not have the same animal unit capacity, the greater animal unit capacity shall be used to determine the separation distance.
6.Dry manure that is stockpiled within a distance of 1,250 feet from another stockpile shall be considered part of the same stockpile.
"Adjacent—water quality" means, for the purpose of determining the construction permit requirements pursuant to 567—65.7(459,459B) and manure management plan requirements pursuant to 567—65.16(459,459B), that two or more confinement feeding operations are adjacent if they have confinement feeding operation structures that are separated at their closest points by less than the following:
1.1,250 feet for confinement feeding operations having a combined animal unit capacity of less than 1,000 animal units.
2.2,500 feet for confinement feeding operations having a combined animal unit capacity of 1,000 or more animal units.
3.The distances in "1" and "2" above shall only be used to determine that two or more confinement feeding operations are adjacent if at least one confinement feeding operation structure is constructed or expanded on or after May 21, 1998.
"Aerobic structure" means an animal feeding operation structure other than an egg washwater storage structure which relies on aerobic bacterial action which is maintained by the utilization of air or oxygen and which includes aeration equipment to digest organic matter. Aeration equipment shall be used and shall be capable of providing oxygen at a rate sufficient to maintain an average of 2 milligrams per liter dissolved oxygen concentration in the upper 30 percent of the depth of manure in the structure at all times.
"Agricultural drainage well" means a vertical opening to an aquifer or permeable substratum which is constructed by any means including but not limited to drilling, driving, digging, boring, augering, jetting, washing, or coring and which is capable of intercepting or receiving surface or subsurface drainage water from land directly or by a drainage system.
"Agricultural drainage well area" means an area of land where surface or subsurface water drains into an agricultural drainage well directly or through a drainage system connecting to the agricultural drainage well.
"Alluvial aquifer area" means an area underlaid by sand or gravel aquifers situated beneath flood plains along stream valleys and includes alluvial deposits associated with stream terraces and benches, contiguous windblown sand deposits, and glacial outwash deposits.
"Alluvial soils" means soils formed in materials deposited by moving water.
"Anaerobic lagoon" means an unformed manure storage structure if the primary function of the structure is to store and stabilize manure, the structure is designed to receive manure on a regular basis, and the structure's design waste loading rates provide that the predominant biological activity is anaerobic. An anaerobic lagoon does not include the following:
1.A runoff control basin or a settled open feedlot effluent basin which collects and stores only precipitation-induced runoff from an open feedlot operation.
2.An anaerobic treatment system that includes collection and treatment facilities for all off gases.
"Animal" means cattle, swine, horses, sheep, chickens, turkeys, goats, fish, or ducks.
"Animal capacity" means the maximum number of animals which the owner or operator will confine in an animal feeding operation at any one time. In a confinement feeding operation, the animal capacity of all confinement buildings will be included in the determination of the animal capacity of the operation, unless the building has been abandoned in accordance with the definition of "abandoned confinement feeding operation structure."
"Animal feeding operation" means a lot, yard, corral, building, or other area in which animals are confined and fed and maintained for 45 days or more in any 12-month period, and all structures used for the storage of manure from animals in the operation. Except as required for an NPDES permit required pursuant to the Act, an animal feeding operation does not include a livestock market. Open feedlots and confinement feeding operations are considered to be separate animal feeding operations.
1.For purposes of water quality regulation, Iowa Code section 459.301 provides that two or more animal feeding operations under common ownership or management are deemed to be a single animal feeding operation if they are adjacent or utilize a common area or system for manure disposal. For purposes of the air quality-related separation distances in Iowa Code section 459.202, Iowa Code section 459.201 provides that two or more animal feeding operations under common ownership or management are deemed to be a single animal feeding operation if they are adjacent or utilize a common system for manure storage. The distinction is due to regulation of animal feeding operations for water quality purposes under the Act. 40 CFR 122.23 sets out the requirements for an animal feeding operation and requires that two or more animal feeding operations under common ownership be considered a single operation if they adjoin each other or if they use a common area or system for disposal of wastes. However, this federal regulation does not control regulation of animal feeding operations for the purposes of the separation distances in Iowa Code section 459.202, and therefore the definition is not required by federal law to include common areas for manure disposal.
2.To determine if two or more animal feeding operations are deemed to be one animal feeding operation, the first test is whether the animal feeding operations are under common ownership or management. If they are not under common ownership or management, they are not one animal feeding operation. For purposes of water quality regulation, the second test is whether the two animal feeding operations are adjacent or utilize a common area or system for manure disposal. If the two operations are not adjacent and do not use a common area or system for manure disposal, they are not one animal feeding operation. For purposes of the separation distances in Iowa Code section 459.202, the second test is whether the two animal feeding operations are adjacent or utilize a common system for manure storage. If the two operations are not adjacent and do not use the same system for manure storage, they are not one animal feeding operation.
3.A common area or system for manure disposal includes, but is not limited to, use of the same manure storage structure, confinement feeding operation structure, egg washwater storage structure, stockpile, permanent manure transfer piping system or center pivot irrigation system. A common area or system for manure disposal does not include manure application fields included in a manure management plan or anaerobic digesters.
"Animal feeding operation structure" means a confinement building, manure storage structure, dry bedded confinement feeding operation structure, or egg washwater storage structure.
"Animal unit" means a unit of measurement based upon the product of multiplying the number of animals of each category by a special equivalency factor, as follows:
1. Slaughter and feeder cattle |
1.000 |
2. Immature dairy cattle |
1.000 |
3. Mature dairy cattle |
1.400 |
4. Butcher or breeding swine weighing more than 55 pounds |
0.400 |
5. Swine weighing 15 pounds or more but not more than 55 pounds |
0.100 |
6. Sheep or lambs |
0.100 |
7. Goats |
0.100 |
8. Horses |
2.000 |
9. Turkeys weighing 7 pounds or more |
0.018 |
10. Turkeys weighing less than 7 pounds |
0.0085 |
11. Broiler or layer chickens weighing 3 pounds or more |
0.010 |
12. Broiler or layer chickens weighing less than 3 pounds |
0.0025 |
13. Ducks |
0.040 |
14. Fish |
0.001 |
"Animal unit capacity" means a measurement used to determine the maximum number of animal units that may be maintained as part of an animal feeding operation at any one time, including as provided in Iowa Code sections 459.201 and 459.301. For dry bedded confinement feeding operations, "animal unit capacity" means the maximum number of animal units which the owner or operator confines in a dry bedded confinement feeding operation at any one time, including the animal unit capacity of all dry bedded confinement feeding operation buildings that are used to house cattle or swine in the dry bedded confinement feeding operation.
"Animal weight capacity" means the sum of the average weight of all animals in a confinement feeding operation when the operation is at full animal capacity. For confinement feeding operations with only one species, the animal weight capacity is the product of multiplying the animal capacity by the average weight during a production cycle. For operations with more than one species, the animal weight capacity of the operation is the sum of the animal weight capacities for all species.
Example 1. Bill wants to construct a confinement feeding operation with two confinement buildings and an earthen manure storage basin. The capacity of each building will be 900 market hogs. The hogs enter the building at 40 pounds and leave at 250 pounds. The average weight during the production cycle is then 145 pounds for this operation. The animal weight capacity of the operation is 145 pounds multiplied by 1,800 for a total of 261,000 pounds.
Example 2. Howard is planning to build a confinement feeding operation with eight confinement buildings and an egg washwater storage lagoon. The capacity of each building will be 125,000 laying hens. The hens enter the building at around 2.5 pounds and leave at around 3.5 pounds. The average weight during the production cycle for these laying hens is 3.0 pounds. Manure will be handled in dry form. The animal weight capacity of the operation is 3.0 pounds multiplied by 1,000,000 for a total of 3,000,000 pounds.
Example 3. Carol has an animal feeding operation with four confinement buildings with below floor formed concrete manure storage tanks and one open feedlot. One confinement building is a farrowing building with a capacity of 72 sows. One confinement building is a nursery building with a capacity of 1,450 pigs. The open feedlot contains 425 sows. Two of the confinement buildings are finishing buildings with a capacity of 1,250 market hogs. The farrowing building contains 72 sows at an average weight of 400 pounds for an animal weight capacity of 28,800 pounds. The nursery building contains 1,450 pigs with an average weight over the production cycle of 25 pounds for an animal weight capacity of 36,250 pounds. The two finishing buildings contain 2,500 market hogs (combined) with an average weight over the production cycle of 150 pounds for an animal weight capacity of 375,000 pounds. The total animal weight capacity of the confinement feeding operation is 440,050 pounds. The weights of the animals in open lots are not included in the calculation of the animal weight capacity of the confinement feeding operation.
"Applicant" means the person applying for a construction permit or an NPDES permit for a confinement feeding operation.
"Bedding" means crop, vegetation, or forage residue or similar materials placed in a dry bedded confinement building for the care of animals.
"Business" means a commercial enterprise.
"Cemetery" means a space held for the purpose of permanent burial, entombment or interment of human remains that is owned or managed by a political subdivision or private entity, or a cemetery regulated pursuant to Iowa Code chapter 523I. A cemetery does not include a pioneer cemetery where there have been six or fewer burials in the preceding 50 years.
"Church" means a religious institution.
"Commercial enterprise" means a building which is used as a part of a business that manufactures goods, delivers services, or sells goods or services, which is customarily and regularly used by the general public during the entire calendar year and which is connected to electric, water, and sewer systems. A commercial enterprise does not include a farm operation.
"Commercial manure service" means a sole proprietor or business association engaged in the business of transporting, handling, storing, or applying manure for a fee.
"Commercial manure service representative" means a manager, employee, agent, or contractor of a commercial manure service, if the person is engaged in transporting, handling, storing, or applying manure on behalf of the service.
"Common management" means significant control by an individual of the management of the day-to-day operations of each of two or more confinement feeding operations. "Common management" does not include control over a contract livestock facility by a contractor as defined in Iowa Code section 202.1.
"Common ownership" means the ownership of an animal feeding operation as a sole proprietor, or a majority ownership interest held by a person, in each of two or more animal feeding operations as a joint tenant, tenant in common, shareholder, partner, member, beneficiary, or other equity interest holder. The majority ownership interest is a common ownership interest when it is held directly, indirectly through a spouse or dependent child, or both.
"Complete application" means an application that is complete and approvable when all necessary questions on the application forms have been completed, the application is signed and all applicable portions of the application, including the application form and required attachments, have been submitted.
"Confinement feeding operation" means an animal feeding operation in which animals are confined to areas which are totally roofed and includes every animal feeding operation that is not an "open feedlot operation" as defined in 567—65.100(459A).
"Confinement feeding operation building" or "confinement building" means a building used in conjunction with a confinement feeding operation to house animals.
"Confinement feeding operation structure" means an animal feeding operation structure that is part of a confinement feeding operation.
"Confinement site" means a site where there is located a manure storage structure which is part of a confinement feeding operation, other than a small animal feeding operation.
"Confinement site manure applicator" means a person, other than a commercial manure service or a commercial manure service representative, who applies manure on land if the manure originates from a manure storage structure.
"Construction approval letter" means a written document of the department to acknowledge that the preconstruction submittal requirements of 567—65.9(459,459B) have been met for a confinement feeding operation that is not required to obtain a construction permit pursuant to 567—65.7(459,459B).
"Construction design statement" means a document required to be submitted by a confinement feeding operation prior to constructing a formed manure storage structure, other than a small animal feeding operation, but that does not meet the threshold engineering requirements pursuant to 567—65.1(459,459B).
"Construction permit" means a written approval of the department to construct, modify or alter the use of an animal feeding operation structure as provided in subrule 65.7(1).
"Controlling interest" means ownership of a confinement feeding operation as a sole proprietor or a majority ownership interest held by a person in a confinement feeding operation as a joint tenant, tenant in common, shareholder, partner, member, beneficiary, or other equity interest holder. The majority ownership interest is a controlling interest when it is held directly, indirectly through a spouse or dependent child, or both. The majority ownership interest must be a voting interest or otherwise control management of the confinement feeding operation.
"Covered" means organic or inorganic material, placed upon an animal feeding operation structure used to store manure, which significantly reduces the exchange of gases between the stored manure and the outside air. Organic materials include, but are not limited to, a layer of chopped straw, other crop residue, or a naturally occurring crust on the surface of the stored manure. Inorganic materials include, but are not limited to, wood, steel, aluminum, rubber, plastic, or Styrofoam. The materials shall shield at least 90 percent of the surface area of the stored manure from the outside air. Cover shall include an organic or inorganic material which current scientific research shows reduces detectable odor by at least 75 percent. A formed manure storage structure directly beneath a floor where animals are housed in a confinement feeding operation is deemed to be covered.
"Critical public area" means land that is owned or managed by the federal government, by the department, or by a political subdivision and that has unique scenic, cultural, archaeological, scientific, or historic significance or contains a rare or valuable ecological system. Critical public areas include:
●State wildlife and waterfowl refuges listed in 571—subrules 52.1(2) and 52.1(3);
●Recreation areas, state parks, state parks managed by another governmental agency, and state preserves as listed in 571—61.2(461A);
●County parks and recreation areas as provided in subrule 65.1(2);
●National wildlife refuges listed as follows: Union Slough National Wildlife Refuge, DeSoto National Wildlife Refuge, Boyer Chute National Wildlife Refuge, Upper Mississippi River National Wildlife and Fish Refuge, Driftless Area National Wildlife Refuge, Neal Smith National Wildlife Refuge, and Port Louisa National Wildlife Refuge;
●National monuments and national historic sites listed as follows: Effigy Mounds National Monument and Herbert Hoover National Historic Site;
●Parks in Iowa that are under the federal jurisdiction listed with the United States Army Corps of Engineers as provided in subrule 65.1(2).
"Cropland" means any land suitable for use in agricultural production including, but not limited to, feed, grain and seed crops, fruits, vegetables, forages, sod, trees, grassland, pasture and other similar crops.
"Deep well" means a well located and constructed in such a manner that there is a continuous layer of low permeability soil or rock at least 5 feet thick located at least 25 feet below the normal ground surface and above the aquifer from which water is to be drawn.
"Designated area" means a known sinkhole, abandoned well, unplugged agricultural drainage well, agricultural drainage well cistern, agricultural drainage well surface tile inlet, drinking water well, designated wetland, or water source. "Designated area" does not include a terrace tile inlet or surface tile inlet other than an agricultural drainage well surface tile inlet.
"Designated wetland" means land designated as a protected wetland by the United States Department of the Interior or the department, including but not limited to a protected wetland as defined in Iowa Code section 456B.1, if the land is owned and managed by the federal government or the department. However, a designated wetland does not include land where an agricultural drainage well has been plugged causing a temporary wetland or land within a drainage district or levee district. Designated wetlands in the state are listed in the department's "Designated Wetlands in Iowa" (see subrule 65.1(2), Incorporation by reference).
"Discontinued animal feeding operation" means an animal feeding operation whose structures have been abandoned or whose use has been discontinued as evidenced by the removal of all animals and the owner or operator has no immediate plans to repopulate.
"Discontinued animal feeding operation structure" means an animal feeding operation structure that has been abandoned or whose use has been discontinued as evidenced by the removal of all animals from the structure and the owner or operator has no immediate plans to repopulate.
"Document" means any form required to be processed by the department under this chapter regulating animal feeding operations, including but not limited to applications or related materials for permits as provided in Iowa Code section 459.303, manure management plans as provided in Iowa Code section 459.312, comment or evaluation by a county board of supervisors considering an application for a construction permit, the department's analysis of the application including using and responding to a master matrix pursuant to Iowa Code section 459.304, and notices required under those sections.
"Dry bedded confinement feeding operation" means a confinement feeding operation in which cattle or swine are confined to areas which are totally roofed and in which all manure is stored as dry bedded manure. Unless specifically stated otherwise, all requirements in Division I of this chapter do apply to dry bedded confinement feeding operations.
"Dry bedded confinement feeding operation structure" means a dry bedded confinement feeding operation building or a dry bedded manure storage structure.
"Dry bedded manure" means manure from cattle or swine that meets all of the following requirements:
1.The manure does not flow perceptibly under pressure.
2.The manure is not capable of being transported through a mechanical pumping device designed to move a liquid.
3.The manure contains bedding.
"Dry bedded manure confinement feeding operation building" or "building" means a building used in conjunction with a confinement feeding operation to house cattle or swine and in which any manure from the animals is stored as dry bedded manure.
"Dry bedded manure storage structure" means a covered or uncovered structure, other than a building, used to store dry bedded manure originating from a confinement feeding operation.
"Dry manure" means manure which meets all of the following conditions:
1.The manure does not flow perceptibly under pressure.
2.The manure is not capable of being transported through a mechanical pumping device designed to move a liquid.
3.The constituent molecules of the manure do not flow freely among themselves but may show a tendency to separate under stress.
"Dry manure" includes manure marketed as a bulk dry animal nutrient product that is stored 1,250 feet or less from the confinement animal feeding structure from which it originated.
"Earthen manure storage basin" means an earthen cavity, either covered or uncovered, which, on a regular basis, receives manure discharges from a confinement feeding operation if accumulated manure from the basin is completely removed at least once each year.
"Earthen waste slurry storage basin" means an uncovered and exclusively earthen cavity which, on a regular basis, receives manure discharges from a confinement animal feeding operation if accumulated manure from the basin is completely removed at least twice each year and which was issued a permit, constructed or expanded on or after July 1, 1990, but prior to May 31, 1995.
"Educational institution" means a building in which an organized course of study or training is offered to students enrolled in kindergarten through grade 12 and served by local school districts, accredited or approved nonpublic schools, area educational agencies, community colleges, institutions of higher education under the control of the state board of regents, and accredited independent colleges and universities.
"Egg washwater storage structure" means an aerobic or anaerobic structure used to store the wastewater resulting from the washing and in-shell packaging of eggs. It does not include a structure also used as a manure storage structure.
"Enforcement action" means an action against a person with a controlling interest in a confinement feeding operation initiated by the department or the attorney general to enforce the provisions of Iowa Code chapter 459 or rules adopted pursuant to the chapter. An enforcement action begins when the attorney general institutes proceedings in district court pursuant to Iowa Code section 455B.112. An enforcement action is pending until final resolution of the action by satisfaction of a court order, for which all judicial appeal rights are exhausted, expired, or waived.
"Family member" means a person related to another person as parent, grandparent, child, grandchild, sibling, or a spouse of such related person.
"Formed manure storage structure" means a covered or uncovered impoundment used to store manure from an animal feeding operation, which has walls and a floor constructed of concrete, concrete block, wood, steel, or similar materials. Similar materials may include, but are not limited to, plastic, rubber, fiberglass, or other synthetic materials. Materials used in a formed manure storage structure shall have the structural integrity to withstand expected internal and external load pressures.
"Freeboard" means the difference in elevation between the liquid level and the confinement feeding operation structure's overflow level.
"Frozen ground" means soil that is impenetrable due to frozen soil moisture but does not include soil that is only frozen to a depth of two inches or less.
"Grassed waterway" means a natural or constructed channel that is shaped or graded to required dimensions and established in suitable vegetation for the stable conveyance of runoff.
"Highly erodible land" means a field that has one-third or more of its acres or 50 acres, whichever is less, with soils that have an erodibility index of eight or more, as determined by rules promulgated by the United States Department of Agriculture.
"Human sanitary waste" means wastewater derived from domestic uses including bathroom and laundry facilities generating wastewater from toilets, baths, showers, lavatories and clothes washing.
"Incidental" means a duty which is secondary or subordinate to a primary job or function.
"Incorporation" means a soil tillage operation following the surface application of manure which mixes the manure into the upper four inches or more of soil.
"Indemnity fund" means the manure storage indemnity fund created in Iowa Code section 459.501.
"Injection" means the application of manure into the soil surface using equipment that discharges it beneath the surface.
"Interest" means ownership of a confinement feeding operation as a sole proprietor or a 10 percent or more ownership interest held by a person in a confinement feeding operation as a joint tenant, tenant in common, shareholder, partner, member, beneficiary, or other equity interest holder. The ownership interest is an interest when it is held directly, indirectly through a spouse or dependent child, or both.
"Internet" means the federated international system that is composed of allied electronic communication networks linked by telecommunication channels, that uses standardized protocols, and that facilitates electronic communication services, including but not limited to use of the World Wide Web; the transmission of electronic mail or messages; the transfer of files and data or other electronic information; and the transmission of voice, image, and video.
"Karst terrain" means land having karst formations that exhibit surface and subterranean features of a type produced by the dissolution of limestone, dolomite, or other soluble rock and characterized by closed depressions, sinkholes, or caves. If a 25-foot vertical separation distance can be maintained between the bottom of an unformed manure storage structure and limestone, dolomite, or other soluble rock, then the structure is not considered to be in karst terrain.
"Liquid manure" means manure that meets all of the following requirements:
1.The manure flows perceptibly under pressure.
2.The manure is capable of being transported through a mechanical pumping device designated to move a liquid.
3.The constituent molecules of the liquid manure flow freely among themselves and show a tendency to separate under stress.
Liquid manure that is frozen or partially frozen is included in this definition.
"Livestock market" means any place where animals are assembled from two or more sources for public auction, private sale, or on a commission basis, which is under state or federal supervision, including a livestock sale barn or auction market, if such animals are kept for ten days or less.
"Long-term stockpile location" means an area where a person stockpiles manure for more than a total of six months in any two-year period.
"Low-pressure irrigation system" means spray irrigation equipment which discharges manure from a maximum height of 9 feet in a downward direction, and which utilizes spray nozzles which discharge manure at a maximum pressure of 25 pounds per square inch.
"Major water source" means a water source that is a lake, reservoir, river or stream located within the territorial limits of the state, or any marginal river area adjacent to the state, if the water source is capable of supporting a floating vessel capable of carrying one or more persons during a total of a six-month period in one out of ten years, excluding periods of flooding. Major water sources in the state are listed in Table 1 and Table 2 at the end of this chapter.
"Manager" means a person who is actively involved in the operation of the service and makes management decisions in the operation of a commercial manure service.
"Man-made manure drainage system" means a drainage ditch, flushing system, or other drainage device which was constructed by human beings and is used for the purpose of transporting manure.
"Manure" means animal excreta or other commonly associated wastes of animals including, but not limited to, bedding, litter, or feed losses. Manure does not include wastewater resulting from the washing and in-shell packaging of eggs. For the purposes of NPDES permitting, "manure" includes manure, bedding, compost and raw materials or other materials commingled with manure or set aside for disposal.
"Manure storage structure" means a formed manure storage structure, an unformed manure storage structure or a dry bedded manure storage structure. A manure storage structure does not include an egg washwater storage structure. An animal truck wash facility may be part of a confinement feeding operation. An animal truck wash effluent structure may be the same as a manure storage structure that is part of the confinement feeding operation, so long as the primary function of such impoundment is to collect and store both effluent from the animal truck wash facility and manure from the confinement feeding operation.
"New animal feeding operation" means an animal feeding operation whose construction was begun after July 22, 1987, or whose operation is resumed after having been discontinued for a period of 12 months or more.
"NPDES permit" means a written permit of the department, pursuant to the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) program, to authorize and regulate the operation of a CAFO. "CAFO" means the same as defined in 567—65.100(459A).
"NRCS" means United States Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Services.
"One hundred year flood plain" means the land adjacent to a major water source, if there is at least a 1 percent chance that the land will be inundated in any one year, according to calculations adopted by rules adopted pursuant to Iowa Code section 459.103. In making the calculations, the department shall consider available maps or data compiled by the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
"Owner" means the person who has legal or equitable title to the property where the confinement feeding operation is located or the person who has legal or equitable title to the confinement feeding operation structures. "Owner" does not include a person who has a lease to use the land where the confinement feeding operation is located or to use the confinement feeding operation structures.
"Permanent vegetation cover" means land which is maintained in perennial vegetative cover consisting of grasses, legumes, or both, and includes, but is not limited to, pastures, grasslands or forages.
"Professional engineer" means a person engaged in the practice of engineering as defined in Iowa Code section 542B.2 who is issued a certificate of licensure as a professional engineer pursuant to Iowa Code section 542B.17.
"Public thoroughfare" means a road, street, or bridge that is constructed or maintained by the state or a political subdivision.
"Public use area" means that portion of land owned by the United States, the state, or a political subdivision with facilities which attract the public to congregate and remain in the area for significant periods of time. Facilities include, but are not limited to, picnic grounds, campgrounds, cemeteries, lodges and cabins, shelter houses, playground equipment, swimming beaches at lakes, and fishing docks, fishing houses, fishing jetties or fishing piers at lakes. It does not include a highway, road right-of-way, parking areas, recreational trails or other areas where the public passes through, but does not congregate or remain in the area for significant periods of time.
"Public water supply" (also referred to as a system or a water system) means a system for the provision to the public of piped water for human consumption, if such system has at least 15 service connections or regularly serves an average of at least 25 individuals daily at least 60 days out of the year. Such term includes (1) any collection, treatment, storage, and distribution facilities under control of the supplier of water and used primarily in connection with such system, and (2) any collection (including wells) or pretreatment storage facilities not under such control which are used primarily in connection with such system. A public water supply system is either a "community water system" or a "noncommunity water system."
"Q100" as defined in 567—70.2(455B,481A), means a flood having a 1 percent chance of being equaled or exceeded in any one year as determined by the department.
"Qualified confinement feeding operation" means a confinement feeding operation which has an animal unit capacity of:
1.5,333 or more for animals other than swine as part of a farrowing and gestating operation or farrow-to-finish operation or cattle as part of a cattle operation.
2.2,500 or more for a swine farrowing and gestating operation, not including replacement breeding swine if the following apply:
●The replacement breeding swine are raised at the confinement feeding operation; and
●The replacement breeding swine are used in the farrowing and gestation operation.
3.5,400 or more for a swine farrow-to-finish operation.
4.8,500 or more for a confinement feeding operation maintaining cattle.
"Qualified stockpile cover" means a barrier impermeable to precipitation that is used to protect a stockpile from precipitation.
"Qualified stockpile structure" means a building or roofed structure that is all of the following:
1.Impermeable to precipitation.
2.Constructed using wood, steel, aluminum, vinyl, plastic, or other similar materials.
3.Constructed with walls or other means to prevent precipitation-induced surface runoff from contacting the stockpile.
"Release" means an actual, imminent or probable discharge of manure from an animal feeding operation structure to surface water, groundwater, drainage tile line or intake, or to a designated area resulting from storing, handling, transporting or land-applying manure.
"Religious institution" means a building in which an active congregation is devoted to worship.
"Research college" means an accredited public or private college or university, including but not limited to a university under control of the state board of regents as provided in Iowa Code chapter 262, or a community college under the jurisdiction of a board of directors for a merged area as provided in Iowa Code chapter 260C, if the college or university performs research or experimental activities regarding animal agriculture or agronomy.
"Residence" means a house or other building, including all structures attached to the building, not owned by the owner of the animal feeding operation, which meets all of the following criteria at the location of the intended residence:
1.Used as a place of habitation for humans on a permanent and frequent basis.
2.Not readily mobile.
3.Connected to a permanent source of electricity, a permanent private water supply or a public water supply system and a permanent domestic sewage disposal system including a private, semipublic or public sewage disposal system.
4.Assessed and taxed as real property.
If a house or other building has not been occupied by humans for more than six months in the last two years, or if a house or other building has been constructed or moved to its current location within six months, the owner of the intended residence has the burden of proving that the house or other building is a residence. Paragraph "3" shall not apply to a house or other building inhabited by persons who are exempt from the compulsory education standards of Iowa Code section 299.24 and whose religious principles or tenets prohibit the use of the utilities listed.
"Restricted spray irrigation equipment" means spray irrigation equipment which disperses manure through an orifice at a rate of 80 pounds per square inch or more.
"School" means an educational institution.
"Seasonal high-water table" means the part of the soil profile closest to the soil surface that becomes saturated (usually in the spring) as observed in a monitoring well or determined by recognition of soil redoxomorphic features.
Note: "Redoxomorphic features" refers to the gleying or mottling or both that occur under saturated conditions within the soil profile.
"Secondary containment barrier" means a structure used to retain accidental manure overflow from a manure storage structure.
"Shallow well" means a well located and constructed in such a manner that there is not a continuous layer of low permeability soil or rock (or equivalent retarding mechanism acceptable to the department) at least 5 feet thick, the top of which is located at least 25 feet below the normal ground surface and above the aquifer from which water is to be drawn.
"Small animal feeding operation" means an animal feeding operation which has an animal unit capacity of 500 or fewer animal units.
"Snow-covered ground" means soil covered by one inch or more of snow or soil covered by one-half inch or more of ice.
"Spray irrigation equipment" means mechanical equipment used for the aerial application of manure, if the equipment receives manure from a manure storage structure during application via a pipe or hose connected to the structure, and includes a type of equipment customarily used for aerial application of water to aid the growing of general farm crops.
"Stockpile" means dry manure or dry bedded manure originating from a confinement feeding operation that is stored at a particular location outside a confinement feeding operation building or a manure storage structure.
"Stockpile dry bedded manure" means to store dry bedded manure outside a dry bedded manure confinement feeding operation building or a dry bedded manure storage structure.
"Stockpile dry manure" means to create or add to a dry manure stockpile.
"Surface water drain tile intake" means an opening to a drain tile, including intake pipes and French drains, which allows surface water to enter the drain tile without filtration through the soil profile.
"Swine farrow-to-finish operation" means a confinement feeding operation in which porcine animals are produced and in which a primary portion of the phases of the production cycle is conducted at one confinement feeding operation. Phases of the production cycle include, but are not limited to, gestation, farrowing, growing and finishing. At a minimum, farrowing, growing, and finishing shall be conducted at the operation with a majority of the pigs farrowed at the site finished to market weight in order to qualify as a farrow-to-finish operation.
"Thoroughfare" means a road, street, bridge or highway open to the public and constructed or maintained by the state or a political subdivision.
"Threshold requirements for an engineer" means the limits, pursuant to Iowa Code section 459.303, which require that the design of a formed manure storage structure or egg washwater storage structure be prepared and signed by a professional engineer licensed in the state of Iowa or by an engineer working for the NRCS. A confinement feeding operation that utilizes a formed manure storage structure meets threshold requirements for an engineer if any of the following apply:
1.A confinement feeding operation with an animal unit capacity of 1,250 or more animal units for swine maintained as part of a swine farrowing and gestating operation.
2.A confinement feeding operation with an animal unit capacity of 2,750 or more animal units for swine maintained as part of a swine farrow-to-finish operation.
3.A confinement feeding operation with an animal unit capacity of 4,000 or more animal units for cattle maintained as part of a cattle operation.
4.Any other confinement feeding operation with an animal unit capacity of 3,000 or more animal units.
"Unformed manure storage structure" means a covered or uncovered impoundment used to store manure, other than a formed manure storage structure, which includes an anaerobic lagoon, aerobic structure, or earthen manure storage basin.
"Water of the state" means any stream, lake, pond, marsh, watercourse, waterway, well, spring, reservoir, aquifer, irrigation system, drainage system, and any other body or accumulation of water, surface or underground, natural or artificial, public or private, which are contained within, flow through or border upon the state or any portion thereof.
"Water source" means a lake, river, reservoir, creek, stream, ditch, or other body of water or channel having definite banks and a bed with water flow, except lakes or ponds without outlet to which only one landowner is riparian.
"Water well" means an excavation that is drilled, cored, bored, augered, washed, driven, dug, jetted, or otherwise constructed for the purpose of exploring for groundwater, monitoring groundwater, utilizing the geothermal properties of the ground, or extracting water from or injecting water into the aquifer. "Water well" does not include an open ditch or drain tiles or an excavation made for obtaining or prospecting for oil, natural gas, minerals, or products mined or quarried.
"Wetted perimeter" means the outside edge of land where the direct discharge of manure occurs from spray irrigation equipment.
65.1(2) Incorporation by reference. The text of the following incorporated materials is not included in Division I of this chapter. The materials listed below are hereby made a part of Division I of this chapter. For material subject to change, only the specific version specified in this subrule is incorporated. Any amendment or revision to a reference document is not incorporated until this subrule has been amended to specify the new version.
a. "Act" means the federal Water Pollution Control Act as amended through January 1, 2015, 33 U.S.C. Chapter 26;
b. "AFO Siting Atlas" means a tool to assist in determining potential building sites that meet regulatory requirements. The AFO Siting Atlas is located on the department's Web site;
c. "CFR" or "Code of Federal Regulations" means the federal administrative rules adopted by the United States in effect as of January 1, 2015;
d. County Parks and Recreation Areas listed in Iowa's County Conservation System Guide to Outdoor Adventure at http://www.mycountyparks.com/GuideBook/Iowa/index.html as shown on [the effective date of this rule];
e. Parks in Iowa under the federal jurisdiction of the United States Army Corps of Engineers listed on the United States Army Corps of Engineers' Web site at http://www.recreation.gov/campgroundDirectoryListByAgencyID.do?contractCode=NRSO&agencyID =70902 as shown on [the effective date of this rule];
f. Designated Wetlands in Iowa – effective date August 23, 2006, located on the department's Web site; and
g. Emergency spill line telephone number is (515)725-8694.
Item 2. Amend subparagraph 65.2(3)"d"(2) as follows:
(2)Applicable NPDES requirements pursuant to the federal Water Pollution Control Act, 33 U.S.C. Ch.26, and 40 CFR Pts.122 and 412 Act.
Item 3. Amend paragraph 65.2(9)"a" as follows:
a. Notification. A person storing, handling, transporting, or land-applying manure from a confinement feeding operation who becomes aware of a release shall notify the department of the occurrence of release as soon as possible but not later than six hours after the onset or discovery of the release by contacting the department at (515)281-8694 department's spill line. The local police department or the office of the sheriff of the affected county shall also be contacted within the same time period if the spill involves a public roadway and public safety could be threatened. Reports made pursuant to this rule shall be confirmed in writing as provided in 65.2(9)"c."
Item 4. Amend paragraph 65.3(3)"h" as follows:
h. Setback requirements for confinement feeding operations with NPDES permits. For confinement feeding operations with NPDES permits, the following is adopted by reference: 40 CFR 412.4(a), (b) and (c)(5) as amended through July 30, 2012.
Item 5. Amend subrule 65.3(4), introductory paragraph, as follows:
65.3(4) Surface application of liquid manure on frozen or snow-covered ground. A person who applies liquid manure on frozen or snow-covered ground shall comply with applicable NPDES requirements pursuant to the federal Water Pollution Control Act, 33 U.S.C. Chapter 26, and 40 CFR Parts 122 and 412, Act and also shall comply with the following requirements:
Item 6. Amend subparagraph 65.3(4)"c"(1) as follows:
(1)An immediate need to apply manure in order to comply with the manure retention requirement of subrule 65.2(3) caused by the improper design or management of the manure storage structure, including but not limited to a failure to properly account for the volume of the manure to be stored. Based on the restrictions described in paragraphs 65.3(4) "a" and "b" and the possibility that the ground could be snow-covered and frozen for the entire period of December 21 to April 1, an operation should not plan to apply liquid manure during that time period. Confinement feeding operations with manure storage structures constructed after May 26, 2009, and without alternatives to manure application must have sufficient storage capacity to retain manure generated from December 21 to April 1 under normal circumstances in order to properly account for the volume of manure to be stored. For the winters of 2010-2011 through 2014-2015 only, confinement feeding operations that have no manure storage structures constructed after May 26, 2009, the department will accept insufficient manure storage capacity as a reason for emergency application in the notification required in 65.3(4)"d"(1).
Item 7. Amend rule 567—65.6(459,459B) as follows:
567—65.6(459,459B) Concentrated animal feeding operations; NPDES permits. Iowa Code subsection 459.311(2) requires a confinement feeding operation that is a concentrated animal feeding operation as defined in 40 CFR 122.23(b) to comply with applicable NPDES permit requirements pursuant to rules adopted by the commission. The following regulations as amended through July 30, 2012, are adopted by reference:
●40 CFR 122.21, application for a permit.
●40 CFR 122.23, concentrated animal feeding operations.
●40 CFR 122.42(e), additional conditions applicable to specified categories of NPDES permits.
●40 CFR 122.63(h), minor modification of permits.
●40 CFR Part 412, concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFO) point source category.
Item 8. Adopt the following new paragraph 65.7(2)"d":
d. A construction permit is not required for a confinement feeding operation that exclusively confines fish and elects to comply with the permitting requirements of Iowa Code section 455B.183.
Item 9. Amend subrule 65.7(4) as follows:
65.7(4) Construction permit application plan review criteria. Review of plans and specifications submitted with a construction permit application shall be conducted to determine the potential of the proposed manure control system to achieve the level of manure control being required of the confinement feeding operation. In conducting this review, applicable criteria contained in federal law, state law, these rules, Natural Resources Conservation Service NRCS design standards and specifications unless inconsistent with federal or state law or these rules, and U.S. Department of Commerce precipitation data shall be used. If the proposed facility plans are not adequately covered by these criteria, applicable criteria contained in current technical literature shall be used.
Item 10. Amend subrule 65.7(5) as follows:
65.7(5) Expiration of construction permits. A construction permit issued prior to June 15, 2005, shall expire if construction, as defined in rule 567—65.8(459,459B), is not begun within one year of the date of issuance and shall expire on June 15, 2012, if construction is not completed by June 14, 2012. A construction permit issued on or after June 15, 2005, shall expire if construction, as defined in rule 567—65.8(459,459B), is not begun within one year and completed within four years of the date of issuance. The director may grant an extension of time to begin or complete construction if it is necessary or justified, upon showing of such necessity or justification to the director, unless a person who has an interest in the proposed operation is the subject of a pending enforcement action or a person who has a controlling interest in the proposed operation has been classified as a habitual violator. If a permitted site has not completed all proposed permitted structures within the four-year limit, then the approved animal unit capacity in the construction permit shall be lowered to be equal to what was constructed and the department shall issue a construction permit amendment for what was constructed.
Item 11. Amend subrule 65.7(7) as follows:
65.7(7) Confinement feeding operations required to obtain a construction approval letter. A person planning to construct a confinement feeding operation, other than a small animal feeding operation as defined in rule 567—65.1(459,459B) or other than an operation required to obtain a construction permit pursuant to subrule 65.7(1), shall obtain from the department a construction approval letter as provided in subrule 65.9(3) prior to beginning construction of a formed manure storage structure or a confinement building. The construction approval letter shall expire if construction, as defined in subrule 65.8(1), is not begun within one year and completed within four years of the date of the construction approval letter.
Item 12. Amend paragraph 65.7(8)"a" as follows:
a. A person shall not construct a confinement feeding operation structure in the one hundred year flood plain. A person shall not begin construction of a confinement feeding operation structure located on alluvial soil until the department issues a declaratory order pursuant to subrule 65.7(9) that the proposed location is not in the one hundred year flood plain. The AFO Siting Atlas may be a tool used to assist in the one hundred year floodplain and alluvial soil determinations.
Item 13. Amend subrule 65.7(9), introductory paragraph, as follows:
65.7(9) Declaratory orders and flood plain determinations. A person shall not construct a confinement feeding operation structure in the one hundred year flood plain. The AFO Siting Atlas may be a tool used to assist in the one hundred year flood plain and alluvial soil determinations. If the location of any proposed confinement feeding operation structure contains soils classified as alluvial determined pursuant to subrule 65.9(4), the owner shall petition the department for a declaratory order or a determination that the confinement feeding operation structure is not in the one hundred year flood plain. To be considered complete, the petition shall include all information necessary, pursuant to 567—Chapters 70 to 76, for the department to determine: (1) if the confinement feeding operation is proposed to be located on a one hundred year flood plain; (2) if a flood plain development permit for the operation is required; and (3) if a flood plain development permit may be issued if one is required. This information may include land surveys to determine elevations of the land within the footprint of the planned operation as well as flood plain and channel geometry. The petition for a declaratory order or determination shall be submitted to the department according to either of the following:
Item 14. Amend rule 567—65.8(459,459B) as follows:
567—65.8(459,459B) Construction. For purposes of these rules:
65.8(1) Construction of an animal feeding operation structure begins or an animal feeding operation structure is constructed when any of the following occurs:
a. Excavation for a proposed animal feeding operation structure, or excavation for footings, or filling or compacting of the soil or soil amendments for a proposed animal feeding operation structure.
b. and c. No change.
65.8(2) Construction does not begin upon occurrence of any of the following:
a. and b. No change.
c. General earth moving for leveling or compacting at the site.
d. No change.
65.8(3) Prohibition on construction.
a. to c. No change.
d. A confinement feeding operation structure shall not be constructed on the one hundred year flood plain in a major water source. Placing fill material on flood plain land to elevate the land above the one hundred year flood level will not be considered as removing the land from the one hundred year flood plain for the purpose of this paragraph. In addition, a A person shall not construct a confinement feeding operation structure on a flood plain outside of a major water source, as provided in 567—71.13(455B) until the department issues a flood plain development permit pursuant to 567—Chapters 70 to 76.
e. A person shall not construct a confinement feeding operation structure on land that contains alluvial soils, according to the Soil Survey published by the Natural Resources Conservation Service of the United States Department of Agriculture NRCS, and determined according to subrule 65.9(4), unless the person has received a declaratory order or a determination from the department of natural resources that the proposed location of the structure is not on the one hundred year flood plain, pursuant to subrule 65.7(9).
f. No change.
Item 15. Amend subrule 65.9(1) as follows:
65.9(1) Construction permit application. Application for a construction permit for a confinement feeding operation shall be made on a form provided by the department. The application shall include all of the information required in the form and should be submitted to the department at least 120 days prior to the date the proposed construction is scheduled to begin. At the time the department receives a complete application, the department shall make a determination regarding the approval or denial of the permit in accordance with subrule 65.10(5). A construction permit application for a confinement feeding operation shall be filed as instructed on the form and shall include the following:
a. to e. No change.
f. Engineering documents. A confinement feeding operation that utilizes an unformed manure storage structure, an egg washwater storage structure or a formed manure storage structure at an operation that meets the threshold requirements for an engineer as defined in 567—65.1(459,459B) shall include an engineering report, construction plans and specifications. The engineering report, construction plans and specifications must be prepared and signed by a licensed professional engineer or by a USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) an NRCS qualified staff person, must detail the proposed structures, and must include a statement certifying that the manure storage structure complies with the requirements of Iowa Code chapter 459. In addition, a qualified soils or groundwater professional, licensed professional engineer or NRCS qualified staff shall submit a hydrogeologic report on soil corings in the area of the unformed manure storage structure or egg washwater storage structure as described in subrules 65.15(6) to 65.15(13).
g. to s. No change.
Item 16. Amend subrule 65.9(4) as follows:
65.9(4) Alluvial One hundred year flood plain or alluvial soils submittal requirements. Prior to beginning construction or expansion of a confinement feeding operation, the person planning the construction shall determine whether the proposed confinement feeding operation structure will be located in soils classified as alluvial as defined in 567—65.1(459,459B) and pursuant to paragraph 65.8(3) "e." The alluvial soils determination shall be obtained by using the AFO Siting Atlas located at the department's official Web site or by consulting a qualified department staff person, a soils professional normally engaged in the practice of soil investigation, or NRCS qualified staff. The AFO Siting Atlas may be a tool used to assist in the alluvial soil determination. The one hundred year flood plain information or the alluvial soils determination shall be submitted to the department according to the following:
a. If the proposed location is not in the one hundred year flood plain or alluvial soils, the person planning the construction shall submit a printed map from the AFO Siting Atlas clearly showing the location of each proposed confinement feeding operation structure or a written statement from qualified department staff, a soils professional normally engaged in the practice of soil investigation or NRCS qualified staff, with the construction permit application documents as required in subrule 65.9(1) or with the construction design statement as required in subrule 65.9(3) if a construction permit is not required.
b. If one hundred year flood plain information is not available and the proposed location is in alluvial soils, the person planning the construction shall petition the department for a declaratory order or a determination according to procedures required in subrule 65.7(9). It is recommended that the person planning the construction consult with qualified department staff before petitioning for a declaratory order or a determination. The department's determination indicating that the location is not in the one hundred year flood plain and a copy of the department's flood plain development permit pursuant to 567—Chapters 70 to 76, if required, must be submitted with the construction permit application documents pursuant to subrule 65.9(1). If a construction permit is not required pursuant to subrule 65.7(1), the department's declaratory order indicating that the location is not in the one hundred year flood plain and a copy of the department's flood plain development permit pursuant to 567—Chapters 70 to 76, if required, must be submitted when a construction design statement is filed pursuant to subrules 65.9(3) and 65.9(6).
Item 17. Amend subrule 65.9(5), introductory paragraph, as follows:
65.9(5) Karst terrain submittal requirements. Prior to beginning construction of a confinement feeding operation, the person planning the construction shall determine whether the proposed confinement feeding operation structure will be located in karst terrain, as defined in 567—65.1(459,459B). The karst terrain determination shall be obtained by using the AFO Siting Atlas located at the department's official Web site or by consulting a qualified department staff person, a soils professional normally engaged in the practice of soil investigation or NRCS qualified staff. The AFO Siting Atlas may be a tool used to assist in the karst terrain determination. The results of the karst terrain determination shall be submitted to the department according to the following:
Item 18. Amend subrule 65.9(7), introductory paragraph, as follows:
65.9(7) Professional engineer design certification. In lieu of a construction design statement prior to beginning construction of a formed manure storage structure, a confinement feeding operation, other than a small animal feeding operation, that is below the threshold requirements for an engineer pursuant to 567—65.1(459,459B) may file with the department a professional engineer design certification and design plans signed by a professional engineer licensed in the state of Iowa or an NRCS qualified staff person. The professional engineer design certification shall be site-specific and shall be filed on a form provided by the department as follows:
Item 19. Amend paragraph 65.9(8)"a" as follows:
a. If a manure storage structure stores liquid or semi -liquid manure, the secondary containment barrier design shall include engineering drawings prepared and signed by a professional engineer licensed in the state of Iowa or an NRCS qualified staff person. For purposes of this subrule only, semiliquid manure means manure that contains a percentage of dry matter that results in manure too solid for pumping, but too liquid for stacking.
Item 20. Amend paragraph 65.10(2)"a," introductory paragraph, as follows:
a. Public notice. The county board of supervisors shall publish a notice that the board has received the construction permit application in a newspaper having general circulation in the county. The county board shall publish the notice as soon as possible but no later than 14 days after receiving the permit application instructions from the department that a complete application has been received. The notice shall include all of the following:
Item 21. Amend subparagraph 65.10(3)"b"(1) as follows:
(1)In completing the master matrix, the board shall not score criteria on a selective basis. The board must score all criteria which are part of the master matrix according to the terms and conditions relating to construction as specified in the application or commitments for manure management that are to be incorporated into a manure management plan as provided in Iowa Code section 459.312 as amended by 2009 Iowa Acts, Senate File 432, section 2.
Item 22. Amend subrule 65.10(5) as follows:
65.10(5) Determination by the department. The department must receive the county board of supervisors' comments or evaluation for approval or disapproval of an application for a construction permit not later than 30 days following the applicant's delivery of the a complete application to the department. Regardless of whether the department receives comments or an evaluation by a county board of supervisors, the department must render a determination or a preliminary determination to approve or disapprove an application for a construction permit within 60 days following the applicant's delivery of an a complete application to the department. However, the applicant may deliver a notice requesting a continuance. Upon receipt of a notice, the time required for the county or department to act upon the application shall be suspended for the period provided in the notice, but for not more than 30 days after the department's receipt of the notice. The applicant may submit more than one notice. However, the department may terminate an application if no action is required by the department for one year following delivery of the application to the board. The department may also provide for a continuance when it considers the application. The department shall provide notice to the applicant and the board of the continuance. The time required for the department to act upon the application shall be suspended for the period provided in the notice, but for not more than 30 days. However, the department shall not provide for more than one continuance. If review of the application is delayed because the application is incomplete, and the applicant fails to supply requested information within a reasonable time prior to the deadline for action on the application, the permit may be denied and a new application will be required if the applicant wishes to proceed.
The department will approve or disapprove an application as follows:
a. If the county board of supervisors does not submit a construction evaluation resolution to the department, fails to submit an adopted recommendation, submits only comments, or fails to submit comments, the department shall approve the application if the application meets the requirements of this chapter and Iowa Code chapter chapters 455B, 459, 459A and 459B. The department will disapprove the application if it does not meet such requirements.
b. If the board of supervisors for the county in which the confinement feeding operation is proposed to be constructed has filed a county construction evaluation resolution and submits an adopted recommendation to approve the construction permit application, which may be based on a satisfactory rating produced by the master matrix, to the department, the department shall preliminarily approve an application for a construction permit if the department determines that the application meets the requirements of this chapter and Iowa Code chapter chapters 455B, 459, 459A and 459B. The department shall preliminarily disapprove an application that does not satisfy the requirements of this chapter and Iowa Code chapter chapters 455B, 459, 459A and 459B regardless of the adopted recommendation of the board of supervisors. The department shall consider any timely filed comments made by the board as provided in this subrule to determine if an application meets the requirements of this chapter and Iowa Code chapter chapters 455B, 459, 459A and 459B.
c. If the board submits to the department an adopted recommendation to disapprove an application for a construction permit that is based on a rating produced by the master matrix, the department shall first determine if the application meets the requirements of this chapter and Iowa Code chapter chapters 455B, 459, 459A and 459B. The department shall preliminarily disapprove an application that does not satisfy the requirements of this chapter and Iowa Code chapter chapters 455B, 459, 459A and 459B, regardless of any result produced by using the master matrix. If the application meets the requirements of this chapter and Iowa Code chapter chapters 455B, 459, 459A and 459B, the department shall conduct an independent evaluation of the application using the master matrix. The department shall preliminarily approve the application if it achieves a satisfactory rating according to the department's evaluation. The department shall preliminarily disapprove the application if it produces an unsatisfactory rating regardless of whether the application satisfies the requirements of this chapter and Iowa Code chapter chapters 455B, 459, 459A and 459B. The department shall consider any timely filed comments made by the board as provided in this subrule to determine if an application meets the requirements of this chapter and Iowa Code chapter chapters 455B, 459, 459A and 459B.
Item 23. Amend paragraph 65.10(7)"a" as follows:
a. A county board of supervisors that has submitted an adopted recommendation to the department may contest the department's preliminary decision to approve or disapprove an application for permit by filing a written demand for a hearing before the commission. Due to the need for expedited scheduling, the county board of supervisors shall, as soon as possible but not later than 14 days following receipt of the department's notice of preliminary decision, notify the chief of the department's water quality bureau by facsimile transmission to (515)281-8895 department in writing that the board intends to file a demand for hearing. The demand for hearing shall be sent to Director, Department of Natural Resources, Henry A. Wallace Building, 502 East Ninth Street, Des Moines, Iowa 50319, the director of the department and must be postmarked no later than 30 days following the board's receipt of the department's notice of preliminary decision.
Item 24. Amend paragraph 65.10(8)"a" as follows:
a. Applicant demand for hearing before the commission. Due to the need for expedited scheduling, the applicant shall, as soon as possible but not later than 14 days following receipt of the department's notice of preliminary decision, notify the chief of the department's water quality bureau by facsimile transmission to (515)281-8895 department in writing that the applicant intends to file a demand for hearing. The demand for hearing shall be sent to Director, Department of Natural Resources, Henry A. Wallace Building, 502 East Ninth Street, Des Moines, Iowa 50319, the director of the department and must be postmarked no later than 30 days following the applicant's receipt of the department's notice of preliminary decision. If the county board of supervisors has filed a demand for hearing, the times for facsimile notification and filing a demand for hearing are extended an additional 3 business days. It is the responsibility of the applicant to communicate with the department to determine if a county demand for hearing has been filed. The demand for hearing shall include a statement setting forth all of the applicant's reasons why the application for permit should be approved or disapproved, including legal briefs and all supporting documentation, and a further statement indicating whether an oral presentation before the commission is requested.
Item 25. Amend subrule 65.10(10) as follows:
65.10(10) Complaint investigations. Complaints of violations of Iowa Code chapter chapters 455B, 459, 459A and 459B and this rule, which are received by the department or are forwarded to the department by a county, following a county board of supervisors' determination that a complainant's allegation constitutes a violation, shall be investigated by the department if it is determined that the complaint is legally sufficient and an investigation is justified.
a. No change.
b. A complaint is legally sufficient if it contains adequate information to investigate the complaint and if the allegation constitutes a violation, without investigating whether the facts supporting the allegation are true or untrue, of rules adopted by the department, Iowa Code chapter chapters 455B, 459, 459A and 459B or environmental standards in regulations subject to federal law and enforced by the department.
c. to i. No change.
Item 26. Amend subrule 65.11(9), introductory paragraph, as follows:
65.11(9) Measurement of separation distances. Except as provided in paragraph 65.11(9)"f," the distance between confinement feeding operation structures and locations or objects from which separation is required shall be measured horizontally by standard survey methods between the closest point of the location or object (not a property line) and the closest point of the confinement feeding operation structure. The department may require that a separation distance be measured and certified by a licensed land surveyor, a professional engineer licensed in the state of Iowa, or USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) NRCS qualified staff in cases where the department cannot confirm a separation distance. For purposes of this subrule, structure shall not include areas that do not house animals or store manure or litter.
Item 27. Amend subrule 65.12(1) as follows:
65.12(1) Exemptions to separation distance requirements from a residence, business, church, school and public use area. As specified in Iowa Code section 459.205 as amended by 2009 Iowa Acts, House File 735, section 4, the separation distances required from residences, businesses, churches, schools and public use areas specified in Iowa Code section sections 459.202 and section 459.204B as amended by 2009 Iowa Acts, House File 735, section 3, and required in subrules 65.11(1), 65.11(2) and 65.11(7), including Tables 6 to 6d at the end of this chapter, shall not apply to the following:
a. No change.
b. A confinement feeding operation structure which is constructed or expanded, if the titleholder of the land benefiting from the distance separation requirement executes a written waiver with the titleholder of the land where the structure, stockpile or qualified stockpile structure is located, under such terms and conditions that the parties negotiate. The waiver shall be specific to the construction or expansion project for which it is submitted. The waiver may include specific language to include future projects or expansions. The written waiver becomes effective only upon the recording of the waiver in the office of the recorder of deeds of the county in which the benefited land is located. The benefited land is the land upon which is located the residence, business, church, school or public use area from which separation is required. The filed waiver shall preclude enforcement by the department of the separation distance requirements of Iowa Code section 459.202. A copy of the recorded waiver shall be submitted with the construction design statement pursuant to subrule 65.9(3) if a construction permit is not required or as part of the construction permit application documents pursuant to subrule 65.9(1).
c. and d. No change.
Item 28. Amend subrule 65.12(2), introductory paragraph, as follows:
65.12(2) Exemptions to separation distance requirements from public thoroughfares. As specified in Iowa Code section 459.205 as amended by 2009 Iowa Acts, House File 735, section 4, the separation required from thoroughfares specified in Iowa Code section 459.202 and summarized in Tables 6 to 6d at the end of this chapter shall not apply to any of the following:
Item 29. Amend subrule 65.12(6), introductory paragraph, as follows:
65.12(6) Exemption to separation distance requirements from cemeteries. As specified in Iowa Code section 459.205 as amended by 2009 Iowa Acts, House File 735, section 4, the separation distance required between a confinement feeding operation structure and a cemetery shall not apply if any of the following apply:
Item 30. Amend subrule 65.12(8) as follows:
65.12(8) Exemptions to prohibition on one hundred year flood plain construction and separation distance requirements from water sources, major water sources, known sinkholes, agricultural drainage wells and designated wetlands—replacement formed manure storage structures. As specified in Iowa Code section 459.310, subsection 4, a separation distance required in subrules 65.11(3) and 65.11(4) or the prohibition against construction of a confinement feeding operation structure on a one hundred year flood plain as provided in paragraph 65.8(3)"e" shall not apply to a confinement feeding operation that includes a confinement feeding operation structure that was constructed prior to March 1, 2003, if any of the following apply:
a. One or more unformed manure storage structures that are part of the confinement feeding operation are replaced with one or more formed manure storage structures on or after April 28, 2003, and all of the following apply:
(1) to (4) No change.
(5)The replacement formed manure storage structure meets or exceeds the requirements of Iowa Code section 459.307 as amended by 2009 Iowa Acts, House File 735, section 7, and subrule 65.15(14).
b. A replacement formed manure storage structure that is part of the confinement feeding operation is constructed on or after April 28, 2003, pursuant to a variance granted by the department. In granting the variance, the department shall make a finding of all of the following:
(1)No change.
(2)The replacement formed manure storage structure complies with standards adopted pursuant to Iowa Code section 459.307 as amended by 2009 Iowa Acts, House File 735, section 7, and subrule 65.15(14).
(3)No change.
Item 31. Amend paragraph 65.15(1)"b" as follows:
b. Drainage tile lines discovered within the projected site of an unformed manure storage structure and within 50 feet of the projected structure's liquid surface at the high water level shall be removed and rerouted to at least 50 feet beyond the projected structure's liquid surface at the high water level. Drainage tile lines installed at the time of construction to lower a groundwater table may remain where located, provided that the tile lines are outside of the proposed berm. A device to allow monitoring of the water in the drainage tile lines installed to lower the groundwater table and a device to allow shutoff of the drainage tile lines shall be installed if the drainage tile lines do not have a surface outlet accessible on the property where the unformed manure storage structure is located. All other drainage tile lines discovered shall be rerouted, capped, or plugged with concrete, Portland cement concrete grout or similar materials.
Item 32. Amend subrule 65.15(2), introductory paragraph, as follows:
65.15(2) Drainage tile removal around an existing manure storage structure. The owner of an aerobic structure, anaerobic lagoon or earthen manure storage basin or earthen waste slurry storage basin, other than an egg washwater storage structure, that is part of a confinement feeding operation with a construction permit granted before March 20, 1996, but after December 31, 1992, shall inspect by March 20, 1997, for drainage tile lines as provided in this subrule, and all applicable records of known drainage tiles shall be examined. The owner of an aerobic structure, anaerobic lagoon, earthen manure storage basin or earthen waste slurry storage basin, other than an egg washwater storage structure, that is part of a confinement feeding operation with a construction permit granted before January 1, 1993, but after May 31, 1985, shall have an inspection conducted by July 1, 2000, inspect for drainage tiles as provided in this subrule, and all applicable records of known drainage tiles shall be examined. Drainage tile lines shall not be installed within the separation distance provided in paragraph 65.15(1)"b" once the basin has been constructed.
Item 33. Amend paragraph 65.15(7)"b" as follows:
b. Permanent artificial lowering of groundwater table.
(1)Unformed structures. The groundwater table around an unformed manure storage structure or earthen egg washwater storage structure may be artificially lowered to levels required in paragraph 65.15(7)"a" by using a gravity flow tile drainage system or other permanent nonmechanical system for artificial lowering of the groundwater table. Detailed engineering and soil drainage information shall be provided with a construction permit application for an unformed manure storage structure or earthen egg washwater storage structure to confirm the adequacy of the proposed permanent system to provide the required drainage without materially increasing the seepage potential of the site if a drainage system for artificially lowering the groundwater table will be installed. Drainage tiles shall not be located closer than 6 feet horizontally from the structure's liquid surface at maximum operating depth. (See 65.15(1)"b" for monitoring and shutoff requirements for drainage tile lines installed to lower the groundwater table.) The level to which the groundwater table will be lowered will be considered to represent the seasonal high-water table. If a drainage tile around the perimeter of the basin is installed a minimum of two feet below the top of the basin liner to artificially lower the seasonal high-water table, the top of the basin's liner may be a maximum of four feet below the seasonal high-water table which existed prior to installation of the perimeter tile system. Drainage tile lines shall be installed between the outside of the proposed toe of the berm and within 25 feet of the outside of the toe of the berm. Drainage tile lines shall be placed in a vertical trench and encased in granular material which extends upward to the level of the seasonal high-water table which existed prior to installation of the perimeter tile system. A device to allow monitoring of the water in the drainage tile lines installed to lower the groundwater table and a device to allow shutoff of the drainage tile lines shall be installed if the drainage tile lines do not have a surface outlet accessible on the property where the unformed manure storage structure is located.
(2)Formed structures. For a formed manure storage structure or a formed egg washwater storage structure, partially or completely constructed below the normal soil surface, a tile drainage system or other permanent system for artificial lowering of groundwater levels shall be installed around the structure if the groundwater table is above the bottom of the structure. (See 65.15(1)"b" 65.15(7)"b"(1) for monitoring and shutoff requirements for drainage tile lines installed to lower the groundwater table.)
Item 34. Amend paragraph 65.15(7)"c" as follows:
c. Determination of groundwater table. For purposes of this rule, groundwater table is the seasonal high water table determined by a licensed professional engineer, a groundwater professional certified pursuant to 567—Chapter 134, or qualified staff from the department or Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) NRCS. If a construction permit is required, the department must approve the groundwater table determination.
(1)Current groundwater levels shall be measured using at least one of the following for either formed or unformed structures:
1.Temporary monitoring wells. Each of the three A minimum of three temporary monitoring wells shall be developed according to 567—subrule 110.11(8) installed. The top of the well screen shall be within 5 feet of the ground surface. Each well shall be extended to at least 2 feet below the bottom of the liner of an unformed manure storage structure, or to at least 2 feet below the footings of a formed manure storage structure.
●Unformed structures. For an unformed manure storage structure, each monitoring well may be installed in the existing boreholes resulting from the corings required in subrule 65.15(6).
●Formed structures. For a formed manure storage structure, at least three temporary monitoring wells shall be installed as close as possible to three corners of the structure, with one of the wells close to the corner of deepest excavation. If the formed structure is circular, the three monitoring wells shall be equally spaced and one well shall be placed at the point of deepest excavation.
2.Test pits. The department may allow use of test pits in lieu of temporary monitoring wells if seasonal variation in climatic patterns, soil and geologic conditions prevent accurate determination of the seasonal high water table or prior to the construction of an unformed manure storage structure liner to ensure that the required separation distance to the groundwater table is being met. The bottom of each test pit shall be at least 2 feet below the floor of the manure storage structure or egg washwater storage structure. Each pit shall be allowed to remain open and unaltered for a minimum of seven days for viewing by the department or NRCS qualified staff for the determination of soil characteristics and related groundwater influence. Adequate protection (temporary berms and covers) shall be provided to prevent surface runoff from entering the test pits. One test pit shall be located in each corner and one in the center of the proposed manure control structure, unless otherwise specified by the department. Test pits shall be backfilled and compacted to achieve the seepage loss as outlined in subrule 65.15(11). A description of the materials present in the test pit shall be documented by all of the following:
●Digital photos;
●Description of soils including mottling;
●Construction specifications; and
●Weather conditions both prior to and during the period in which test pits are open.
(2)No change.
Item 35. Amend subrule 65.15(11) as follows:
65.15(11) Seals for unformed manure storage structures and unformed egg washwater storage structures. An unformed manure storage structure or egg washwater storage structure shall be sealed such that seepage loss through the seal is as low as practically possible. The percolation rate shall not exceed 1/16 inch per day at the design depth of the structure. Following construction of the structure, the results of a testing program which indicates the adequacy of the seal shall be provided to this department in writing prior to start-up of a permitted operation.
Item 36. Amend subrule 65.15(14), introductory paragraph, as follows:
65.15(14) Concrete standards. A formed manure storage structure which is constructed of concrete on or after March 24, 2004, that is part of a confinement feeding operation other than a small animal feeding operation shall meet the following minimum standards. For the purpose of this subrule, a "PE" is a professional engineer licensed in the state of Iowa and an "NRCS engineer" is an engineer working for the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) NRCS. (Caveat: These standards are not intended to address other site-related engineering and construction considerations beyond the department's jurisdiction.)
Item 37. Amend paragraph 65.15(14)"a"(2)"11" as follows:
11. All walls shall be formed with rigid forming systems and shall not be earth-formed. Form ties shall be nonremovable to provide a liquid-tight structure. No conduits or pipes shall be installed through an outside wall below the maximum liquid level of the structure.
Item 38. Amend paragraph 65.15(14)"a"(2)"14"as follows:
14. Backfilling of the walls shall not start until the floor slats or permanent bracing have has been installed and grouted. Backfilling shall be performed with material free of vegetation, large rocks or debris.
Item 39. Amend subparagraphs 65.15(14)"c"(1), (2) and (5) as follows:
(1)In an area that exhibits karst terrain or an area that drains into a known sinkhole, a PE, NRCS qualified staff or a qualified organization shall submit a soil exploration study based on the results from soil borings or test pits to determine the vertical separation between the bottom of the formed structure and limestone, dolomite, or other soluble rock. A minimum of two soil borings or two test pits, equally spaced within each formed structure , or two test pits located within 5 feet of the outside of the formed structure are required. After soil exploration is completed, each soil boring and test pit shall be properly plugged with concrete grout, bentonite, or similar materials.
(2)A minimum 5-foot layer of low permeability soil (1 × 10–6 cm/sec) or rock between the bottom of a formed manure storage structure and limestone, dolomite, or other soluble rock is required if the formed manure storage structure is not designed by a PE or NRCS qualified staff.
(5)Backfilling shall not start until the floor slats have been placed or permanent bracing has been installed and grouted, and shall be performed with material free of vegetation, large rocks, or debris.
Item 40. Amend paragraph 65.15(17)"a" as follows:
a. A secondary containment barrier shall consist of a structure surrounding or downslope of a manure storage structure and shall be designed according to either of the following:
(1)If the manure storage structure is used to store liquid or semiliquid manure, the secondary containment barrier shall be designed to contain 120 percent of the volume of manure stored above the manure storage structure's final grade or 50 percent of the volume of manure stored belowground or partially belowground, whichever is greater. Engineering drawings prepared by a professional engineer licensed in Iowa or NRCS qualified staff must be submitted according to procedures set forth in subrule 65.9(8) and must show compliance with 65.15(17) "a" to "d" or "e." If the containment barrier does not surround the manure storage structure, upland drainage must be diverted. For purposes of this subrule only, semiliquid manure means manure that contains a percentage of dry matter that results in manure too solid for pumping, but too liquid for stacking.
(2)If the manure storage structure is used for the storage of only dry manure, the secondary containment barrier shall be designed to contain at least 10 percent of the volume of manure stored. Detailed drawings prepared by the owner or a representative must be submitted according to procedures set forth in subrule 65.9(8) and must show compliance with 65.15(17) "a" to "d""c" or "e." If the containment barrier does not surround the manure storage structure, upland drainage must be diverted. Any dry manure retained by the secondary containment barrier shall be removed and properly disposed of within 14 days.
Item 41. Adopt the following new paragraph 65.15(17)"f":
f. In lieu of the construction of the secondary containment barrier, the manure control structure can be designed to retain the manure and direct the manure back into the storage structure.
Item 42. Amend subrule 65.16(1) as follows:
65.16(1) In accordance with Iowa Code section 459.312 as amended by 2009 Iowa Acts, Senate File 432, section 2, the following persons are required to submit manure management plans to the department, including an original manure management plan and an updated manure management plan, as required by this rule:
a. to e. No change.
f. An animal feeding operation otherwise required to submit an updated manure management plan and pay an annual compliance fee may make an election to be considered a small animal feeding operation for purposes of filing updated manure management plans and annual compliance fees if the confinement feeding operation maintains an animal unit capacity of 500 or fewer animal units. The election shall automatically terminate when more than 500 animal units are housed at the confinement feeding operation at any one time. If the confinement feeding operation exceeds more than 500 animal units, a manure management plan shall be submitted.
Item 43. Amend rule 567—65.17(459,459B), introductory paragraph, as follows:
567—65.17(459,459B) Manure management plan content requirements. All manure management plans are to be submitted on forms or electronically as prescribed by the department. The plans shall include all of the information specified in Iowa Code section 459.312 as amended by 2009 Iowa Acts, Senate File 432, section 2, and as described below.
Item 44. Amend subparagraphs 65.17(1)"c"(1) and (2) as follows:
(1)The name of the owner and the name of the confinement feeding operation, including mailing address and telephone number.
(2)The name of the contact person for the confinement feeding operation, including mailing address and telephone number.
Item 45. Rescind paragraph 65.17(4)"c".
Item 46. Amend subparagraph 65.17(6)"a"(1) as follows:
(1)Soil survey interpretation record. The plan shall include a map showing soil map units for the fields where manure will be applied. The optimum crop yield for each field shall be determined by using the weighted average of the soil interpretation record yields for the soils on the cropland where the manure is to be applied. Soil interpretation records from the Natural Resources Conservation Service NRCS shall be used to determine yields based on soil map units.
Item 47. Amend subrule 65.17(13), introductory paragraph, as follows:
65.17(13) Record keeping. Records shall be maintained by the owner of a confinement feeding operation who is required to submit a manure management plan. This recorded information shall be maintained for three years following the year of application or for the length of the crop rotation, whichever is greater. Records shall be maintained for five years following the year of application or for the length of the crop rotation, whichever is greater. Records shall be maintained at the site of the confinement feeding operation or at a residence or office of the owner or operator of the facility within 30 miles of the site. Records to demonstrate compliance with the manure management plan shall include the following:
Item 48. Amend subrule 65.17(16), introductory paragraph, as follows:
65.17(16) Soil sampling requirements for fields where the phosphorus index must be used. Soil samples shall be obtained from each field in the manure management plan at least once every four years, and the soil samples shall be four years old or less. Each soil sample shall be analyzed for phosphorus and pH. The soil sampling protocol shall meet all of the following requirements:
Item 49. Amend subrule 65.17(17), introductory paragraph, as follows:
65.17(17) Use of the phosphorus index. Manure application rates shall be determined in conjunction with the use of the Iowa Phosphorus Index as specified by the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) NRCS Iowa Technical Note No.25.
Item 50. Amend paragraphs 65.17(17)"b" and "e" as follows:
b. When sheet and rill erosion is calculated for the phosphorus index, the soil type used for the calculation shall be the most erosive soil map unit that is at least 10 percent of the total field area. Effective September 15, 2010, in In all original and complete manure management plans submitted to the department for approval, the dominant critical soil map unit consistent with NRCS conservation planning guidelines shall be used to calculate sheet and rill erosion for the phosphorus index. (See NRCS Technical Note No.29).
e. For an original manure management plan, previous soil sampling data that does not meet the requirements of subrule 65.17(16) may be used in the phosphorus index if the data is four years old or less. In the case of fields for which soil sampling data is used that does not meet the requirements of subrule 65.17(16), the fields must be soil-sampled according to the requirements of subrule 65.17(16) no more than one year after the original manure management plan is approved and a new manure management plan shall be submitted with the results of the new samples.
Item 51. Rescind and reserve subrule 65.17(20).
Item 52. Amend paragraph 65.19(4)"a" as follows:
a. Certification term. Certification for a commercial manure service and commercial manure service representative shall be for a period of one year and shall expire on March 1 of each year. Certification for a confinement site manure applicator shall be for a period of three years and shall expire on December 31 of the third year. After June 30, 2001, the The expiration dates of confinement site manure applicator certifications that currently expire on a date other than December 31 are automatically extended to December 31 of the year the certification expires.
Item 53. Amend rule 567—65.21(459,459B) as follows:
567—65.21(459,459B) Transfer of legal responsibilities or title. If title or legal responsibility for a permitted confinement feeding operation and its confinement feeding operation structure is transferred, the person to whom title or legal responsibility is transferred shall be subject to all terms and conditions of the construction permit and these rules. The person to whom the construction permit was issued and the person to whom title or legal responsibility is transferred shall notify the department of the transfer of legal responsibility or title of the operation within 30 days of the transfer. Within 30 days of receiving a written request from the department, the person to whom legal responsibility is transferred shall submit to the department all information needed to modify the construction permit to reflect the transfer of legal responsibility. A person who has been classified as a habitual violator under Iowa Code section 459.604 shall not acquire legal responsibility or a controlling interest to any additional permitted confinement feeding operations for the period that the person is classified as a habitual violator. A person who has an interest in a confinement feeding operation that is the subject of a pending enforcement action shall not acquire legal responsibility or an interest to any additional permitted confinement feeding operations for the period that the enforcement action is pending.
Item 54. Rescind rule 567—65.100(455B,459,459A) and adopt the following new rule in lieu thereof:
567—65.100(459A) Definitions and incorporation by reference. In addition to the definitions in Iowa Code sections 455B.101, 455B.171 and 459A.102, the following definitions shall apply to Division II of this chapter:
65.100(1) Definitions.
"Abandoned" means an open feedlot operation structure that has been razed, removed from the site of an open feedlot operation, filled in with earth, or converted to uses other than an open feedlot operation structure so that it cannot be used as an open feedlot operation structure without significant reconstruction.
"Adjacent." Two or more open feedlot operations are defined as adjacent if both of the following occur:
1.At least one open feedlot operation structure is constructed on or after July 17, 2002.
2.An open feedlot operation structure which is part of one open feedlot operation is separated by less than 1,250 feet from an open feedlot operation structure which is part of the other open feedlot operation.
"Alternative technology settled open feedlot effluent control system" or "AT system" means use of an open feedlot effluent control technology other than a conventional runoff containment system to control and dispose of settled open feedlot effluent. The department may allow an open feedlot operation covered by the NPDES permit application requirements of 567—65.102(459A) or 567—65.103(455B,459A) to use an AT system, provided the open feedlot operation satisfactorily demonstrates the AT system will provide an equivalent level of performance to that achieved by a runoff containment system that is designed and operated as required by statute, 567—subrule 62.4(12) and Division II of this chapter. Demonstration of equivalent performance must include submitting results of computer modeling which compares the predicted performance of the proposed system with that of a conventional runoff containment system over the same period. The specific requirements which must be met for an open feedlot operation to qualify for use of an AT system and the information which must be submitted to the department are outlined in rule 567—65.110(459A).
Design requirements have been established for two types of AT systems. These are a vegetative infiltration basin (VIB) followed by a vegetative treatment area (VTA) and a stand-alone vegetative treatment area (VTA). If other AT systems are developed that meet the equivalent performance standard established under EPA's CAFO rules, the department will consider their acceptance on a case-by-case basis.
"Animal" means cattle, swine, horses, sheep, chickens, turkeys, goats, fish, or ducks.
"Animal capacity" means the maximum number of animals which the owner or operator will confine in an open feedlot operation at any one time.
"Animal feeding operation" or "AFO" means a lot, yard, corral, building, or other area in which animals are confined and fed and maintained for 45 days or more in any 12-month period, and all structures used for the storage of manure from animals in the operation. Except as required for an NPDES permit required pursuant to the Act, an animal feeding operation does not include a livestock market.
"Animal unit" means a unit of measurement based upon the product of multiplying the number of animals of each category by a special equivalency factor, as follows:
1. Slaughter and feeder cattle |
1.000 |
2. Immature dairy cattle |
1.000 |
3. Mature dairy cattle |
1.400 |
4. Butcher or breeding swine weighing more than 55 pounds |
0.400 |
5. Swine weighing 15 pounds or more but not more than 55 pounds |
0.100 |
6. Sheep or lambs |
0.100 |
7. Horses |
2.000 |
8. Turkeys weighing 7 pounds or more |
0.018 |
9. Turkeys weighing less than 7 pounds |
0.0085 |
10. Broiler or layer chickens weighing 3 pounds or more |
0.010 |
11. Broiler or layer chickens weighing less than 3 pounds |
0.0025 |
12. Goats |
0.100 |
13. Ducks |
0.040 |
14. Fish |
0.001 |
"Animal unit capacity" means a measurement used to determine the maximum number of animal units that may be maintained as part of an open feedlot operation. Only for purposes of determining whether an open feedlot operation must obtain an NPDES permit, the animal unit capacity of the animal feeding operation shall include the animal unit capacities of both the open feedlot operation and the confinement feeding operation if all of the following occur:
1.The animals in the open feedlot operation and the confinement feeding operation are all in the same category of animals as used in the definitions of "large CAFO" and "medium CAFO" in 40 CFR Part 122.
2.The closest open feedlot operation structure is separated by less than 1,250 feet from the closest confinement feeding operation structure.
3.The open feedlot operation and the confinement feeding operation are under common ownership or management.
"Common management" means significant control by an individual of the management of the day-to-day operations of each of two or more open feedlot operations. "Common management" does not include control over a contract livestock facility by a contractor as defined in Iowa Code section 202.1.
"Common ownership" means to hold an interest in each of two or more open feedlot operations as any of the following:
1.A sole proprietor.
2.A joint tenant or tenant in common.
3.A holder of a majority equity interest in a business association as defined in Iowa Code section 202B.102, including as a shareholder, partner, member, beneficiary, or other equity interest holder.
An interest in an open feedlot operation under "2" or "3" above is a common ownership interest when it is held directly or indirectly through a spouse or dependent child, or both.
"Concentrated animal feeding operation" or "CAFO" means an AFO that is defined as a large CAFO, a medium CAFO, or a designated CAFO.
"Deep well" means a well located and constructed in such a manner that there is a continuous layer of low permeability soil or rock at least 5 feet thick located at least 25 feet below the normal ground surface and above the aquifer from which water is to be drawn.
"Designated area" means a known sinkhole, or a cistern, abandoned well, unplugged agricultural drainage well, agricultural drainage well surface tile inlet, drinking water well, designated wetland, lake, or water source. A designated area does not include a terrace tile inlet or surface tile inlet other than an agricultural drainage well surface tile inlet.
"Designated CAFO" means an AFO that has been designated as a CAFO pursuant to rule 567–65.103(455B,459A).
"Discontinued open feedlot operation" means an open feedlot operation in which the open feedlot operation structures have been abandoned or the use of the open feedlot operation structures has been discontinued as evidenced by the removal of all animals, and the owner or operator has no immediate plans to repopulate the structures.
"Feed storage runoff basin" means a covered or uncovered impoundment with the primary function to collect and store runoff from a feed storage area.
"Formed settled open feedlot effluent basin" means a settled open feedlot effluent basin which has walls and a floor constructed of concrete, concrete block, wood, steel, or similar materials. Similar materials may include, but are not limited to, plastic, rubber, fiberglass, or other synthetic materials. Materials used in a formed settled open feedlot effluent basin shall have the structural integrity to withstand expected internal and external load pressures.
"Karst terrain" means land having karst formations that exhibit surface and subterranean features of a type produced by the dissolution of limestone, dolomite, or other soluble rock and characterized by closed depressions, sinkholes, losing streams, or caves. If a 25-foot vertical separation distance can be maintained between the bottom of an open feedlot operation structure and limestone, dolomite, or other soluble rock, then the structure is not considered to be in karst terrain.
"Livestock market" means any place where animals are assembled from two or more sources for public auction, private sale, or on a commission basis, which is under state or federal supervision, including a livestock sale barn or auction market, if such animals are kept for ten days or less.
"Manure" means animal excreta or other commonly associated wastes of animals including, but not limited to, bedding, compost, litter, feed losses, raw materials or other materials commingled with manure or set aside for disposal.
"NPDES permit" means a written permit of the department pursuant to the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) program, to authorize and regulate the operation of a CAFO.
"Nutrient management plan" or "NMP" means a plan which provides for the management of manure, process wastewater, settled open feedlot effluent, settleable solids, open feedlot effluent, animal truck wash effluent, including the application of effluent, as provided in 567—65.112(459A).
"Open feedlot" means a lot, yard, corral, building, or other area used to house animals in conjunction with an open feedlot operation.
"Open feedlot effluent" means a combination of manure, precipitation-induced runoff, or other runoff from an open feedlot before its settleable solids have been removed. If an open feedlot operation structure or animal truck wash effluent structure contains effluent from both an open feedlot operation and an animal truck wash facility, the animal truck wash effluent shall be deemed to be open feedlot effluent.
"Open feedlot effluent basin" means an open feedlot basin which does not settle solids before the effluent goes to the basin.
"Open feedlot operation" means an unroofed or partially roofed animal feeding operation if crop, vegetation, or forage growth or residue is not maintained as part of the animal feeding operation during the period that animals are confined in the animal feeding operation. "Open feedlot operation" includes a "partially roofed animal feeding operation" as defined in this rule.
Iowa Code section 459A.103 provides that two or more open feedlot operations under common ownership or management are deemed to be a single open feedlot operation if they are adjacent or utilize a common area or system for open feedlot effluent disposal. To determine if two or more open feedlot operations are deemed to be one open feedlot operation, the first test is whether the open feedlot operations are under common ownership or management. If they are not under common ownership or management, they are not one open feedlot operation. The second test is whether the two open feedlot operations are adjacent or utilize a common area or system for open feedlot effluent disposal. If the two operations are not adjacent and do not use a common area or system for open feedlot effluent disposal, they are not one open feedlot operation.
"Open feedlot operation structure" means an open feedlot, a settled open feedlot effluent basin, a solids settling facility, or an AT system. "Open feedlot operation structure" does not include a manure storage structure as defined in Iowa Code section 459.102.
"Owner" means the person who has title to the property where the animal feeding operation or the animal truck wash facility is located or the person who has title to the animal feeding operation structures or the animal truck wash effluent structure which is part of an animal truck wash facility. "Owner" does not include a person who has a lease to use the land where the animal feeding operation or the animal truck wash facility is located or to use the animal feeding operation structures or the animal truck wash effluent structure which is part of an animal truck wash facility.
"Partially roofed animal feeding operation" means an animal feeding operation in which the animals have unrestricted access from any attached roofed structure and the square footage of the unroofed area is at least 10 percent of the square footage of any attached roofed area.
"Permanent vegetation cover" means land which is maintained in perennial vegetation cover consisting of grasses, legumes, or both, and includes, but is not limited to, pastures, grasslands or forages.
"Process wastewater" means water directly or indirectly used in the operation of the AFO for any or all of the following: spillage or overflow from animal or poultry watering systems; washing, cleaning, or flushing of pens, barns, manure pits, or other AFO facilities; direct contact swimming, washing, or spray cooling of animals; or dust control. Process wastewater also includes any water which comes into contact with any raw materials, products, or byproducts, including manure, litter, feed, milk, eggs or bedding.
"Production area" means that part of an AFO that includes the area in which animals are confined, the manure storage area, the raw materials storage area, egg washing and egg processing facilities, and the waste containment areas. The area in which animals are confined includes, but is not limited to, open lots, housed lots, feedlots, stall barns, free stall barns, milk rooms, milking centers, cow yards, barnyards, medication pens, walkers, animal walkways, confinement houses, and stables. The manure storage area includes, but is not limited to, lagoons, solids settling facilities, settled open feedlot effluent basins, storage sheds, stockpiles, under house or pit storages, liquid impoundments, static piles, and composting piles. The raw materials storage area includes, but is not limited to, feed silos, silage bunkers, and bedding materials. The waste containment area includes, but is not limited to, settling basins and areas within berms and diversions which separate uncontaminated storm water. Also included in the definition of production area is any area used in the storage, handling, treatment, or disposal of mortalities.
"Professional engineer" means a person engaged in the practice of engineering as defined in Iowa Code section 542B.2 who is issued a certificate of licensure as a professional engineer pursuant to Iowa Code section 542B.17.
"Release" means an actual, imminent or probable discharge of process wastewater, manure, open feedlot effluent, settled open feedlot effluent, or settleable solids from an open feedlot operation structure to surface water, groundwater, or an actual, imminent or probable discharge directly to a drainage tile line or intake resulting from storing, handling, transporting or land-applying process wastewater, manure, open feedlot effluent, settled open feedlot effluent or settleable solids.
"Settleable solids," "scraped solids," or "solids" means that portion of the effluent that meets all the following requirements:
1.The solids do not flow perceptibly under pressure.
2.The solids are not capable of being transported through a mechanical pumping device designed to move a liquid.
3.The constituent molecules of the solids do not flow freely among themselves but do show the tendency to separate under stress.
"Settled open feedlot effluent" means a combination of manure, precipitation-induced runoff, or other runoff originating from an open feedlot after its settleable solids have been removed.
"Settled open feedlot effluent basin" or "runoff control basin" means a covered or uncovered impoundment which is part of an open feedlot operation, if the primary function of the impoundment is to collect and store settled open feedlot effluent. An animal truck wash facility may be part of an open feedlot operation. An animal truck wash effluent structure may be the same as a settled open feedlot effluent basin that is part of the open feedlot operation, so long as the primary function of such impoundment is to collect and store effluent from both the animal truck wash facility and the open feedlot operation.
"Shallow well" means a well located and constructed in such a manner that there is not a continuous layer of low permeability soil or rock (or equivalent retarding mechanism acceptable to the department) at least 5 feet thick, the top of which is located at least 25 feet below the normal ground surface and above the aquifer from which water is to be drawn.
"Solids settling facility" means a basin, terrace, diversion, or other structure or solids removal method which is part of an open feedlot operation and which is designed and operated to remove settleable solids from open feedlot effluent. A "solids settling facility" does not include a basin, terrace, diversion, or other structure or solids removal method which retains the liquid portion of open feedlot effluent for more than seven consecutive days following a precipitation event.
"Stockpile" means any accumulation of manure, scraped solids, settleable solids or combination of manure and solids located outside of the open feedlot or animal truck wash facility or outside of an area that drains to an open feedlot or animal truck wash facility, where the scraped manure or solids are stored for less than six months.
"Unformed settled open feedlot effluent basin" means a settled open feedlot effluent basin, other than a formed settled open feedlot effluent basin.
"Vegetative infiltration basin" or "VIB" means an open feedlot operation structure in which settled open feedlot effluent is discharged into a relatively flat basin area which is bermed to prevent entry or discharge of surface water flows and is planted to permanent vegetation. An extensive tile system installed at a depth of three to five feet is used to collect infiltrated settled open feedlot effluent from the VIB and discharge it into a VTA for further treatment. As opposed to wetlands, which are designed to maintain a permanent water level, a VIB is designed to maximize water infiltration into the soil and thus normally will have standing water for only short periods of time. Removal of settleable solids is required prior to discharge of open feedlot effluent into the VIB. Soil suitability is essential to ensure adequate filtration and treatment of pollutants. Periodic harvesting of vegetation is required.
"Vegetative treatment area" or "VTA" means an open feedlot operation structure in which settled open feedlot effluent is discharged into areas which are level in one dimension and have a slight slope (less than 5 percent) in the other dimension and are planted to relatively dense permanent vegetation. Settled open feedlot effluent must be discharged evenly across the top width of the VTA and allowed to slowly flow downslope through the VTA. Level spreaders or other practices may be required to maintain even flow throughout the length of the VTA. Management to maintain a dense vegetation cover is required, as is periodic harvesting of vegetation.
"Water of the state" means any stream, lake, pond, marsh, watercourse, waterway, well, spring, reservoir, aquifer, irrigation system, drainage system, and any other body or accumulation of water, surface or underground, natural or artificial, public or private, which are contained within, flow through or border upon the state or any portion thereof.
"Water well" means an excavation that is drilled, cored, bored, augered, washed, driven, dug, jetted, or otherwise constructed for the purpose of exploring for groundwater, monitoring groundwater, utilizing the geothermal properties of the ground, or extracting water from or injecting water into the aquifer. "Water well" does not include an open ditch or drain tiles or an excavation made for obtaining or prospecting for oil, natural gas, minerals, or products mined or quarried.
"Waters of the United States" means the same as defined in 40 CFR 122.2.
65.100(2) Incorporation by reference. The text of the following incorporated materials is not included in Division II of this chapter. The materials listed below are hereby made a part of Division II of this chapter. For material subject to change, only the specific version specified in this subrule is incorporated. Any amendment or revision to a reference document is not incorporated until this subrule has been amended to specify the new version.
a. "Act" means the federal Water Pollution Control Act as amended through January 1, 2015, 33 U.S.C. Chapter 26;
b. "AFO Siting Atlas" means a tool to assist in determining potential building sites that meet regulatory requirements. The AFO Siting Atlas is located on the department's Web site;
c. "CFR" or "Code of Federal Regulations" means the federal administrative rules adopted by the United States in effect as of January 1, 2015;
d. Designated Wetlands in Iowa – effective date August 23, 2006, located on the department's Web site; and
e. Spill line telephone number is (515)725-8694.
Item 55. Amend rule 567—65.101(459A), introductory paragraph, as follows:
567—65.101(459A) Minimum open feedlot effluent control requirements and reporting of releases. An open feedlot operation shall provide for the management of manure, process wastewater, settled open feedlot effluent, settleable solids, scraped solids, and open feedlot effluent by using an open feedlot control method as provided in subrules 65.101(1) to 65.101(8). A release shall be reported to the department as provided in subrule 65.101(9).
Item 56. Amend subrules 65.101(2) and 65.101(3) as follows:
65.101(2) This subrule shall apply to an open feedlot operation which has obtained an NPDES permit pursuant to 567—65.102(455B,459A) or 567—65.103(455B,459A).
a. An open feedlot operation may discharge manure, process wastewater, settled open feedlot effluent, settleable solids, or open feedlot effluent into any waters of the United States due to a precipitation event, if any of the following apply:
(1) For an the open feedlot operation that houses cattle, other than veal calves, the operation is designed, constructed, operated, and maintained to comply with the requirements of 567—subrule 62.4(12) and not to discharge manure, process wastewater, settled open feedlot effluent, settleable solids, or open feedlot effluent resulting from precipitation events less than or equal to the 25-year, 24-hour precipitation event into any waters of the United States 40 CFR Part 412.
(2)For an open feedlot operation that houses veal calves, swine, chickens, or turkeys, the operation is designed, constructed, operated, and maintained not to discharge manure, process wastewater, settled open feedlot effluent, settleable solids, or open feedlot effluent resulting from precipitation events less than or equal to the 100-year, 24-hour precipitation event into any waters of the United States.
b. No change.
65.101(3) An open feedlot operation which has an animal unit capacity of 1,000 animal units or more, or an open feedlot operation which is a large CAFO, or a medium CAFO, as defined in rule 567—65.100(455B,459,459A) or a designated CAFO, pursuant to rule 567—65.103(455B,459A) shall not discharge manure, process wastewater, settled open feedlot effluent, settleable solids or open feedlot effluent from an open feedlot operation structure or production area into any waters of the United States, unless the discharge is pursuant to an NPDES permit. The control of manure, process wastewater, settled open feedlot effluent, settleable solids or open feedlot effluent originating from the open feedlot operation may be accomplished by the use of a solids settling facility, settled open feedlot effluent basin, AT system, or any other open feedlot effluent control structure or practice approved by the department. The department may require the diversion of surface drainage prior to contact with an open feedlot operation structure. Settleable solids shall be settled from open feedlot effluent before the effluent enters a settled open feedlot effluent basin or AT system.
Item 57. Amend subrules 65.101(6), 65.101(8) and 65.101(9) as follows:
65.101(6) Land application.
a. and b. No change.
c. CAFOs.
(1)No change.
(2)Setback requirements for open feedlot operations with NPDES permits. For open feedlot operations with NPDES permits, the following is adopted by reference: 40 CFR 412.4(a), (b) and (c)(5) as amended through July 30, 2012.
65.101(8) Stockpiling of scraped manure solids and settleable solids. Stockpiles of manure solids scraped from open feedlot operations and stockpiles of settleable solids shall comply with the following requirements.
a. to e. No change.
65.101(9) A release, as defined in rule 567—65.100( 455B,459,459A), shall be reported to the department as provided in this subrule. This subrule does not apply to the land application of manure, process wastewater, open feedlot effluent, settled open feedlot effluent, scraped solids, or settleable solids in compliance with these rules, or to precipitation- or snowmelt-induced runoff from open feedlots in compliance with the minimum control requirements set forth in this rule.
a. Notification. A person storing, handling, transporting, or land-applying manure, process wastewater, open feedlot effluent, settled open feedlot effluent , scraped solids, or settleable solids from an open feedlot operation who becomes aware of a release shall notify the department of the occurrence of release as soon as possible but not later than six hours after the onset or discovery of the release by contacting the department at (515)281-8694 department's spill line. The local police department or the office of the sheriff of the affected county shall also be contacted within the same time period if the release involves a public roadway and public safety could be threatened. Reports made pursuant to this rule shall be confirmed in writing as provided in 65.101(9)"c."
b. No change.
c. Written report. The written report of a release shall be submitted at the request of the department within 30 days after the verbal report of the release and contain at a minimum the following information:
(1) to (6) No change.
(7)The estimated or known volume of manure, process wastewater, open feedlot effluent, settled open feedlot effluent, scraped solids, or settleable solids allegedly released.
(8) to (12) No change.
d. and e. No change.
Item 58. Rescind rule 567—65.102(455B,459A) and adopt the following new rule in lieu thereof:
567—65.102(459A) Concentrated animal feeding operations; NPDES permits. Iowa Code subsection 459A.401(2) requires an open feedlot that is a concentrated animal feeding operation as defined in 40 CFR 122.23(b) to comply with applicable NPDES permit requirements pursuant to rules adopted by the commission. The following regulations are adopted by reference:
●40 CFR 122.21, application for a permit.
●40 CFR 122.23, concentrated animal feeding operations.
●40 CFR 122.42(e), additional conditions applicable to specified categories of NPDES permits.
●40 CFR 122.63(h), minor modification of permits.
●40 CFR Part 412, concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFO) point source category.
Item 59. Amend subrules 65.104(3) and 65.104(4) as follows:
65.104(3) Expansion of existing animal feeding operations. A person intending to expand an existing animal feeding operation which, upon completion of the expansion, will be defined as a CAFO and if the operation discharges pollutants to waters of the United States shall apply for an NPDES permit at least 90 days prior to the scheduled expansion. Operation of the expanded portion of the facility shall not begin until an NPDES permit has been obtained.
65.104(4) New animal feeding operations. A person intending to begin a new animal feeding operation which, upon completion, will be defined as a CAFO and if the operation discharges pollutants to waters of the United States shall apply for an NPDES permit at least 180 days prior to the date operation of the new animal feeding facility is scheduled. Operation of the new facility shall not begin until an NPDES permit has been obtained.
Item 60. Rescind and reserve subrule 65.104(6).
Item 61. Amend subrules 65.104(9) and 65.104(10) as follows:
65.104(9) Permit conditions. NPDES permits shall contain conditions required by 40 CFR Section 122.41 and conditions considered necessary by the department to ensure compliance with all applicable rules of the department, to ensure that the production area and land application areas are operated and maintained as required by Iowa law, to protect the public health and beneficial uses of waters of the United States, and to prevent water pollution from manure storage or application operations. Any more stringent conditions of 2005 Iowa Code Supplement chapter 459A, 567—subrule 62.4(12), and this chapter that apply to animal feeding operations shall govern. For CAFOs that maintain cattle, swine, or poultry, the following conditions shall be included:
a. Nutrient management plan. Open feedlot CAFOs shall comply with the requirements of 567—65.112(459A) and any additional nutrient management plan requirements for CAFOs in these rules by December 31, 2006. CAFOs that seek to obtain coverage under an NPDES permit issued after December 31, 2006, shall have a nutrient management plan developed and implemented upon the date of permit coverage.
b. and c. No change.
d. Minimum monitoring requirements for AT systems. During the first two five years of operation of an AT system, the following minimum monitoring will be required:
(1) to (4) No change.
e. Quarterly reporting requirements for large CAFOs with outside liquid impoundments. A permittee with outside liquid impoundments must submit quarterly reports by April 10, July 10, October 10, and January 10, following the respective calendar quarters, documenting daily precipitation, weekly impoundment liquid levels, volume of liquid removed from the impoundments, and the date, time, duration, and estimated volume of any overflow. Liquid levels must be obtained by observing a depth marker which clearly indicates the minimum capacity necessary to contain the runoff and direct precipitation of the 25-year, 24-hour precipitation event. or the 100-year, 24-hour precipitation event as applicable pursuant to 65.101(2)"a."
f. Annual reporting requirements for all CAFOs with systems other than AT systems. All permittees must submit an annual report to the department by January 10 of the following year. The annual report must include:
(1) to (4) No change.
(5)Summary of all manure, process wastewater, settled open feedlot effluent, settleable solids, or open feedlot effluent discharges from the production area that have occurred in the previous 12 months, including date, time, and approximate volume; and
(6)A statement indicating whether the current version of the CAFO's nutrient management plan was developed or approved by a certified nutrient management planner.;
(7)Actual crops planted and actual yield for the preceding 12 months; and
(8)Results of all samples of manure, litter and process wastewater for nitrogen and phosphorus content for manure, litter and process wastewater that was land-applied.
g. and h. No change.
65.104(10) Permit renewal.
a. No change.
b. Permits involving use of AT systems.
(1)During the first two years of operation of an AT system, a permittee will be issued a two-year NPDES permit. Renewal of this a permit involving use of an AT system is contingent upon proper operation and maintenance of the AT system, submittal of all required records and reports, and demonstration that the AT system is providing an equivalent level of performance to that achieved by a containment system that is designed and operated as required by statute, 567—subrule 62.4(12) and Division II of this chapter.
(2)No change.
Item 62. Amend subrule 65.105(3) as follows:
65.105(3) Applications that cannot be approved. The department shall not approve an application for a construction permit unless the applicant submits all of the following:
a. No change.
b. An engineering report, construction plans, and specifications prepared by a professional engineer or the Natural Resources Conservation Service of the United States Department of Agriculture NRCS certifying that the construction design of the settled open feedlot effluent basin or AT system complies with the construction design standards required in Division II of this chapter 65.
Item 63. Amend subrule 65.105(4) as follows:
65.105(4) Plan review criteria; time for approval or disapproval.
a. Plan review criteria. Review of plans and specifications shall be conducted by the department to determine the potential of the settled open feedlot effluent basin or AT system to achieve the level of control being required of the open feedlot operation. Applicable criteria contained in federal law, state law, these rules, Natural Resources Conservation Service NRCS design standards and specifications, unless inconsistent with federal or state law or these rules, and United States Department of Commerce precipitation data will be used in the review of large CAFOs. If the proposed facility plans are not adequately covered by these criteria, applicable criteria contained in current technical literature shall be used. Medium CAFOs and designated CAFOs shall be evaluated using the department's professional judgment.
b. No change.
Item 64. Amend subrule 65.105(5) as follows:
65.105(5) Expiration of construction permits. The construction permit shall expire if construction, as defined in rule 567—65.106(459A), is not begun within one year and completed within three years of the date of issuance. A construction permit issued prior to September 14, 2005, shall expire if construction, as defined in rule 567—65.106(459A), is not begun within one year of the date of issuance and shall expire on September 15, 2012, if construction is not completed by September 14, 2012. The director may grant an extension of time to begin or complete construction if it is necessary or justified, upon showing of such necessity or justification to the director.
Item 65. Amend subrule 65.106(2) as follows:
65.106(2) Construction does not begin upon occurrence of any of the following:
a. Removal of trees, brush, or other vegetative growth.
b. Construction of driveways or roads.
c. General earth moving for leveling or compacting at the site.
d. Installation of temporary utility services.
Item 66. Amend paragraph 65.107(2)"f" as follows:
f. An engineering report, construction plans and specifications prepared by a professional engineer or by Natural Resources Conservation Service NRCS personnel for the settled open feedlot effluent basin or AT system.
Item 67. Amend rule 567—65.108(455B,459A) as follows:
567—65.108(455B,459A) Water well separation distances for open feedlot operations.
65.108(1) Settled Unformed settled open feedlot effluent basins. Settled Unformed settled open feedlot effluent basins shall be separated from water wells as follows:
a. Public wells. 1,000 feet from shallow wells and 400 feet from deep wells;
b. Private wells. 400 feet from both shallow wells and deep wells.
65.108(2) Open feedlots, solids settling facilities, formed settled open feedlot effluent basins, feed storage runoff control structures and AT systems. Open feedlots, solids settling facilities, formed settled open feedlot effluent basins, feed storage runoff control structures and AT systems shall be separated from water wells as follows: for both public wells and private wells, 200 feet from shallow wells and 100 feet from deep wells.
65.108(3) No change.
Item 68. Amend rule 567—65.109(459A) as follows:
567—65.109(459A) Settled open feedlot effluent basins—investigation, design and construction requirements. A settled open feedlot effluent basin required to be constructed pursuant to a construction permit issued pursuant to 2005 Iowa Code Supplement section 459A.205 shall meet the design and construction requirements set forth in this rule.
65.109(1) No change.
65.109(2) Soils and hydrogeologic report. A settled open feedlot effluent basin required to be constructed pursuant to a construction permit issued pursuant to rule 567—65.105(459A) shall meet design standards as required by a soils and hydrogeologic report. The report shall be submitted with the construction permit application as provided in rule 567—65.107(459A). The report shall include all of the following:
a. and b. No change.
c. The results of a soils investigation conducted at a minimum of three locations within the area of the basin reflecting the continuous soil profile existing within the area of the basin. The soils investigation results shall be used in determining subsurface soil characteristics and groundwater elevation and direction of flow at the proposed site. The soils investigation shall be conducted and utilized as follows:
(1) to (3) No change.
(4)If located in karst terrain or potential karst terrain, at least one soil coring shall be taken to a minimum depth of 25 feet below the bottom elevation of the settled open feedlot effluent basin or into bedrock, whichever is shallower. The department may accept information from the department's Geosam database in lieu of the coring. If bedrock is encountered, adequate investigation of the bedrock formation shall be made to determine if it consists of limestone, dolomite, or other soluble rock.
(5) to (7) No change.
65.109(3) Hydrology.
a. Determination of groundwater table. For purposes of this rule, groundwater table is the seasonal high-water table determined by a professional engineer, a groundwater professional certified pursuant to 567—Chapter 134, or qualified staff from the department or Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) NRCS. If a construction permit is required, the department must approve the groundwater table determination.
(1) and (2) No change.
b. and c. No change.
65.109(4) Karst terrain.
a. and b. No change.
c. Construction of an unformed settled open feedlot effluent basins basin is allowed in areas identified as karst terrain if site-specific geologic information is submitted documenting that 25 feet of suitable materials exist between the structure bottom and carbonated bedrock or limestone or dolomite.
65.109(5) No change.
65.109(6) Floodplain requirements.
a. Construction in floodplains. Open feedlot operation structures located on a floodplain or within a floodway of a river or stream may be required to obtain DNR department permits and provide protection from inundation by flood waters, as specified in 567—Chapters 71 and 72. If a proposed open feedlot operation structure is located in alluvial soils, then a floodplain determination or floodway elevation shall be requested from the department. The AFO Siting Atlas may be a tool used to assist in the floodplain and alluvial soil determinations.
b. Permits for dam construction. Open feedlot operation structures exceeding storage capacity or dam height thresholds may be required to obtain DNR department permits, as specified in 567—71.3(455B) and 567—72.3(455B).
65.109(7) and 65.109(8) No change.
65.109(9) Unformed basins containing confinement manure and open feedlot effluent. Unformed basins containing confinement manure and open feedlot effluent shall meet the confinement construction standards and separation distance requirements provided in Division I of this chapter. The unformed basin design shall ensure adequate storage for two feet of freeboard plus the open feedlot effluent resulting from a 25-year, 24-hour precipitation event. The unformed basin shall contain the annual manure generated from all confinement animals.
Item 69. Amend subrule 65.110(5), introductory paragraph, as follows:
65.110(5) Hydrology—groundwater table. For purposes of this rule, groundwater table is the seasonal high-water table determined by a professional engineer, a groundwater professional certified pursuant to 567—Chapter 134, or qualified staff from the department or Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) NRCS. If a construction permit is required, the department must approve the groundwater table determination.
Item 70. Amend rule 567—65.111(459A) as follows:
567—65.111(459A) Construction certification.
65.111(1) The owner of an open feedlot operation who is issued a construction permit for a settled open feedlot effluent basin or AT system as provided in rule 567—65.105(459A) on or after July 1, 2005, shall submit to the department a construction certification from a professional engineer certifying all of the following:
a. The settled open feedlot effluent basin or AT system was constructed in accordance with the design plans submitted to the department as part of an application for a construction permit pursuant to rule 567—65.107(459A). If the actual construction deviates from the approved design plans, the construction certification shall identify all changes and certify that the changes were consistent with all applicable standards of these rules.
b. The settled open feedlot effluent basin or AT system was inspected by the professional engineer after completion of construction and before commencement of operation.
65.111(2) No change.
Item 71. Amend rule 567—65.112(459A) as follows:
567—65.112(459A) Nutrient management plan requirements.
65.112(1) The owner of an open feedlot operation which has an animal unit capacity of 1,000 animal units or more or which is required to be issued an NPDES permit shall develop and implement a nutrient management plan meeting the requirements of this rule. The owner of an open feedlot operation that seeks to obtain or is required to be issued an NPDES permit after December 31, 2006, shall develop and implement a nutrient management plan meeting the requirements of this rule no later than the date on which the NPDES permit becomes effective. For the purpose of this rule, requirements pertaining to open feedlot effluent also apply to settled open feedlot effluent and settleable solids.
65.112(2) to 65.112(7) No change.
65.112(8) A Except as provided in 65.112(8)"f," a nutrient management plan shall include all of the following:
a. No change.
b. Information relating to the application of the manure, process wastewater and open feedlot effluent, including all of the following:
(1)Nutrient levels concentration of the manure, process wastewater and open feedlot effluent.
(2)No change.
c. If the application is on land other than land owned or rented for crop production by the owner of the open feedlot operation, the plan shall include a copy of each written agreement executed by the owner of the open feedlot operation and the landowner or the person renting the land for crop production where the manure, process wastewater or open feedlot effluent may be applied. The written agreement shall indicate the number of acres on which the manure, process wastewater or effluent may be applied and the length of the agreement.
d. and e. No change.
f. Sales of scraped solids or settleable solids licensed by the Iowa department of agriculture and land stewardship (IDALS). Open feedlot operations that will sell scraped solids or settleable solids as a bulk dry animal nutrient product under Iowa Code chapter 200A as regulated by IDALS may, in lieu of complying with this subrule for that portion of open feedlot effluent, submit to the department a copy of the operation's site-specific IDALS license or documentation for any scraped solids or settleable solids that will be sold pursuant to Iowa Code chapter 200A, along with the department-approved nutrient management plan form for sales of scraped solids or settleable solids.
g. An open feedlot operation must submit a complete nutrient management plan using a new phosphorus index, including soil sampling as required in subrule 65.17(16), for each field in the nutrient management plan a minimum of once every five years, submitting the plan with the NPDES permit renewal application if the open feedlot operation has an NPDES permit.
65.112(9) No change.
65.112(10) Current nutrient management plan, record keeping and inspections.
a. No change.
b. Record keeping. Records shall be maintained by the owner of a an open feedlot operation who is required to submit a nutrient management plan. This recorded information shall be maintained for five years following the year of application or for the length of the crop rotation, whichever is greater. Records shall be maintained at the site of the open feedlot operation and shall be made available to the department upon request. Records to demonstrate compliance with the nutrient management plan shall include the following:
(1) to (7) No change.
c. No change.
65.112(11) Settled open feedlot effluent on land planted to soybeans. Effective May 14, 2013, the owner of an open feedlot operation that is required to submit a nutrient management plan shall not apply liquid manure, process wastewater or settled open feedlot effluent to land that is currently planted to soybeans or to land where the current crop has been harvested that will be planted to soybeans the next crop season. Not later than November 14, 2012, the commission shall review the available scientific evidence and determine whether any further or alternative action is necessary. The prohibition on applying liquid manure, process wastewater or settled open feedlot effluent shall not become effective unless the commission publishes a notice in the Iowa Administrative Bulletin confirming that it has reviewed the available scientific evidence and that the prohibition shall take effect on May 14, 2013.
Item 72. Amend rule 567—65.113(459A) as follows:
567—65.113(459A) Complaint investigations. Complaints of violations of Iowa Code chapter 455B, or 459, or 2005 Iowa Code Supplement chapter 459A, or 459B or these rules, which are received by the department or are forwarded to the department by a county, following a county board of supervisors' determination that a complainant's allegation constitutes a violation, shall be investigated by the department if it is determined that the complaint is legally sufficient and an investigation is justified.
65.113(1) No change.
65.113(2) A complaint is legally sufficient if it contains adequate information to investigate the complaint and if the allegation constitutes a violation, without an investigation of whether the facts supporting the allegation are true or untrue, of department rules, Iowa Code chapter 455B, or 459, or 2005 Iowa Code Supplement chapter 459A, or 459B or environmental standards in regulations subject to federal law and enforced by the department.
65.113(3) to 65.113(8) No change.
65.113(9) When a person who is a department official, an agent of the department, or a person accompanying the department official or agent enters the premises of an open feedlot operation, both of the following shall apply:
a. The person may enter at any reasonable time in and upon any private or public property to investigate any actual or possible violation of Iowa Code chapter 455B, or 459, or 2005 Iowa Code Supplement chapter 459A, or 459B or these rules. However, the owner or person in charge shall be notified.
(1) to (4) No change.
b. No change.
Item 73. Reserve rules 567—65.115 to 567—65.199 in Division II.
Item 74. Adopt the following new rules 567—65.200(459,459A) to 567—65.210(459,459A) and Division III title:
DIVISION III
ANIMAL TRUCK WASH FACILITIES
567—65.200(459,459A) Definitions and incorporation by reference. In addition to the definitions in Iowa Code sections 455B.101, 455B.171 and 459A.102, the following definitions shall apply to Division III of this chapter.
65.200(1) Definitions.
"Animal feeding operation" or "AFO" means a lot, yard, corral, building, or other area in which animals are confined and fed and maintained for 45 days or more in any 12-month period, and all structures used for the storage of manure from animals in the operation. Except as required for an NPDES permit required pursuant to the Act, an animal feeding operation does not include a livestock market.
"Animal truck wash effluent" means a combination of manure, washwater-induced runoff, or other runoff derived from an animal truck wash facility, which may include solids. Animal truck wash effluent shall not exceed the following metal concentrations: aluminum 10 mg/L, copper 0.4 mg/L, and iron 10 mg/L.
"Animal truck wash effluent structure" means an impoundment which is part of an animal truck wash facility, if the primary function of the impoundment is to collect and store animal truck wash effluent.
"Animal truck wash facility" means an operation engaged solely in washing single-unit trucks, truck-tractors, semitrailers, or trailers used to transport animals. An animal truck wash facility is considered to be part of an animal feeding operation if the animal truck wash facility and the animal feeding operation are under common ownership or management and the animal truck wash facility is located within 1,250 feet of the animal feeding operation.
"Common management" means significant control by an individual of the management of the day-to-day operations of two or more animal truck wash facilities or an animal truck wash facility and an animal feeding operation. "Common management" does not include control over a contract livestock facility by a contractor as defined in Iowa Code section 202.1.
"Formed animal truck wash effluent structure" means a covered or uncovered impoundment used to store effluent from an animal truck wash facility, which has walls and a floor constructed of concrete, concrete block, wood, steel, or similar materials.
"Karst terrain" means land having karst formations that exhibit surface and subterranean features of a type produced by the dissolution of limestone, dolomite, or other soluble rock and characterized by closed depressions, sinkholes, losing streams, or caves. If a 25-foot vertical separation distance can be maintained between the bottom of an animal truck wash facility and limestone, dolomite, or other soluble rock, then the structure is not considered to be in karst terrain.
"Manure" means animal excreta or other commonly associated wastes of animals including, but not limited to, bedding, compost, litter, feed losses, raw materials or other materials commingled with manure or set aside for disposal. If a manure storage structure or animal truck wash effluent structure contains both manure from a confinement feeding operation and animal truck wash effluent from an animal truck wash facility, the effluent shall be deemed to be manure.
"Manure storage structure" means a formed manure storage structure, an unformed manure storage structure or a dry bedded manure storage structure. A manure storage structure does not include an egg washwater storage structure. An animal truck wash facility may be part of a confinement feeding operation. An animal truck wash effluent structure may be the same as a manure storage structure that is part of the confinement feeding operation, so long as the primary function of such impoundment is to collect and store both effluent from the animal truck wash facility and manure from the confinement feeding operation.
"Nutrient management plan" or "NMP" means a plan which provides for the management of animal truck wash effluent, including the application of effluent, as provided in 567—65.208(459A).
"Open feedlot effluent" means a combination of manure, precipitation-induced runoff, or other runoff from an open feedlot before its settleable solids have been removed. If an open feedlot operation structure or animal truck wash effluent structure contains effluent from both an open feedlot operation and an animal truck wash facility, the animal truck wash effluent shall be deemed to be open feedlot effluent.
"Owner" means the person who has title to the property where the animal truck wash facility is located or the person who has title to the animal truck wash effluent structure which is part of an animal truck wash facility. "Owner" does not include a person who has a lease to use the land where the animal truck wash facility is located or to use the animal truck wash effluent structure which is part of an animal truck wash facility.
"Release" means an actual, imminent or probable discharge of process wastewater, manure, animal truck wash effluent, or settleable solids from an animal truck wash facility to surface water, groundwater, or an actual, imminent or probable discharge directly to a drainage tile line or intake resulting from storing, handling, transporting or land-applying process wastewater, manure, animal truck wash effluent or settleable solids.
"Settleable solids," "scraped solids," or "solids" mean that portion of animal truck wash effluent that meets all the following requirements:
1.The solids do not flow perceptibly under pressure.
2.The solids are not capable of being transported through a mechanical pumping device designed to move a liquid.
3.The constituent molecules of the solids do not flow freely among themselves but do show the tendency to separate under stress.
"Settled open feedlot effluent basin" or "runoff control basin" means a covered or uncovered impoundment which is part of an open feedlot operation, if the primary function of the impoundment is to collect and store settled open feedlot effluent. An animal truck wash facility may be part of an open feedlot operation. An animal truck wash effluent structure may be the same as a settled open feedlot effluent basin that is part of the open feedlot operation, so long as the primary function of such impoundment is to collect and store effluent from both the animal truck wash facility and the open feedlot operation.
"Small animal truck wash facility" means an animal truck wash facility, if all of the following apply:
1.The animal truck wash facility and all single-unit trucks, truck-tractors, semitrailers, or trailers that are washed at the facility are owned by the same person; and
2.The average total per-day volume of washwater used by the animal truck wash facility does not exceed 2,000 gallons as calculated on a monthly basis.
"Stockpile" means any accumulation of manure, scraped solids, settleable solids or combination of manure and solids located outside of the animal truck wash facility or outside of an area that drains to an animal truck wash facility, where the scraped manure or solids are stored for less than six months.
"Unformed animal truck wash effluent structure" means a covered or uncovered impoundment used to store animal truck wash effluent, other than a formed animal truck wash effluent structure.
"Water of the state" means any stream, lake, pond, marsh, watercourse, waterway, well, spring, reservoir, aquifer, irrigation system, drainage system, and any other body or accumulation of water, surface or underground, natural or artificial, public or private, which are contained within, flow through or border upon the state or any portion thereof.
65.200(2) Incorporation by reference. The text of the following incorporated materials is not included in Division III of this chapter. The materials listed below are hereby made a part of Division III of this chapter. For material subject to change, only the specific version specified in this subrule is incorporated. Any amendment or revision to a reference document is not incorporated until this subrule has been amended to specify the new version.
a. "Act" means the federal Water Pollution Control Act as amended through January 1, 2015, 33 U.S.C. Chapter 26;
b. "AFO Siting Atlas" means a tool to assist in determining potential building sites that meet regulatory requirements. The AFO Siting Atlas is located on the department's Web site;
c. "CFR" or "Code of Federal Regulations" means the federal administrative rules adopted by the United States in effect as of January 1, 2015;
d. Designated Wetlands in Iowa – effective date August 23, 2006, located on the department's Web site; and
e. Spill line telephone number is (515)725-8694.
567—65.201(459A) Minimum animal truck wash effluent control requirements and reporting of releases. An animal truck wash facility shall provide for the management of manure, process wastewater, settleable solids, scraped solids, and animal truck wash effluent by using the control method as provided in subrules 65.201(1) to 65.201(4). A release shall be reported to the department as provided in subrule 65.201(5).
65.201(1) No direct discharge of animal truck wash effluent shall be allowed from an animal truck wash facility into a publicly owned lake, a known sinkhole, or an agricultural drainage well.
65.201(2) Land application.
a. General requirements. Animal truck wash effluent shall be land-applied in a manner which will not cause pollution of surface water or groundwater. Land application of animal truck wash effluent shall not exceed one inch per hour, and land application shall cease immediately if runoff occurs. Land application of animal truck wash effluent shall be conducted on days when weather and soil conditions are suitable. Weather and soil conditions are normally considered suitable for animal truck wash effluent application if: (1) land application areas are not frozen or snow-covered; (2) temperatures during application are greater than 32 degrees Fahrenheit; and (3) precipitation has not exceeded the water holding capacity of the soil to accept the effluent application without the possibility of runoff. Application in accordance with the provisions of state law and the rules in this chapter shall be deemed as compliance with this requirement.
b. Separation distances. A person shall not apply animal truck wash effluent on land located within 750 feet from a residence not owned by the titleholder of the land, unless one of the following apply:
(1)The animal truck wash effluent is land-applied by injection or incorporation on the same date as the animal truck wash effluent was land-applied.
(2)The titleholder of the land benefiting from the separation distance requirement executes a written waiver with the titleholder of the land where the animal truck wash effluent is applied.
(3)The animal truck wash effluent is from a small animal truck wash facility or an animal truck wash facility that is part of a small animal feeding operation.
65.201(3) The owner of an animal truck wash facility who discontinues the use of the facility shall remove and land-apply in accordance with state law all manure, process wastewater and animal truck wash effluent from the animal truck wash effluent structures as soon as practical but not later than six months following the date the animal truck wash facility is discontinued.
65.201(4) Stockpiling of scraped solids and settleable solids. Stockpiles of solids scraped from animal truck wash facilities and stockpiles of settleable solids shall comply with the following requirements:
a. Stockpiles must be land-applied in accordance with subrule 65.201(2) as soon as possible but not later than six months after they are established.
b. Stockpiles shall not be located within 400 feet from a designated area or, in the case of a high-quality water resource, within 800 feet.
c. Stockpiles shall not be located in grassed waterways or areas where water ponds or has concentrated flow.
d. Stockpiles shall not be located within 200 feet of a terrace tile inlet or surface tile inlet or known sinkhole unless the stockpile is located so that any runoff from the stockpile will not reach the inlet or sinkhole.
e. Stockpiles shall not be located on land having a slope of more than 3 percent unless methods, structures or practices are implemented to contain the stockpiled solids, including but not limited to hay bales, silt fences, temporary earthen berms, or other effective measures, and to prevent or diminish precipitation-induced runoff from the stockpiled solids.
65.201(5) A release, as defined in rule 567—65.200(459,459A), shall be reported to the department as provided in this subrule. This subrule does not apply to the land application of manure, process wastewater, animal truck wash effluent, scraped solids, or settleable solids in compliance with these rules.
a. Notification. A person storing, handling, transporting, or land-applying manure, process wastewater, animal truck wash effluent, scraped solids, or settleable solids from an animal truck wash facility who becomes aware of a release shall notify the department of the occurrence of release as soon as possible but not later than six hours after the onset or discovery of the release by contacting the department's spill line. The local police department or the office of the sheriff of the affected county shall also be contacted within the same time period if the release involves a public roadway and public safety could be threatened. Reports made pursuant to this rule shall be confirmed in writing as provided in 65.201(5)"c."
b. Verbal report. The verbal report of such a release should provide information on as many items listed in 65.201(5)"c" as available information will allow.
c. Written report. The written report of a release shall be submitted at the request of the department within 30 days after the verbal report of the release and contain at a minimum the following information:
(1)The approximate location of the alleged release (including at a minimum the quarter-quarter section, township and county in which the release occurred or was discovered).
(2)The time and date of onset of the alleged release, if known, and the time and date of the discovery of the alleged release.
(3)The time and date of the verbal report to the department of the release.
(4)The name, mailing address and telephone number of the person reporting the release.
(5)The name, mailing address and telephone number of any other person with knowledge of the event who can be contacted for further information.
(6)The source of the manure, process wastewater, animal truck wash effluent, scraped solids, or settleable solids allegedly released.
(7)The estimated or known volume of manure, process wastewater, animal truck wash effluent, scraped solids, or settleable solids allegedly released.
(8)The weather conditions at the time of the onset or discovery of the release.
(9)If known, the circumstances under which the alleged release occurred or exists (e.g., overflow, storage structure breach, equipment malfunction or breakdown, land runoff).
(10)The approximate location of the nearest stream or other water body which is or could be impacted by the alleged release, and the approximate location to the alleged release of any known tile intakes or tile lines which could be a direct conveyance to a surface water or groundwater.
(11)A description of any containment or remedial measures taken to minimize the impact of the release.
(12)Any information that may assist the department in evaluating the release.
d. Reporting of subsequent findings. All subsequent findings and laboratory results should be reported and submitted in writing to the department as soon as they become available.
e. Waiver of notification requirement. A waiver from the notification requirement of paragraph "a" of this subrule may be granted by the department for a release to a specific drainage tile line or intake if sufficient information is provided to demonstrate that the drainage tile line or intake will not result in a discharge to a water of the state.
567—65.202(459,459A) Construction permits.
65.202(1) Animal truck wash facilities required to obtain a construction permit. An animal truck wash facility must obtain a construction permit prior to any of the following:
a. Constructing or expanding an animal truck wash effluent structure.
b. When the department has previously issued the animal truck wash facility a construction permit and the volume of the animal truck wash effluent would be more than the volume approved by the department in the previous construction permit.
c. When the animal truck wash facility is part of a confinement feeding operation and all of the following apply:
(1)The department has issued a construction permit or an NPDES permit for the confinement feeding operation or a letter approving a construction design statement for the confinement feeding operation in lieu of a construction permit.
(2)The animal truck wash effluent will be added to an existing manure storage structure resulting in a total stored volume greater than that approved in the construction permit or the construction design statement approval letter.
d. When the animal truck wash facility is part of an open feedlot operation and all of the following apply:
(1)The department has issued a construction permit or an NPDES permit for an open feedlot operation.
(2)The animal truck wash effluent will be added to an existing settled open feedlot effluent basin resulting in a total stored volume greater than that approved in the construction permit or NPDES permit.
e. When an animal truck wash facility is constructed or expanded as part of a small animal feeding operation that includes a manure storage structure and the animal truck wash effluent will be added to the manure storage structure.
65.202(2) When a construction permit for an animal truck wash facility is not required.
a. When a small animal truck wash facility is constructed or expanded.
b. When a small animal truck wash facility is part of a small animal feeding operation and the animal truck wash effluent is added to the manure storage structure.
65.202(3) Construction permit applications that cannot be approved. The department shall not approve an application for a construction permit unless the applicant submits all of the following:
a. A nutrient management plan as provided in rule 567—65.208(459A).
b. An engineering report, construction plans, and specifications prepared by a professional engineer or NRCS certifying that the design of the animal truck wash effluent structure complies with the construction design standards required in Division III of this chapter.
65.202(4) Plan review criteria; time for approval or disapproval.
a. Plan review criteria. Review of plans and specifications shall be conducted by the department to determine the potential of the animal truck wash effluent structure to achieve the level of control being required of the animal truck wash facility. Applicable criteria contained in federal law, state law, these rules, NRCS design standards and specifications, unless inconsistent with federal or state law or these rules will be used in this review. If the proposed facility plans are not adequately covered by these criteria, applicable criteria contained in current technical literature shall be used.
b. Time for approval or disapproval. The department shall approve or disapprove an application for a construction permit within 60 days after receiving the permit application. However, the applicant may deliver a notice requesting a continuance. Upon receipt of a notice, the time required for the department to act upon the application shall be suspended for the period provided in the notice, but for not more than 30 days after the department's receipt of the notice. The applicant may submit more than one notice. If review of the application is delayed because the application is incomplete, and the applicant fails to supply requested information within a reasonable time prior to the deadline for action on the application, the permit may be denied and a new application will be required if the applicant wishes to proceed. The department may also provide for a continuance when it considers the application. The department shall provide notice to the applicant of the continuance. The time required for the department to act upon the application shall be suspended for the period provided in the notice, but for not more than 30 days. However, the department shall not provide for more than one continuance.
65.202(5) Expiration of construction permits. The construction permit shall expire if construction, as defined in rule 567—65.203(459A), is not begun within one year and completed within three years of the date of issuance. The director may grant an extension of time to begin or complete construction if it is necessary or justified, upon showing of such necessity or justification to the director.
65.202(6) Revocation of construction permits. The department may suspend or revoke a construction permit, modify the terms or conditions of a construction permit, or refuse to renew a construction permit expiring according to subrule 65.202(5) if it determines that the operation of the animal truck wash facility constitutes a clear, present and impending danger to public health or the environment.
65.202(7) Permit prior to construction. An applicant for a construction permit shall notify the department prior to the start of construction for any animal truck wash facility. The applicant shall not begin construction of an animal truck wash facility until the person has been granted a permit for the construction by the department.
567—65.203(459A) Construction. For purposes of these rules:
65.203(1) Construction of an animal truck wash facility begins or an animal truck wash facility is constructed when any of the following occur:
a. Excavation commences for a proposed animal truck wash facility or proposed expansion of an existing animal truck wash facility structure.
b. Installation of forms for concrete for a proposed animal truck wash facility or the proposed expansion of an existing animal truck wash facility.
c. Installation of piping for movement of animal truck wash effluent within or between animal truck wash facilities as proposed or proposed to be expanded.
65.203(2) Construction does not begin upon occurrence of any of the following:
a. Removal of trees, brush, or other vegetative growth.
b. Construction of driveways or roads.
c. General earth moving for leveling at the site.
d. Installation of temporary utility services.
65.203(3) Separation distances for the construction or expansion of an animal truck wash effluent structure.
a. An animal truck wash effluent structure shall not be constructed or expanded within 1,250 feet from a residence not owned by the titleholder of the animal truck wash facility, a commercial enterprise, a bona fide religious institution, an educational institution, or a public use area.
b. An animal truck wash effluent structure shall not be constructed or expanded within 100 feet from a public thoroughfare.
c. Any separation distance required for a confinement feeding operation structure and a location or object specified in Table 6 for "Water Wells" and "Other Distances" at the end of this chapter shall also apply to the animal truck wash effluent structure and that same location or object.
d. An animal truck wash effluent structure shall not be constructed or expanded on land that is part of a one hundred year floodplain.
65.203(4) Exemptions to separation distances for the construction or expansion of an animal truck wash effluent structure.
a. Paragraph 65.203(3)"a" does not apply if a residence, educational institution, a bona fide religious institution, or commercial enterprise was constructed or expanded, or if the boundaries of a public use area were expanded, after the date that the animal truck wash facility was established. The date the animal truck wash facility was established is the date on which the animal truck wash facility commenced operating. A change in ownership or expansion of an animal truck wash facility shall not change the date of operation.
b. Paragraphs 65.203(3)"a" and "b" do not apply if the titleholder of the land benefiting from the separation distance requirement, including a person authorized by the titleholder, executes a written waiver with the owner of the animal wash effluent structure. The structure shall be constructed or expanded under such terms and conditions that the parties negotiate. The state or a political subdivision constructing or maintaining the public thoroughfare benefiting from the separation distance requirement may execute a written waiver with the titleholder of the land where the structure is located. The structure shall be constructed or expanded under such terms and conditions that the parties negotiate. The waiver shall be specific to the construction or expansion project for which it is submitted. The waiver may include specific language to include future projects or expansions.
c. Paragraphs 65.203(3)"a" and "b" shall not apply to small animal truck wash facilities.
d. Exemptions to separation distance requirements from water sources, major water sources, known sinkholes, agricultural drainage wells and designated wetlands and secondary containment.
As specified in Iowa Code section 459.310(3), the separation distance required from surface intakes, wellheads or cisterns of agricultural drainage wells, known sinkholes, water sources, major water sources and designated wetlands, specified in Iowa Code section 459.310 and summarized in Tables 6 to 6d at the end of this chapter, shall not apply to a farm pond or privately owned lake as defined in Iowa Code section 462A.2 or to an animal truck wash effluent structure constructed with a secondary containment barrier according to subrule 65.15(17). To qualify for this separation distance exemption, the design of the secondary containment barrier shall be filed in accordance with subrule 65.9(8) prior to beginning construction of the animal truck wash facility.
e. Paragraphs 65.203(3)"c" and "d" shall not apply to the replacement of an unformed animal truck wash effluent structure constructed prior to April 28, 2003, with a formed animal truck wash effluent structure. The capacity of a replacement animal truck wash effluent structure shall not exceed the amount required to store animal truck wash effluent for any 18-month period.
567—65.204(459A) Construction permit application. An animal truck wash facility required to obtain a construction permit in accordance with the provisions of 65.202(1) shall apply for the construction permit at least 90 days before the date that construction, installation, or modification is scheduled to start.
65.204(1) Conceptual design. Prior to submitting an application for a construction permit, the applicant may submit a conceptual design and site investigation report to the department for review and comment.
65.204(2) Application for a construction permit for an animal truck wash facility shall be made on a form provided by the department. The application shall include all of the information necessary to enable the department to determine the potential of the proposed animal truck wash effluent structure to achieve the level of control required of the animal truck wash facility. A construction permit application shall include the following:
a. The name of the animal truck wash facility and the name of the owner of the animal truck wash facility, including the owner's mailing address and telephone number.
b. The name of the contact person for the animal truck wash facility, including the person's mailing address and telephone number.
c. The location of the animal truck wash facility.
d. A statement providing that the application is for any of the following:
(1)The construction or expansion of an animal truck wash effluent structure for an existing animal truck wash facility which is not expanding;
(2)The construction or expansion of an animal truck wash effluent structure for an existing animal truck wash facility which is expanding;
(3)The construction of an animal truck wash effluent structure for a proposed new animal truck wash facility.
e. An engineering report, construction plans, and specifications prepared by a professional engineer or by NRCS personnel.
(1)The engineering report must demonstrate that the storage capacity of the animal truck wash effluent structure is equal to or greater than the amount of effluent to be stored for any six-month period, in addition to two feet of freeboard for an unformed animal truck wash effluent structure or one foot of freeboard for a formed animal truck wash effluent structure.
(2)If an animal truck wash effluent structure is to be constructed on karst terrain, the engineering report must establish that the construction complies with the requirements of Iowa Code section 459A.404.
f. A report on the soil and hydrogeologic information for the site, as described in subrule 65.206(2).
g. Information including, but not limited to, maps, drawings and aerial photos that clearly show the location of all the following:
(1)The animal truck wash facility and all existing and proposed animal truck wash effluent structures.
(2)Any animal truck wash facility under common ownership or common management and located within 1,250 feet of the animal truck wash facility.
(3)Any public water supply system as defined in Iowa Code section 455B.171 or drinking water well which is located less than the distance from the animal truck wash facility required by rule 567—65.205(459A). Information shall also be provided as to whether the proposed animal truck wash effluent structure will meet all applicable separation distances.
567—65.205(459A) Water well separation distances for animal truck wash facilities.
65.205(1) Unformed animal truck wash effluent structures. Unformed animal truck wash effluent structures shall be separated from water wells as follows:
a. Public wells. 1,000 feet from shallow wells and 400 feet from deep wells;
b. Private wells. 400 feet from both shallow wells and deep wells.
65.205(2) Formed animal truck wash effluent structures. Formed animal truck wash effluent structures shall be separated from water wells as follows: for both public wells and private wells, 200 feet from shallow wells and 100 feet from deep wells.
65.205(3) Variances. Variances to this rule may be granted by the director if the petitioner complies with the procedures and criteria in 561—Chapter 10 and provides an alternative that is substantially equivalent to the rule or provides improved effectiveness or protection as required by the rule. Petition for a variance shall be made in writing at the time the construction permit application is submitted. The denial of a variance may be appealed to the commission.
567—65.206(459A) Unformed animal truck wash effluent structure—investigation, design and construction requirements. An unformed animal truck wash effluent structure required to be constructed pursuant to a construction permit issued pursuant to Iowa Code section 459A.205 shall meet the design and construction requirements set forth in this rule.
65.206(1) Drainage tile investigation and removal. Prior to constructing an unformed animal truck wash effluent structure, the owner of the animal truck wash facility shall investigate the site for the animal truck wash effluent structure for a drainage tile line. The investigation shall be made by digging a core trench to a depth of at least six feet from ground level at the projected center of the berm of the animal truck wash effluent structure. A written record of the investigation shall be submitted as part of the construction certification required in 567—65.207(459A). If a drainage tile line is discovered, one of the following solutions shall be implemented:
a. The drainage tile line shall be rerouted around the perimeter of the unformed animal truck wash effluent structure at a distance of at least 25 feet horizontally separated from the outside toe of the berm of the unformed animal truck wash effluent structure. For an area of the unformed animal truck wash effluent structure where there is not a berm, the drainage tile line shall be rerouted at least 50 feet horizontally separated from the edge of the unformed animal truck wash effluent structure.
b. The drainage tile line shall be replaced with a nonperforated tile line under the unformed animal truck wash effluent structure floor. The nonperforated tile line shall be continuous and without connecting joints. There must be a minimum of three feet between the nonperforated tile line and the unformed animal truck wash effluent structure floor.
65.206(2) Soils and hydrogeologic report. An unformed animal truck wash effluent structure required to be constructed pursuant to a construction permit issued pursuant to rule 567—65.202(459A) shall meet design standards as required by a soils and hydrogeologic report. The report shall be submitted with the construction permit application as provided in rule 567—65.204(459A). The report shall include all of the following:
a. A description of the steps taken to determine the soils and hydrogeologic conditions at the proposed construction site, a description of the geologic units encountered, and a description of the effects of the soil and groundwater elevation and direction of flow on the construction and operation of the unformed animal truck wash effluent structure.
b. The subsurface soil classification of the site. A subsurface soil classification shall be based on ASTM international designation D 2487-92 or D 2488-90.
c. The results of a soils investigation conducted at a minimum of three locations within the area of the unformed animal truck wash effluent structure reflecting the continuous soil profile existing within the area of the unformed animal truck wash effluent structure. The soils investigation results shall be used in determining subsurface soil characteristics and groundwater elevation and direction of flow at the proposed site. The soils investigation shall be conducted and utilized as follows:
(1)By a qualified person ordinarily engaged in the practice of performing soils investigations.
(2)At locations that reflect the continuous soil profile conditions existing within the area of the proposed unformed animal truck wash effluent structure, including conditions found near the corners and the deepest point of the proposed unformed animal truck wash effluent structure. The soils investigation shall be conducted to a minimum depth of ten feet below the proposed bottom elevation of the unformed animal truck wash effluent structure.
(3)By methods which identify the continuous soil profile and do not result in mixing of soil layers. Soil corings using hollow-stem augers and other suitable methods may be used.
(4)If located in karst terrain or potential karst terrain, at least one soil coring shall be taken to a minimum depth of 25 feet below the bottom elevation of the unformed animal truck wash effluent structure or into bedrock, whichever is shallower.
(5)Soil corings may be used to determine current groundwater levels by completing the corings as temporary monitoring wells as provided in 65.206(3)"a"(1) and measuring the water levels in these wells no earlier than seven days after installation as provided in 65.206(3)"a"(2).
(6)Upon abandonment of soil core holes, all soil core holes, including those developed as temporary water level monitoring wells, shall be plugged with concrete, Portland cement concrete grout, bentonite, or similar materials.
(7)If excavation methods are used in conducting the soils investigation, upon closure these excavations must be filled with suitable materials and adequately compacted to ensure they will not compromise the integrity of the unformed animal truck wash effluent structure liner.
65.206(3) Hydrology.
a. Determination of groundwater table. For purposes of this rule, the groundwater table is the seasonal high-water table determined by a professional engineer, a groundwater professional certified pursuant to 567—Chapter 134, or qualified staff from the department or NRCS. If a construction permit is required, the department must approve the groundwater table determination.
(1)Current groundwater levels shall be measured as provided in this subparagraph for an unformed animal truck wash effluent structure. Three temporary monitoring wells shall be installed. The top of the well screen shall be within five feet of the ground surface. Each well shall be extended to at least two feet below the proposed top of the liner of an unformed animal truck wash effluent structure or to at least two feet below the proposed bottom of the footings of a formed animal truck wash effluent structure. In addition, the wells must be installed as follows:
1.Unformed animal truck wash effluent structure. For an unformed animal truck wash effluent structure, the monitoring wells may be installed in the soil core holes developed as part of conducting the soils investigation required in paragraph 65.206(2)"c."
2.Formed animal truck wash effluent structure. For a formed animal truck wash effluent structure, at least three temporary monitoring wells shall be installed as close as possible to three corners of the structure, with one of the wells close to the corner of deepest excavation. If the formed animal truck wash effluent structure is circular, the three monitoring wells shall be equally spaced and one well shall be placed at the point of deepest excavation.
(2)The seasonal high-water table shall be determined by considering all relevant data, including the groundwater levels measured in the temporary monitoring wells not earlier than seven days following installation, NRCS soil survey information, soil characteristics such as color and mottling, other existing water table data, and other pertinent information. If a drainage system for artificially lowering the groundwater table will be installed in accordance with the requirements of paragraph 65.206(3)"c," the level to which the groundwater table will be lowered will be considered to represent the seasonal high-water table.
b. The unformed animal truck wash effluent structure shall be constructed with a minimum separation of two feet between the top of the liner of the unformed animal truck wash effluent structure and the seasonal high-water table.
c. If a drainage tile line around the perimeter of the basin is installed a minimum of two feet below the top of the unformed animal truck wash effluent structure liner to artificially lower the seasonal high-water table, the top of the unformed animal truck wash effluent structure's liner may be a maximum of four feet below the seasonal high-water table which existed prior to installation of the perimeter tile system. The seasonal high-water table may be artificially lowered by gravity flow tile lines or other similar system. However, the following shall apply:
(1)Except as provided in subparagraph (2), an animal truck wash facility shall not use a nongravity mechanical system that uses pumping equipment.
(2)If the animal truck wash facility was constructed before July 1, 2005, the operation may continue to use its existing nongravity mechanical system that uses pumping equipment or it may construct a new nongravity mechanical system that uses pumping equipment. However, an animal truck wash facility that expands the area of its animal truck wash facility on or after April 1, 2011, shall not use a nongravity mechanical system that uses pumping equipment.
(3)Drainage tile lines may be installed to artificially lower the seasonal high-water table at an unformed animal truck wash effluent structure, if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
1.A device to allow monitoring of the water in the drainage tile lines and a device to allow shutoff of the flow in the drainage tile lines are installed, if the drainage tile lines do not have a surface outlet accessible on the property where the unformed animal truck wash effluent structure is located.
2.Drainage tile lines are installed horizontally at least 25 feet away from the outside toe of the berm of the unformed animal truck wash effluent structure. Drainage tile lines shall be placed in a vertical trench and encased in granular material which extends upward to the level of the seasonal high-water table which existed prior to installation of the perimeter tile system.
65.206(4) Karst terrain.
a. Construction prohibited. Unformed animal truck wash effluent structures shall not be constructed in areas which drain to known sinkholes or in karst terrain. Structure sites located within one mile of karst terrain shall be considered to be located in karst terrain, unless site-specific geologic information is submitted documenting that 25 feet of suitable materials exist between the bottom of an unformed animal truck wash effluent storage structure and carbonated bedrock or limestone or dolomite.
b. The use of formed structures is required to store animal truck wash effluent in karst terrain.
(1)Formed structures constructed of concrete in karst terrain shall comply with the provisions of 65.15(14).
(2)The use of formed structures constructed of materials other than concrete and located in areas which drain to known sinkholes or located in karst terrain may be approved by the department if the proposed structures are designed by a professional engineer, a minimum of five feet vertical separation is maintained between the structure bottom and carbonated bedrock, and the engineer certifies and provides data showing that the permeability of the geologic material below the structure's base is sufficiently low to provide an adequate barrier to prevent percolation into carbonated bedrock or groundwater.
c. Construction of an unformed animal truck wash effluent structure is allowed in areas identified as karst terrain if site-specific geologic information is submitted documenting that 25 feet of suitable materials exist between the bottom of an unformed animal truck wash effluent storage structure and carbonated bedrock or limestone or dolomite.
65.206(5) Bedrock separation. An unformed animal truck wash effluent structure shall be constructed with at least four feet of separation between the bottom of the unformed animal truck wash effluent structure and a bedrock formation.
65.206(6) Floodplain requirements.
a. Construction in floodplains. Animal truck wash facilities located on a floodplain or within a floodway of a river or stream may be required to obtain department permits and provide protection from inundation by flood waters, as specified in 567—Chapters 71 and 72. If the animal truck wash facility structure is located in alluvial soils, then a floodplain determination or floodway elevation shall be requested from the department. The AFO Siting Atlas may be a tool used to assist in the floodplain and alluvial soil determinations.
b. Permits for dam construction. Animal truck wash facility structures exceeding storage capacity or dam height thresholds may be required to obtain department permits, as specified in 567—71.3(455B) and 567—72.3(455B).
65.206(7) Liner design and construction. The liner of an unformed animal truck wash effluent structure shall comply with all of the following:
a. The liner shall comply with any of the following permeability standards:
(1)The liner shall be constructed to have a percolation rate that shall not exceed one-sixteenth inch per day at the design depth of the unformed animal truck wash effluent structure as determined by percolation tests conducted by the professional engineer. If a clay soil liner is used, the liner shall be constructed with a minimum thickness of 12 inches or the minimum thickness necessary to comply with the percolation rate in this subparagraph, whichever is greater.
(2)The liner shall be constructed to have a percolation rate that shall not exceed one-sixteenth inch per day at the design depth of the unformed animal truck wash effluent structure. The design of the liner will specify a moisture content, compaction requirement, and liner thickness that will comply with the maximum allowable percolation requirement and will be based on moisture content and percentage of maximum density as determined by a standard 5-point proctor test performed in accordance with ASTM D698 (Method A). The liner thickness will be based on laboratory tests of the compacted material, with a minimum liner thickness of 12 inches. Appropriate field or laboratory testing during construction shall be provided to verify the design requirements are met.
b. If a synthetic liner is used, the liner shall be installed to comply with the percolation rate required in 65.206(7)"a"(1).
65.206(8) Berm erosion inspection and repair. The owner of an animal truck wash facility using an unformed animal truck wash effluent structure shall inspect the berms of the unformed animal truck wash effluent structure at least semiannually for evidence of erosion. If the inspection reveals erosion which may impact the unformed animal truck wash effluent structure's structural stability or the integrity of the unformed animal truck wash effluent structure's liner, the owner shall repair the berms.
65.206(9) Basins containing confinement manure and animal truck wash effluent. Basins containing confinement manure and animal truck wash effluent shall meet the confinement construction standards and separation distance requirements provided in Division I of this chapter. The basin design shall ensure adequate storage including two feet of freeboard for an unformed animal truck wash effluent structure or one foot of freeboard for a formed animal truck wash effluent structure. The basin shall contain the annual manure generated from all confinement animals.
65.206(10) Formed animal truck wash effluent structures. An animal truck wash facility electing to use a formed animal truck wash effluent structure may submit, in lieu of an engineering report, a construction design statement that meets the requirements in subrule 65.9(6).
567—65.207(459A) Construction certification.
65.207(1) The owner of an animal truck wash facility who is issued a construction permit for an animal truck wash effluent structure as provided in rule 567—65.202(459A) shall submit to the department a construction certification on a form provided by the department from a professional engineer certifying all of the following:
a. The animal truck wash effluent structure was constructed in accordance with the design plans submitted to the department as part of an application for a construction permit pursuant to rule 567—65.204(459A). If the actual construction deviates from the approved design plans, the construction certification shall identify all changes and certify that the changes were consistent with all applicable standards of these rules.
b. The animal truck wash effluent structure was inspected by the professional engineer after completion of construction and before commencement of operation.
65.207(2) A written record of an investigation for drainage tile lines, including the findings of the investigation and actions taken to comply with 65.206(1), shall be submitted as part of the construction certification.
567—65.208(459A) Nutrient management plan requirements.
65.208(1) The owner of an animal truck wash facility, other than a small animal truck wash facility, which has an animal truck wash effluent structure shall develop and implement a nutrient management plan meeting the requirements of this rule. However, an animal truck wash facility which is part of a confinement feeding operation, in lieu of submitting a nutrient management plan, may submit an original manure management plan and an updated manure management plan to the department.
65.208(2) A person shall not remove animal truck wash effluent from an animal truck wash facility for which a nutrient management plan is required under this rule, unless the department approves a nutrient management plan as required in this rule.
65.208(3) The department shall not approve an application for a permit to construct an animal truck wash effluent structure unless the owner of the animal truck wash facility applying for approval submits a nutrient management plan together with the application for the construction permit as provided in rule 567—65.202(459A).
65.208(4) If a construction permit is required as provided in rule 567—65.202(459A), the department shall approve or disapprove the nutrient management plan as part of the construction permit application. If a construction permit is not required, the department shall approve or disapprove the nutrient management plan within 60 days from the date that the department receives the nutrient management plan.
65.208(5) A nutrient management plan shall include all of the following:
a. Restrictions on the application of animal truck wash effluent based on all of the following:
(1)A phosphorus index of each field in the nutrient management plan, as required in 65.17(17), including the factors used in the calculation. A copy of the NRCS phosphorus index detailed report shall satisfy the requirement to include the factors used in the calculation. In addition, total phosphorus (as P2O5) available to be applied from the animal truck wash facility shall be included.
(2)Calculations necessary to determine the land area required for the application of animal truck wash effluent from an animal truck wash facility based on nitrogen or phosphorus use levels (as determined by the phosphorus index) in order to obtain optimum crop yields according to a crop schedule specified in the nutrient management plan, and according to requirements specified in subrule 65.17(4).
b. Information relating to the application of the animal truck wash effluent, including all of the following:
(1)Nutrient concentration of the animal truck wash effluent. Animal truck wash facilities shall provide yearly animal truck wash effluent test analysis for aluminum, copper, and iron.
(2)Application methods, the timing of the application, and the location of the land where the application occurs.
c. If the application is on land other than land owned or rented for crop production by the owner of the animal truck wash facility, the plan shall include a copy of each written agreement executed by the owner and the landowner or the person renting the land for crop production where the animal truck wash effluent may be applied. The written agreement shall indicate the number of acres on which the animal truck wash effluent may be applied and the length of the agreement.
d. An estimate of the animal truck wash effluent volume or weight produced by the animal truck wash facility.
e. Information which shows all of the following:
(1)There is adequate storage for animal truck wash effluent, including procedures to ensure proper operation and maintenance of the storage structures.
(2)Surface drainage is diverted from the animal truck wash facility.
(3)Chemicals or other contaminants handled on site are not disposed of in an animal truck wash facility that is not specifically designed to store such chemicals or contaminants.
(4)Equipment used for the land application of animal truck wash effluent must be periodically inspected for leaks.
(5)Appropriate site-specific conservation practices to be implemented, including as appropriate buffers or equivalent practices, to control runoff of pollutants to waters of the United States.
(6)Protocols for appropriate testing of animal truck wash effluent and soil.
(7)Protocols to land-apply animal truck wash effluent in accordance with site-specific nutrient management practices that ensure appropriate agricultural utilization of the nutrients in the animal truck wash effluent.
(8)Identification of specific records that will be maintained to document the implementation and management of the requirements in this subrule.
65.208(6) Current nutrient management plan, record keeping and inspections.
a. Current nutrient management plan. The owner of an animal truck wash facility who is required to submit a nutrient management plan shall maintain a current nutrient management plan at the site of the animal truck wash facility and shall make the current nutrient management plan available to the department upon request. If nutrient management practices change, a person required to submit a nutrient management plan shall make appropriate changes consistent with this rule. If values other than the standard table values are used for nutrient management plan calculations, the source of the values used shall be identified.
b. Record keeping. Records shall be maintained by the owner of an animal truck wash facility who is required to submit a nutrient management plan. This recorded information shall be maintained for five years following the year of application or for the length of the crop rotation, whichever is greater. Records shall be maintained at the site of the animal truck wash facility and shall be made available to the department upon request. Records to demonstrate compliance with the nutrient management plan shall include the following:
(1)Factors used to calculate the animal truck wash effluent application rate:
1.Optimum yield for the planned crop.
2.Types of nitrogen credits and amounts.
3.Remaining crop nitrogen needed.
4.Nitrogen content and first-year nitrogen availability of the animal truck wash effluent.
5.Phosphorus content of the animal truck wash effluent as required in 65.17(3)"i"(1) and (2). If an actual sample is used, documentation shall be provided.
6.For animal truck wash facilities, the soil test analysis must include phosphorus, aluminum, copper and iron. The yearly effluent analysis for animal truck wash facilities shall include metals testing.
(2)If phosphorus-based application rates are used, the following shall be included:
1.Crop rotation.
2.Phosphorus removed by crop harvest of that crop rotation.
(3)Maximum allowable animal truck wash effluent application rate.
(4)Actual animal truck wash effluent application information:
1.Method(s) of application when animal truck wash effluent from the animal truck wash facility was applied.
2.Date(s) when the animal truck wash effluent from the animal truck wash facility was applied.
3.Weather conditions at the time of application and for 24 hours prior to and following the application.
4.Location of the field where the animal truck effluent from the animal truck wash facility was applied, including the number of acres.
5.The animal truck wash effluent application rate.
6.Dates when application equipment was inspected.
(5)Date(s) and application rate(s) of commercial nitrogen and phosphorus on fields that received animal truck wash effluent. However, if the date and application rate information is for fields which are not owned for crop production or which are not rented or leased for crop production by the person required to keep records pursuant to this subrule, an enforcement action for noncompliance with a nutrient management plan or the requirements of this subrule shall not be pursued against the person required to keep records pursuant to this subrule or against any other person who relied on the date and application rate in records required to be kept pursuant to this subrule, unless that person knew or should have known that nitrogen or phosphorus would be applied in excess of maximum levels set forth in paragraph 65.17(1)"a." If nutrients are applied to fields not owned, rented or leased for crop production by the person required to keep records pursuant to this subrule, that person shall obtain from the person who owns, rents or leases those fields a statement specifying the planned commercial nitrogen and phosphorus fertilizer rates to be applied to each field receiving the nutrients.
(6)A copy of the current soil test laboratory results for each field in the nutrient management plan.
(7)All applicable records identified in 65.208(5)"e."
c. Record inspection. The department may inspect an animal truck wash facility at any time during normal working hours and may inspect the nutrient management plan and any records required to be maintained.
567—65.209(459A) Complaint investigations. Complaints of violations of Iowa Code chapter 455B, 459, 459A, or 459B or these rules, which are received by the department or are forwarded to the department by a county, following a county board of supervisors' determination that a complainant's allegation constitutes a violation, shall be investigated by the department if it is determined that the complaint is legally sufficient and an investigation is justified.
65.209(1) If after evaluating a complaint to determine whether the allegation may constitute a violation, without investigating whether the facts supporting the allegation are true or untrue, the county board of supervisors shall forward its finding to the department director.
65.209(2) A complaint is legally sufficient if it contains adequate information to investigate the complaint and if the allegation constitutes a violation, without an investigation of whether the facts supporting the allegation are true or untrue, of department rules, Iowa Code chapter 455B, 459, 459A, or 459B, or environmental standards in regulations subject to federal law and enforced by the department.
65.209(3) The department in its discretion shall determine the urgency of the investigation, and the time and resources required to complete the investigation, based upon the circumstances of the case, including the severity of the threat to the quality of surface water or groundwater.
65.209(4) The department shall notify the complainant and the alleged violator if an investigation is not conducted specifying the reason for the decision not to conduct an investigation.
65.209(5) The department will notify the county board of supervisors where the violation is alleged to have occurred before doing a site investigation unless the department determines that a clear, present and impending danger to the public health or environment requires immediate action.
65.209(6) The county board of supervisors may designate a county employee to accompany the department on the investigation of any site as a result of a complaint.
65.209(7) A county employee accompanying the department on a site investigation has the same right of access to the site as the department official conducting the investigation during the period that the county designee accompanies the department official.
65.209(8) Upon completion of an investigation, the department shall notify the complainant of the results of the investigation, including any anticipated, pending or complete enforcement action arising from the investigation. The department shall deliver a copy of the notice to the animal truck wash facility that is the subject of the complaint, any alleged violators if different from the animal truck wash facility and the county board of supervisors of the county where the violation is alleged to have occurred.
65.209(9) When a person who is a department official, an agent of the department, or a person accompanying the department official or agent enters the premises of an animal truck wash, both of the following shall apply:
a. The person may enter at any reasonable time in and upon any private or public property to investigate any actual or possible violation of Iowa Code chapter 455B, 459, 459A, or 459B or these rules. However, the owner or person in charge shall be notified.
(1)If the owner or occupant of any property refuses admittance to the animal truck wash facility, or if prior to such refusal the director demonstrates the necessity for a warrant, the director may make application under oath or affirmation to the district court of the county in which the property is located for the issuance of a search warrant.
(2)In the application, the director shall state that an inspection of the premises is mandated by the laws of this state or that a search of certain premises, areas, or things designated in the application may result in evidence tending to reveal the existence of violations of public health, safety, or welfare requirements imposed by statutes, rules or ordinances established by the state or a political subdivision thereof. The application shall describe the area, premises, or thing to be searched, give the date of the last inspection if known, give the date and time of the proposed inspection, declare the need for such inspection, recite that notice of desire to make an inspection has been given to affected persons and that admission was refused if that be the fact, and state that the inspection has no purpose other than to carry out the purpose of the statute, ordinance, or regulation pursuant to which inspection is to be made. If an item of property is sought by the director, it shall be identified in the application.
(3)If the court is satisfied from the examination of the applicant, and of other witnesses, if any, and of the allegations of the application of the existence of the grounds of the application, or that there is probable cause to believe their existence, the court may issue such search warrant.
(4)In making inspections and searches pursuant to the authority of this rule, the director must execute the warrant:
1.Within ten days after its date.
2.In a reasonable manner, and any property seized shall be treated in accordance with the provisions of Iowa Code chapters 808, 809, and 809A.
3.Subject to any restrictions imposed by the statute, ordinance or regulation pursuant to which inspection is made.
b. The person shall comply with standard biosecurity requirements customarily required by the animal truck wash facility which are necessary in order to control the spread of disease among an animal population.
567—65.210(455B,459A) Transfer of legal responsibilities or title. If title or legal responsibility for a permitted animal truck wash facility and its animal truck wash effluent structure is transferred, the person to whom title or legal responsibility is transferred shall be subject to all terms and conditions of the permit and these rules. The person to whom the permit was issued and the person to whom title or legal responsibility is transferred shall notify the department of the transfer of legal responsibility or title of the operation within 30 days of the transfer. Within 30 days of receiving a written request from the department, the person to whom legal responsibility is transferred shall submit to the department all information needed to modify the permit to reflect the transfer of legal responsibility.
These rules are intended to implement Iowa Code chapters 455B and 459A.
Item 75. Amend 567—Chapter 65, Appendix A, System 1, as follows:
SYSTEM 1: ONE OPEN FEEDLOT EFFLUENT APPLICATION PERIOD PER YEAR
MAJOR SYSTEM FEATURES. No change.
DETAILED SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS:
Open Feedlot Effluent Control System. No change.
Open Feedlot Effluent Application Requirements: Open feedlot effluent must be removed from the open feedlot effluent control system and land-applied in accordance with the following requirements:
1.No change.
2.Feedlot Runoff Control System: Accumulated open feedlot effluent shall be removed from the feedlot runoff control system and disposed of by land application at least once annually. The interval between successive application periods shall not exceed 12 months.
During application periods, land application shall be conducted at rates sufficient to ensure complete removal of accumulated open feedlot effluent from the runoff control system in ten or fewer application days. Open feedlot effluent removal is considered complete when the open feedlot effluent remaining in the runoff control system occupies less than 10 percent of the system's design open feedlot effluent storage volume.
Land application of open feedlot effluent shall be conducted on days when weather and soil conditions are suitable. Weather and soil conditions are normally considered suitable for open feedlot effluent application if:
- Land application areas are not frozen or snow-covered.
- Temperatures during application are greater than 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
- Precipitation has not exceeded 0.05 inch per day for each of the three days immediately preceding application and no precipitation is occurring on the day of application the water-holding capacity of the soil to accept the manure application without the possibility of runoff.
Item 76. Amend 567—Chapter 65, Appendix A, System 2, as follows:
SYSTEM 2: JULY AND OCTOBER OPEN FEEDLOT EFFLUENT APPLICATION
MAJOR SYSTEM FEATURES. No change.
DETAILED SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS:
Open Feedlot Effluent Control System. No change.
Open Feedlot Effluent Application Requirements: Open feedlot effluent must be removed from the open feedlot effluent control system and land-applied in accordance with the following requirements:
1.No change.
2.Feedlot Runoff Control System:
A.A feedlot operator must comply with the following open feedlot effluent application requirements if application operations are limited to the months of July and October.
During these months, land application shall be conducted at rates sufficient to ensure complete removal of accumulated open feedlot effluent from the runoff control system in ten or fewer application days. Open feedlot effluent removal is considered complete when the open feedlot effluent remaining in the runoff control system occupies less than 10 percent of the system's design open feedlot effluent storage capacity.
During July and October, open feedlot effluent application operations shall be initiated on the first day that conditions are suitable for land application of open feedlot effluent, and application must continue on subsequent days that suitable conditions exist. If unfavorable weather conditions prevent complete application of open feedlot effluent to be accomplished during July or October, application must be continued into the following month. Open feedlot effluent application operations may cease when complete application has been achieved.
Weather and soil conditions are normally considered suitable for land application of open feedlot effluent if:
- Land application areas are not frozen or snow-covered.
- Temperatures during application are greater than 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
- Precipitation has not exceeded 0.05 inch per day for each of the three days immediately preceding application and no precipitation is occurring on the day of application the water-holding capacity of the soil to accept the manure application without the possibility of runoff.
B.No change.
Item 77. Amend 567—Chapter 65, Appendix A, System 3, as follows:
SYSTEM 3: APRIL, JULY AND OCTOBER OPEN FEEDLOT EFFLUENT APPLICATION
MAJOR SYSTEM FEATURES. No change.
DETAILED SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS:
Open Feedlot Effluent Control System. No change.
Open Feedlot Effluent Application Requirements: Open feedlot effluent must be removed from the open feedlot effluent control system and land-applied in accordance with the following requirements:
1.No change.
2.Feedlot Runoff Control System:
A.A feedlot operator must comply with the following open feedlot effluent application requirements if application operations are limited to the months of April, July and October.
During these months, land application shall be conducted at rates sufficient to ensure complete removal of accumulated open feedlot effluent from the runoff control system in ten or fewer application days. Open feedlot effluent removal is considered complete when the open feedlot effluent remaining in the runoff control system occupies less than 10 percent of the system's design open feedlot effluent storage capacity.
During April, July and October, open feedlot effluent application operations shall be initiated on the first day that conditions are suitable for land application of open feedlot effluent, and application must continue on subsequent days that suitable conditions exist. If unfavorable weather conditions prevent complete application of open feedlot effluent to be accomplished during any of these months, open feedlot effluent application must be continued into the following month. Open feedlot effluent application operations may cease when complete application has been achieved.
Weather and soil conditions are normally considered suitable for land application of open feedlot effluent if:
- Land application areas are not frozen or snow-covered.
- Temperatures during application are greater than 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
- Precipitation has not exceeded 0.05 inch per day for each of the three days immediately preceding application and no precipitation is occurring on the day of application the water-holding capacity of the soil to accept the manure application without the possibility of runoff.
B.No change.
Item 78. Amend 567—Chapter 65, Appendix A, System 4, as follows:
SYSTEM 4: OPEN FEEDLOT EFFLUENT APPLICATION AFTER EACH
SIGNIFICANT PRECIPITATION EVENT
MAJOR SYSTEM FEATURES. No change.
DETAILED SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS:
Open Feedlot Effluent Control System. No change.
Open Feedlot Effluent Application Requirements: Open feedlot effluent must be removed from the open feedlot effluent control system and land-applied in accordance with the following requirements:
1.No change.
2.Feedlot Runoff Control System: Accumulated open feedlot effluent shall be removed from the feedlot runoff control system and disposed of by land application following each precipitation or snowmelt runoff event which results in significant open feedlot effluent accumulations in the control system. Open feedlot effluent accumulations will be considered significant whenever the available (unoccupied) storage capacity remaining in the control system is less than 90 percent of that required to store the runoff from the 25-year, 24-hour precipitation event.
Once the available storage capacity remaining in the open feedlot effluent control system is reduced to the point that open feedlot effluent application is necessary, open feedlot effluent application operations must be initiated on the first day that conditions are suitable for land application of open feedlot effluent, and application must continue on subsequent days that suitable conditions exist. Application operations may cease when the storage capacity available in the control system has been restored to greater than 90 percent of that required to store runoff from the 25-year, 24-hour precipitation event.
During application periods, land application shall be conducted at rates sufficient to ensure complete removal of accumulated open feedlot effluent from the control system in ten or fewer application days.
Weather and soil conditions are normally considered suitable for land application of open feedlot effluent if:
- Land application areas are not frozen or snow-covered.
- Temperatures during application are greater than 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
- Precipitation has not exceeded 0.05 inch per day for each of the three days immediately preceding application and no precipitation is occurring on the day of application the water-holding capacity of the soil to accept the manure application without the possibility of runoff.
Item 79. Amend 567—Chapter 65, Appendix A, System 5, as follows:
SYSTEM 5: APRIL/MAY AND OCTOBER/NOVEMBER OPEN
FEEDLOT EFFLUENT APPLICATION
MAJOR SYSTEM FEATURES. No change.
DETAILED SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS:
Open Feedlot Effluent Control System. No change.
Open Feedlot Effluent Application Requirements: Open feedlot effluent must be removed from the open feedlot effluent control system and land-applied in accordance with the following requirements:
1.No change.
2.Feedlot Runoff Control System: At a minimum, accumulated open feedlot effluent shall be removed from the feedlot runoff control system and disposed of by land application during the periods April 1 through May 31 and October 1 through November 30.
During each of these periods, land application shall be conducted at rates sufficient to ensure complete removal of accumulated open feedlot effluent from the runoff control system in ten or fewer application days. Open feedlot effluent removal is considered complete when the open feedlot effluent remaining in the runoff control system occupies less than 10 percent of the system's design open feedlot effluent storage capacity.
A feedlot operator may dispose of accumulated open feedlot effluent during any period of the year that conditions are suitable. While application during other periods will minimize the need for application during the April/May and October/November periods, the feedlot operator will still need to dispose of sufficient open feedlot effluent during these periods to reduce the open feedlot effluent volume remaining in the runoff control system during these periods to less than 10 percent of the system's design open feedlot effluent storage capacity.
Land application of open feedlot effluent shall be conducted on days when weather and soil conditions are suitable. Weather and soil conditions are normally considered suitable for open feedlot effluent application if:
- Land application areas are not frozen or snow-covered.
- Temperatures during application are greater than 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
- Precipitation has not exceeded 0.05 inch per day for each of the three days immediately preceding application and no precipitation is occurring on the day of application the water-holding capacity of the soil to accept the manure application without the possibility of runoff.
Item 80. Rescind 567—Chapter 65, Table 2, and adopt the following new table in lieu thereof:
TABLE 2
Major Water Sources – Lakes
County |
Lake Name |
Easting |
Northing |
Location |
Adair |
Greenfield Lake |
375999.79 |
4572927.56 |
1 mile southwest of Greenfield |
|
Meadow Lake |
379665.66 |
4582459.52 |
6 miles northeast of Greenfield |
|
Meadow Lake Watershed Pond 1 |
379413 |
4582674 |
|
|
Meadow Lake Watershed Pond 2 |
379575 |
4581649 |
|
|
Mormon Trail Lake |
363054.22 |
4566934.26 |
1½ miles southeast of Bridgewater |
|
Nodaway Lake |
374770.59 |
4571870.36 |
2 miles southwest of Greenfield |
|
Orient Lake |
379552.53 |
4561682.24 |
1 mile southwest of Orient |
Adams |
Binder Lake |
356117.08 |
4540974.27 |
1 mile northeast of Corning |
|
Lake Icaria |
353123.81 |
4545985.84 |
4 miles north of Corning |
|
Spring Lake |
354110 |
4538035 |
|
|
West Lake Corning |
354797.09 |
4540213.74 |
North edge of Corning |
Allamakee |
Big Lake (Lansing) |
644291 |
4807674 |
3 miles north of Lansing |
|
Big Slough |
642493 |
4809417 |
|
|
Butler Lake |
652484 |
4785589 |
|
|
Conway Lake |
657161 |
4738737 |
Pool 11, Mississippi River |
|
Founders Pond |
646809.86 |
4771777.37 |
|
|
Gimmel Lake |
653020 |
4786756 |
|
|
Harper's Slough |
652820 |
4787292 |
|
|
Japan Slough |
649975 |
4781589 |
|
|
Joyce Lake |
651789 |
4786453 |
|
|
Lansing Lake |
644132.62 |
4806470.39 |
|
|
Lost Channel |
643012 |
4814948 |
|
|
Martelle Lake |
652046 |
4785558 |
|
|
McDonald Slough |
643396 |
4807291 |
|
|
Middle Slough |
643004 |
4806779 |
|
|
Minnesota Slough |
641882 |
4816293 |
|
|
Mud Hen Lake |
650260.15 |
4780202.09 |
|
|
New Albin Big Lake |
642649.71 |
4815967.5 |
|
|
Off Slough |
649525 |
4778400 |
|
|
Oil Spring Creek |
652475 |
4786953 |
|
|
Phillipi Lake |
642729 |
4806240 |
|
|
Pigpen Slough |
640087 |
4817194 |
|
|
Rittenhouse Lake |
653227 |
4785541 |
|
|
Saint Paul Slough |
654608 |
4788421 |
|
|
Taylor Lake |
650782 |
4782728 |
|
|
Upper Iowa River |
642871 |
4814120 |
|
|
Village Creek |
645559 |
4800999 |
|
|
Waukon Pond |
623664 |
4790199 |
South end of Waukon |
|
Yellow River Pond |
643657 |
4781904 |
|
|
Zoll Lake |
641939 |
4808167 |
|
Appanoose |
Lower Centerville Reservoir |
509891.81 |
4507010.42 |
2 miles south of Centerville |
|
Mystic Reservoir |
504475.03 |
4515541.19 |
North edge of Mystic |
|
Rathbun Reservoir |
507933.71 |
4521817.24 |
8 miles northwest of Centerville |
|
Stephen's Forest - Unionville Area Pond |
528645.58 |
4518825.61 |
|
|
Upper Centerville Reservoir |
508646.64 |
4506155.89 |
South edge of Centerville |
Audubon |
Littlefield Lake |
351168.93 |
4602359.81 |
4 miles east of Exira |
|
Nabotna Pond |
343511.71 |
4624705.94 |
|
Benton |
Hannen Lake |
573568.05 |
4635295.78 |
4 miles southwest of Blairstown |
|
Polk Township Lake |
587024 |
4681784 |
5.5 miles northwest of Urbana on west side of I-380 |
|
Rodgers Park Lake |
576162.03 |
4672389 |
3.5 miles northwest of Vinton |
|
Winegar Lake |
579835.17 |
4682491.94 |
9 miles north of Vinton |
Black Hawk |
Alice Wyth Lake |
547459.69 |
4708746.55 |
North edge of Waterloo |
|
Big Woods Lake |
546383 |
4711126 |
Northwest edge of Cedar Falls |
|
Black Hawk Park Pond 1 |
541989 |
4715777 |
|
|
Black Hawk Park Pond 2 |
542020 |
4716091 |
|
|
Brinker Lake |
549696.62 |
4707599.56 |
North edge of Waterloo |
|
Casey Lake (a.k.a. Hickory Hills Lake) |
556658.34 |
4679465.31 |
12 miles south of Waterloo |
|
Cedar Falls Impoundment |
545219.5 |
4709795.29 |
North edge of Cedar Falls |
|
Cedar River N.R.A. Pond |
564167 |
4693201 |
|
|
City Park Pond (Waterloo) |
551267.77 |
4707955.43 |
|
|
Deerwood Park Lake |
557153 |
4701012 |
|
|
Fisher Lake |
548451.46 |
4709310.52 |
North edge of Waterloo |
|
Fox Township W.A. Pond |
576669 |
4699847 |
|
|
George Wyth Lake |
549304.53 |
4709368.04 |
North edge of Waterloo |
|
Green Belt Lake |
550302.63 |
4703101.58 |
West edge of Waterloo |
|
Harold Getty Lake |
556343 |
4703053 |
Located in southeast Waterloo about 1 mile north of the intersection of Highway 20 and Highway 218 (follow Mitchell Street about 0.25 miles east from Highway 218 to the Riverview Recreation Area) |
|
Hope Martin Pond |
551368 |
4704345 |
|
|
Meyers Lake |
558310 |
4701247 |
Evansdale |
|
North Hartman Pond |
548427 |
4708601 |
North edge of Waterloo |
|
North Prairie Lake |
544206.21 |
4703495.88 |
Southwest edge of Cedar Falls |
|
Railroad Lake (Falls Access S.W.M.A.) |
540750.04 |
4714257.34 |
|
|
Roger Birdsall Memorial Park Lake |
542025.53 |
4709221.17 |
|
|
Singing Bird Lake |
551500.52 |
4704389.09 |
|
|
South Hartman Pond |
548882 |
4708243 |
North edge of Waterloo |
|
South Prairie Lake |
544294.1 |
4702973.87 |
|
|
Thunder Woman Park Pond |
538081 |
4720051 |
|
|
Turkey Ridge |
539901 |
4720235 |
|
|
West Hartman Pond |
548157 |
4708610 |
|
Boone |
Dickcissell Lake |
432318.99 |
4654283.46 |
4 miles east of Boone |
|
Don Williams Lake |
415725.47 |
4663301.65 |
5 miles north of Ogden |
|
Fraser |
419267 |
4664205 |
West edge of Fraser |
|
Fraser Pit |
419643 |
4663787 |
|
|
Jay Carlson (south) |
422516 |
4654138 |
3 miles west of Boone |
|
Jay Carlson Pit (east) |
422807 |
4654169 |
|
|
Jay Carlson Pit (west) |
422427.57 |
4654299.59 |
3 miles west of Boone |
|
McHose Park Pond |
426458.23 |
4654856 |
|
Bremer |
Avenue of the Saints Pond |
537967.5 |
4728531.17 |
2 miles southwest of Waverly |
|
Frederika Impoundment |
556332.06 |
4748108.86 |
|
|
Horton Pond |
543076 |
4737673 |
|
|
Three Rivers Pond |
543567 |
4731680 |
|
|
Waverly Impoundment |
543351.73 |
4730767.74 |
|
|
Wilson Grove North |
574521 |
4747448 |
|
|
Wilson Grove South |
574556 |
4747158 |
|
Buchanan |
Fairbank Impoundment |
577705.32 |
4721261.98 |
|
|
Fontana Mill Lake |
589338.93 |
4717700.81 |
.5 miles south of Hazleton |
|
Grover Pond |
597864 |
4694570 |
|
|
Independence Impoundment |
590394.01 |
4703679.18 |
Independence |
|
Koutny Pond |
585334.5 |
4683990.61 |
2.5 miles southeast of Brandon |
|
Quasqueton Impoundment |
601853.66 |
4694358.61 |
|
|
Sand Creek Access Area Lake |
604060.74 |
4688360.98 |
|
|
Triangle Park Pond |
590366 |
4700259 |
|
Buena Vista |
Gustafson Lake |
324410.66 |
4749539.68 |
1 mile south of Sioux Rapids |
|
Marathon City Park Pond |
336282.51 |
4747522.39 |
|
|
Pickerel Lake |
343178.2 |
4752172.72 |
7 miles northwest of Marathon |
|
Storm Lake (incl. Little Storm Lake) |
320724 |
4720589.78 |
South edge of Storm Lake |
|
Sturchler Pit (Newell Pit) |
332561.65 |
4720157.73 |
1½ miles northwest of Newell |
|
Three Waters W.A. Lake |
332361.81 |
4723241.67 |
2 miles west, 3 miles north of Newell |
Butler |
Shell Rock County Park Lake |
533481.5 |
4730230.8 |
|
|
South Fork Park Pond |
501014 |
4732423 |
|
|
Sportsman's Pond |
526024.24 |
4737139.8 |
|
Calhoun |
Calhoun W.A. Pond |
380550.56 |
4708274.59 |
|
|
Highway 4 R.A. Pond |
364318.22 |
4693540.94 |
Southwest edge of Rockwell City |
|
North Twin Lake |
366058.06 |
4704861.72 |
4 miles north of Rockwell City |
|
Rockwell City City Pond |
365301.56 |
4695663.29 |
|
Carroll |
Daniel Davis Timber Pond |
350975.82 |
4639598.71 |
|
|
Great Western Park Lake |
327502.29 |
4640943.67 |
¼ mile west of Manning |
|
Swan Lake |
347387.38 |
4655754.9 |
3 miles southeast of Carroll |
|
Tigges Pond Dedham |
350202 |
4637381 |
|
|
Tigges Pond Willey |
346242 |
4648362 |
|
Cass |
Atlantic Quarry Pond 1 |
331184 |
4587055 |
|
|
Atlantic Quarry Pond 2 |
331584 |
4587075 |
|
|
Atlantic Quarry Pond 3 |
331194 |
4586765 |
|
|
Atlantic Quarry Pond 4 |
330814 |
4586305 |
|
|
Cass County Education Pond |
355709 |
4565459 |
|
|
Cocklin Fish Farm |
321115.02 |
4569144.05 |
2 miles north of Griswold |
|
Cold Springs Lake |
325247.74 |
4573271.32 |
1 mile south of Lewis |
|
Iranistan Pond |
321341.31 |
4575142.81 |
5½ miles north of Griswold |
|
Lake Anita |
351183.86 |
4587776.12 |
½ mile south of Anita |
|
Nodaway W.A. Pond |
348909.57 |
4562168.2 |
4 miles southwest of Massena |
Cedar |
Bennett Lake |
673027.94 |
4623719.41 |
3 miles east of Bennett |
|
Cedar Valley Park Quarries |
646463.9 |
4620838.45 |
7.5 miles southwest of Tipton |
Cerro Gordo |
Black Pit |
481804.02 |
4776426.15 |
Southwest edge of Mason City |
|
Blair Meadows Preserve Pond |
478617.97 |
4779040.49 |
|
|
Blue Pit |
482111.48 |
4776398.89 |
Southwest edge of Mason City |
|
Bluebill Lake |
472575 |
4772317 |
4 miles south of Clear Lake |
|
Clark Lake (Mike Zack W.A.) |
484789.14 |
4772323.49 |
4 miles southeast of Mason City |
|
Clear Lake |
468223.96 |
4775662.73 |
South edge of Clear Lake |
|
Fin and Feather Lake |
484532.82 |
4772256.57 |
3 miles south, 1 mile east of Mason City |
|
Georgia Hanford Park Ponds |
484772.71 |
4774447.16 |
|
|
Kuhn W.A. Quarry |
461019.75 |
4784286.67 |
|
|
Lime Creek Conservation Area Pond |
483422.38 |
4781958.78 |
|
|
Mason City East Park Pond |
485146.14 |
4777980.74 |
|
|
Rockfall Pond |
493523.87 |
4783404.37 |
|
|
Rockwell Pond |
483665.34 |
4757598.17 |
|
|
Wilkinson Pioneer Park Pond |
495812.85 |
4781094.28 |
1 mile southwest of Rock Falls |
Cherokee |
Larson Lake |
304430.57 |
4733431.63 |
2½ miles east, 2 miles north of Aurelia |
|
Spring Lake |
288123.89 |
4736797.97 |
South edge of Cherokee |
Chickasaw |
Airport Lake |
553186.11 |
4770705.14 |
2 miles northwest of New Hampton |
|
Goodale Conservation Area Pond |
538694.07 |
4781787.04 |
|
|
Johnny Walnut Seed Conservation Area Pond |
558890.16 |
4783221.4 |
|
|
Nashua Impoundment (Cedar Lake) |
537601.88 |
4756074.71 |
East edge of Nashua |
|
New Hampton Pond (Garnant) |
556648 |
4766778 |
On south 4th Avenue |
|
Ringneck Haven |
546180 |
4776920 |
1.5 miles north, 1 mile west of North Washington |
|
Sluggo's Pond |
572129.68 |
4775728.49 |
|
|
Split Rock Lake |
562232.53 |
4751215.46 |
4 miles south, 2 miles west of Fredericksburg |
|
Twin Ponds |
549570.09 |
4762052.06 |
|
Clarke |
East Lake (Osceola) |
437595.56 |
4542703.74 |
½ mile east of Osceola |
|
Grade Lake |
435244.38 |
4541428.82 |
|
|
Green Pines W.A. Pond |
440396.84 |
4554345.48 |
|
|
Q Pond City Park |
434442.65 |
4543865.34 |
Northwest edge of Osceola |
|
West Lake (Osceola) |
432377.34 |
4543057.65 |
2 miles west of Osceola |
Clay |
Brugeman Park Pond |
306038.38 |
4784675.59 |
|
|
Dicken's Pit |
336663.27 |
4776416.47 |
|
|
Elk Lake |
343505.42 |
4771935.39 |
1 mile west, 3 miles south of Ruthven |
|
Hawk Valley Pond (east) |
330877 |
4777520 |
|
|
Hawk Valley Pond (west) |
330799.83 |
4777354.35 |
|
|
James W.A. Lake |
320881.12 |
4754827.39 |
|
|
Scharnberg Pond |
313589.42 |
4780323.5 |
3 miles east of Everly |
|
Schmerse W.A. Pond |
330762.31 |
4789429.12 |
|
|
Stolley Pit |
322147 |
4780318 |
|
|
Trumbull Lake |
341588.03 |
4783433.66 |
4 miles west, 5 miles north of Ruthven |
Clayton |
Ackerman Cut |
657357 |
4737376 |
|
|
Big Pond |
657273.37 |
4738200.61 |
|
|
Bussey Lake |
654925.65 |
4740888.84 |
2 miles north of Guttenberg |
|
Cassville Iowa Slough |
659190 |
4733838 |
|
|
Dead Lake |
664841 |
4728559 |
|
|
Elkader Impoundment |
630271.33 |
4746096.02 |
Elkader |
|
Ferry Slough |
656672 |
4741212 |
|
|
Frenchtown Lake |
655025.87 |
4745546.55 |
|
|
Guttenberg Waterfowl Ponds |
650096 |
4755972 |
|
|
Johnsons Slough |
649854 |
4758013 |
|
|
Methodist Lake |
650333 |
4754252 |
|
|
Norwegian Lake |
650299 |
4756882 |
|
|
Osborne Pond |
627996.1 |
4739466.54 |
4.5 miles southwest of Elkader on Highway 13 |
|
Picayune Chute |
667499 |
4727985 |
|
|
Sny Magill Ponds (3) |
646906 |
4757322 |
|
|
Spring Lake |
663898 |
4728959 |
|
|
State Line Slough |
655794 |
4749192 |
|
|
Swift Slough |
656481 |
4738566 |
|
|
Wachendorf Lake |
665673 |
4728599 |
|
|
Wood Duck Lake |
664082 |
4729894 |
|
|
Wood Duck Slough |
665193 |
4728551 |
|
|
Wyalusing Slough |
649971 |
4754957 |
|
|
Wyoming Slough |
649926 |
4755032 |
|
Clinton |
Beaver Slough |
731464 |
4633122 |
|
|
Blue Bill Slough |
729968 |
4630504 |
|
|
Cook Slough |
735828 |
4656142 |
|
|
Dark Chute |
734997 |
4656669 |
|
|
Elk River Slough |
735246 |
4651042 |
|
|
Gomers Lake |
734043 |
4650592 |
|
|
Grass Lake |
732753 |
4632465 |
|
|
Hagenson Pond |
719775.71 |
4624673.83 |
.25 miles south of Folletts |
|
Killdeer R.A. Lake |
711769.49 |
4632533.72 |
5 miles east of DeWitt |
|
Lower Lake |
731111 |
4631776 |
|
|
Lyons Chute |
735004 |
4642186 |
|
|
Malone Park Pond |
711349.2 |
4632124.6 |
5 miles east of DeWitt |
|
McAndrews Wildlife Area Pond |
676287 |
4655308 |
|
|
Pond Lily Lake |
725811 |
4628290 |
|
|
Rock Creek |
723154 |
4625541 |
|
|
Schricker Slough |
724198 |
4627207 |
|
|
Sodus Slough |
723474 |
4625535 |
|
|
Swan Slough |
726432 |
4628308 |
|
|
The Tubes |
725042 |
4627687 |
|
|
Tyler Lake |
724150 |
4627546 |
|
|
Upper Lake |
731782 |
4632342 |
|
Crawford |
Ahart/Rudd N.R.A. Pond |
291176.1 |
4641904.72 |
1 mile west, 1.5 miles south of Dow City |
|
Nelson Park Lake |
285370.38 |
4646138.79 |
3 miles west, 3 miles north of Dow City |
|
Newcom/Riggelman N.R.A. Pond |
311386.82 |
4668258.97 |
|
|
Sunset Lake |
303325.19 |
4652690.91 |
|
|
Yellow Smoke Park Lake |
307776.43 |
4655290.27 |
2 miles east, 2 miles north of Denison |
Dallas |
Beaver Lake |
398938.68 |
4598600.26 |
1½ miles north of Dexter |
|
Glissman Pond |
407406 |
4602545 |
|
|
Siglund Pond |
429979 |
4628676 |
|
|
Snyder Pit |
412198 |
4621032 |
|
Davis |
Bloomfield City Park Pond |
550631.24 |
4511403.99 |
|
|
Davis County Pond 1 (N-S) |
551262 |
4511060 |
|
|
Davis County Pond 10 (N-N) |
551330 |
4511330 |
|
|
Davis County Pond 2 (S-NE) |
551448 |
4510774.28 |
|
|
Davis County Pond 3 (S-NW) |
550946 |
4510770 |
|
|
Davis County Pond 4 (S-NM2) |
551166 |
4510721 |
|
|
Davis County Pond 5 (S-M1) |
551147 |
4510550 |
|
|
Davis County Pond 6 (S-S) |
551277 |
4510162 |
|
|
Davis County Pond 7 (S-NM1) |
551246 |
4510808 |
|
|
Davis County Pond 8 (S-M2) |
551212 |
4510377 |
|
|
Davis County Pond 9 (N-M) |
551274 |
4511217 |
|
|
Drakesville Ponds |
544053.7 |
4516907.98 |
|
|
Lake Fisher |
547145.17 |
4511858.74 |
2 miles northwest of Bloomfield |
|
Lake Wapello |
535775.58 |
4518715.47 |
7 miles west of Drakesville |
Decatur |
Home Pond |
419485.75 |
4497642.68 |
|
|
Lake LeShane |
417531.16 |
4498385.73 |
|
|
Little River Watershed Lake |
434102.76 |
4512932.22 |
1 mile west of Leon |
|
Nine Eagles Lake |
434841.62 |
4494456.68 |
3½ miles southeast of Davis City |
|
Slip Bluff Lake |
427969.88 |
4500576.02 |
2 miles northwest of Davis City |
Delaware |
Backbone Lake |
620098.06 |
4717575.34 |
4 miles southwest of Strawberry Point |
|
Schram Pond |
627204 |
4703162 |
|
|
Silver Lake (Delaware) |
637956.2 |
4698315.57 |
Southeast edge of Delhi |
Des Moines |
4th Pumping Plant (Iowa Slough Lake) |
670782.93 |
4547982.17 |
6 miles north, 5 miles east of Kingston |
|
Big Hollow Lake |
648948 |
4534137 |
3 miles west of Sperry |
|
Black Hawk Bottoms |
658961 |
4507637 |
|
|
Buffalo Slough |
670919 |
4545162 |
|
|
Camp Island |
672008 |
4540145 |
|
|
Charlie Island |
672115 |
4542329 |
|
|
Cody Chute |
671688 |
4543373 |
|
|
Gahn Wildlife Refuge Pond |
652570.62 |
4522956.11 |
Northwest of West Burlington, 1 mile north of Highway 34 |
|
Gates Lake |
670341 |
4546373 |
|
|
Gorge Pond |
648629 |
4534554 |
5 miles west of Sperry |
|
Gun Chute |
671255 |
4544681 |
|
|
Half Moon Lake |
658047 |
4508487 |
|
|
Huron Chute |
670493 |
4546373 |
|
|
Izaak Walton Lake |
656013.69 |
4521699.42 |
|
|
Johnson Island |
672127 |
4541237 |
|
|
Leaky Pond |
649971 |
4535213 |
5 miles west of Sperry |
|
Linder Pond |
648842 |
4534364 |
5 miles west of Sperry |
|
O'Connell Slough |
661110 |
4523877 |
|
|
Otter Bay |
663051 |
4523701 |
|
|
Otter Slough |
662762 |
4524286 |
|
|
Round Lake |
657613 |
4509914 |
|
|
Rush Chute |
661527 |
4523059 |
|
|
Shelter D |
649433 |
4535145 |
5 miles west of Sperry |
|
Shelter E |
650161 |
4535176 |
5 miles west of Sperry |
|
Swift Slough |
665024 |
4527309 |
|
|
Twin Ponds |
671560 |
4545138 |
|
|
West Lake |
655836.8 |
4521930.26 |
|
|
Yeager Lake |
660748.37 |
4521923.82 |
|
Dickinson |
Big Spirit Lake |
329966.96 |
4812894.29 |
1 mile north of Spirit Lake |
|
Center Lake |
327070.22 |
4808772.86 |
2 miles west, ½ mile south of Spirit Lake |
|
Diamond Lake |
322816.82 |
4816686.45 |
2 miles east, 2 miles north of Montgomery |
|
East Okoboji Lake |
328394.92 |
4805141.83 |
East edge of Okoboji |
|
Little Spirit Lake |
328213.3 |
4818249.82 |
4 miles north of Orleans |
|
Little Swan Lake |
342370 |
4813624 |
|
|
Lower Gar Lake |
328234.54 |
4801799.84 |
½ mile south of Arnolds Park |
|
Minnewashta Lake |
327875.2 |
4803006.35 |
½ mile south of Arnolds Park |
|
Pleasant Lake |
335821.28 |
4807755.65 |
3 miles east, 1 mile south of Spirit Lake |
|
Prairie Lake |
332924.42 |
4805076.72 |
2.5 miles east of Arnolds Park |
|
Silver Lake (Dickinson) |
310997.28 |
4813089.18 |
West edge of Lake Park |
|
Swan Lake |
342395.86 |
4813752.52 |
2 miles north of Superior |
|
Upper Gar Lake |
328141.26 |
4803845.34 |
East of Arnolds Park |
|
Welch Lake |
324264.45 |
4814314.92 |
|
|
West Okoboji Lake |
326658.64 |
4804352.38 |
Northwest edge of Arnolds Park |
|
Westport Park Pond |
309177.54 |
4798208.23 |
|
Dubuque |
Basswood Creek |
679703 |
4724434 |
|
|
Bluebell Creek |
661458 |
4730249 |
|
|
Bunker Chute |
672453 |
4726563 |
|
|
Dubuque Harbor |
692288 |
4706960 |
|
|
East Bergfeld |
682823 |
4706318 |
|
|
Greens Lake |
699375 |
4700686 |
|
|
Heritage Pond |
688309.91 |
4713704.08 |
North edge of Dubuque |
|
Horseshoe Lake |
700143 |
4700256 |
|
|
Lake Peosta Channel |
692993 |
4710087 |
|
|
Molo Slough |
698268 |
4701301 |
|
|
Mud Lake Park |
688390.25 |
4720447.61 |
|
|
Shawon Dasse Slough |
698520 |
4701375 |
|
|
West Bergfeld |
682370 |
4706457 |
|
Emmet |
High Lake |
361493.8 |
4796057.25 |
6 miles east of Wallingford |
|
Ingham Lake |
362567.49 |
4797656.25 |
6 miles east of Wallingford |
|
Iowa Lake |
382161.54 |
4817021.05 |
6 miles north of Armstrong |
|
Jim Hall Habitat Area Wetland |
356559.58 |
4791861.6 |
|
|
Tuttle Lake |
371345.55 |
4817077.11 |
1 mile east, 2 miles north of Dolliver |
|
West Swan Lake S.W.M.A. |
364028.85 |
4801616.77 |
3 miles southeast of Gruver |
Fayette |
Gilbertson Area Lake |
613397.36 |
4756833.09 |
East of Elgin off of County Highway B64 |
|
Lake Oelwein |
588798.64 |
4722337.49 |
South edge of Oelwein |
|
Maynard Impoundment |
591414 |
4737075 |
|
|
Volga Lake |
600326.81 |
4750319.41 |
3 miles north of Fayette |
|
Waucoma Impoundment |
578691.97 |
4767409.38 |
|
Floyd |
Charles City Impoundment |
525968.93 |
4768270.7 |
Charles City |
|
Fossil Park Pond |
502010 |
4766025 |
1 mile west of Rockford |
|
Marble Rock Impoundment |
510448.27 |
4757045.24 |
West edge of Marble Rock |
|
Rudd Lake |
509045 |
4774695 |
East of Rudd |
Franklin |
Beeds Lake |
480055.88 |
4735292.12 |
2 miles west, 1 mile north of Hampton |
|
Interstate Park Lake |
465846.02 |
4730889.95 |
1 mile west, 2 miles south of I-35 and Hwy 3 |
|
Maynes Grove Lake |
483119.56 |
4724728.86 |
5 miles south of Hampton |
|
Pope Joy Pond |
464203 |
4714636.42 |
|
|
Prairie Bridges Park Ponds |
495240.66 |
4712345.37 |
1 mile north of Ackley |
|
Robinsons Pond |
485757.14 |
4733568.17 |
|
|
Sheffield G.M.A. Pond |
477136.67 |
4750562.81 |
|
|
Toft Pit |
459592.79 |
4723669.33 |
|
Fremont |
Lake Virginia |
272866 |
4504644 |
5 miles west of Riverton |
|
McPaul A Pond |
263645.55 |
4525103.08 |
2 miles south of Bartlett |
|
McPaul B Pond |
263506.35 |
4523459.15 |
2 miles south of Bartlett |
|
Percival Lake |
262829.68 |
4517831.28 |
1 mile north of Percival |
|
Pinky's Glen Pond |
270951.36 |
4530967.33 |
2 miles west of Tabor |
|
Scott Lake A |
263972.86 |
4527917.37 |
1½ miles south of Bartlett |
|
Scott Lake B |
263966.46 |
4527143.86 |
1½ miles south of Bartlett |
|
Waubonsie Access Lake |
261509.74 |
4507347 |
|
Greene |
Pound Pit |
396860 |
4658722 |
|
|
Pound Pit middle W |
396775 |
4658797 |
|
|
Pound Pit NE |
396775 |
4658894 |
3 miles north of Grand Junction |
|
Pound Pit NW |
396654 |
4658891 |
|
|
Pound Pit SW |
396723 |
4658550 |
|
|
Spring Lake |
393381.93 |
4657295.83 |
4 miles northwest of Grand Junction |
Grundy |
Grundy County Lake |
529801.87 |
4700900.07 |
South side of Hwy 20 at Dike exit |
|
Rodman Park Ponds |
527694.71 |
4702110.46 |
2 miles west of Dike |
|
Stoehr Lake (Wellsburg) |
509535.39 |
4693577.21 |
4 miles southeast of Wellsburg |
Guthrie |
Springbrook Lake |
378112.1 |
4626039.93 |
7 miles north of Guthrie Center |
|
Sutcliff Woodland Pond |
363708.79 |
4613110.19 |
10 miles north of Adair |
Hamilton |
Briggs Woods Lake |
434799.38 |
4698625.1 |
2 miles south of Webster City |
|
Little Wall Lake |
447509.22 |
4679896.07 |
1½ miles south of Jewell |
Hancock |
Crystal Lake |
435751.69 |
4786527.29 |
North edge of Crystal Lake |
|
Crystal Lake Sediment Pond |
436272 |
4787244 |
Off the northeast corner of Crystal Lake |
|
Eight Mile Pits |
439357.12 |
4787963.53 |
|
|
Eldred Sherwood Lake |
453975.09 |
4754473.17 |
3 miles east, 1 mile north of Goodell |
|
Pilot Knob Lake |
454452.32 |
4788839.96 |
3 miles east of Forest City |
|
Torkelson Pit W.A. (north) |
456166.98 |
4783852.84 |
|
|
Torkelson Pit W.A. (southeast) |
456317 |
4783649 |
|
|
Torkelson Pit W.A. (southwest) |
456186 |
4783743 |
|
|
West Twin Lake |
440160.83 |
4754061.28 |
3 miles east of Kanawha |
Hardin |
Alden |
469050 |
4707733 |
|
|
Lower Pine Lake |
493819.22 |
4690719.67 |
½ mile east of Eldora |
|
Meiers Access |
472688 |
4684011 |
|
|
Pine Ridge R.A. Lake |
494327.5 |
4696097.19 |
|
|
Steamboat Rock |
494022 |
4695110 |
|
|
Upper Pine Lake |
494761.55 |
4691675.65 |
½ mile east of Eldora |
Harrison |
DeSoto Bend at DeSoto National Wildlife Refuge |
247652.14 |
4603538.94 |
5 miles west of Missouri Valley at DeSoto National Wildlife Refuge |
|
Dunlap Pond |
285083.69 |
4636573.63 |
East edge of Dunlap |
|
Nobles |
251377 |
4599685 |
6 miles southwest of Missouri Valley |
|
Sawmill Hollow W.A. Pond |
257535.24 |
4614482.5 |
4 miles southwest of Magnolia |
|
Schaben Pond |
278081.43 |
4631303.92 |
5½ miles northeast of Woodbine |
|
Schley Park Pond |
287078.68 |
4606215.77 |
1 mile east of Persia |
|
Willow Lake |
268199.26 |
4627939.86 |
5½ miles west of Woodbine |
Henry |
East Lake Park |
624600.28 |
4533827.73 |
Mount Pleasant - city park |
|
Gibson Area Pond |
611978 |
4531418 |
East of Oakland Mills (Henry CCB) |
|
Lake Geode |
636087.98 |
4519878.79 |
4 miles southwest of Danville |
|
Lake Geode Pond #1 |
637003 |
4520751 |
|
|
Lake Geode Pond #3 |
637089 |
4520269 |
|
|
Lake Geode Pond #4 |
636941 |
4520357 |
|
|
Lake Geode Pond #5 |
636535 |
4520217 |
|
|
Lake Geode Pond #6 |
634992 |
4520680 |
|
|
Lake Geode Pond #7 |
|
|
|
|
Lake Geode Pond #8 |
|
|
|
|
Oakland Mills Impoundment |
616371.43 |
4532547.37 |
|
Howard |
Lake Hendricks |
536796.76 |
4802511.8 |
.5 miles northeast of Riceville |
|
Lidtke Impoundment |
558360 |
4812676 |
|
|
Lime Springs Impoundment |
558117.58 |
4812991.97 |
|
|
Merrick Pond |
538801.89 |
4788117.94 |
|
|
Taylor Park Pond |
571816.29 |
4789408.51 |
3 miles northwest of Protivin |
|
Vernon Springs Park Pond |
569748.29 |
4799739.76 |
|
Humboldt |
Humboldt Impoundment |
399264.31 |
4731291.08 |
|
|
Rutland Impoundment |
393915 |
4734434 |
|
Ida |
Crawford Creek Impoundment |
285080.77 |
4683549.46 |
3½ miles south of Battle Creek |
|
Moorehead Park Pond |
295746.77 |
4692499.69 |
½ mile north of Ida Grove |
Iowa |
Gateway Park North |
577527 |
4629168 |
North edge of Marengo |
|
Gateway Park South |
577522 |
4628800 |
North edge of Marengo |
|
Iowa Lake |
568747.08 |
4609827.89 |
5 miles north of Millersburg |
|
Lake Iowa Pond |
568387 |
4609231 |
Behind the nature center in Lake Iowa Park |
|
Williamsburg Pond |
581687.98 |
4612442.9 |
In the town of Williamsburg |
Jackson |
Alligator Lake |
733398 |
4662712 |
|
|
Bards Lake |
732439 |
4662936 |
|
|
Barge Lake |
734038 |
4662695 |
|
|
Bellevue Pond |
713018 |
4680766 |
South edge of Bellevue, near Bellevue State Park |
|
Bellevue Slough |
711881 |
4688370 |
|
|
Big Keller Lake |
733142 |
4667124 |
|
|
Big Sieber Lake |
732910 |
4664862 |
|
|
Blake's Lake |
726130 |
4672042 |
|
|
Bonnie Lake |
717312.92 |
4675010.51 |
|
|
Bowman's Slough |
717091 |
4676230 |
|
|
Dead Lake |
733310 |
4664175 |
|
|
Densmore Lake |
724280.63 |
4671708.49 |
|
|
Doc Wood Lake |
733494 |
4664015 |
|
|
Eldridge Slough |
734109 |
4663128 |
|
|
Esmay Slough |
733497 |
4665008 |
|
|
Fish Lake |
722936.54 |
4672600.4 |
|
|
Flat Lake (A) |
719274 |
4674318 |
|
|
Flat Lake (B) |
733522 |
4663968 |
|
|
Golden Lake |
718898.04 |
4675105.93 |
|
|
Goose Lake |
720185.32 |
4674528.7 |
|
|
Green Island Lake |
724532.96 |
4671513.05 |
1 mile east of Green Island |
|
Harrington Slough |
713758 |
4679680 |
|
|
Horseshoe Pond |
693445.62 |
4658581.92 |
|
|
Hubble Slough |
733897 |
4659264 |
|
|
Hurstville Pond |
691433 |
4662547 |
1 mile north of Maquoketa |
|
Israel Day Lake |
733606 |
4662720 |
|
|
Jackson Lake |
719474 |
4674965 |
|
|
Joe Day Lake |
732671 |
4664015 |
|
|
Lainsville Slough |
729361 |
4669432 |
|
|
Little Keller Lake |
732659.32 |
4667065.9 |
|
|
Little Sawmill Lake |
724477.32 |
4672495.39 |
|
|
Little Sieber Lake |
733166 |
4664662 |
|
|
Lower Brown Lake |
727674 |
4670384 |
|
|
Lower Y Lake |
733727.34 |
4666349.11 |
|
|
McGann's Lake |
725645 |
4672141 |
|
|
Middle Sabula Lake |
733211.42 |
4661003.42 |
West edge of Sabula |
|
Pin Oak Lake |
729142.03 |
4670312.65 |
|
|
Running Slough |
733678 |
4666005 |
|
|
Sawmill Lake |
724778.68 |
4672601.1 |
|
|
Scarborough Lake |
727305 |
4670619 |
|
|
Sheepshead Bay |
734325 |
4665286 |
|
|
Snag Slough |
723628 |
4672682 |
|
|
Snider Lake |
722807.84 |
4673524.84 |
|
|
South Sabula Lake |
733677.57 |
4660163.34 |
|
|
Sunfish Lake |
732412.16 |
4666850.65 |
|
|
Town Lake |
732718 |
4662632 |
|
|
Twin Lakes |
721080.93 |
4674100.26 |
|
|
Upper Brown Lake |
726110.52 |
4670430.27 |
|
|
Upper Sabula Lake |
732981.25 |
4661695.68 |
|
|
Upper Y Lake |
733574.41 |
4666792.15 |
|
|
Western Pond |
718108.96 |
4674401.97 |
|
Jasper |
Clear Creek Pond |
480600 |
4628525 |
|
|
Deppe Pond (north) |
511167 |
4623933 |
4 miles northeast of Kellogg |
|
Deppe Pond (south) |
511161 |
4623426 |
4 miles northeast of Kellogg |
|
Jacob Krumm Nature Preserve Lake (east) |
517620 |
4617110 |
|
|
Jacob Krumm Nature Preserve Lake (west) |
518446.58 |
4617485.07 |
6 miles southeast of Kellogg |
|
Mariposa Lake |
502975.97 |
4625216.65 |
5 miles northeast of Newton |
|
Reimer Refuge Pond |
507460 |
4619070 |
|
|
Rock Creek Lake |
512179.64 |
4620967.25 |
4 miles northeast of Kellogg |
|
Rock Creek Lake Park Pond (east) |
513967 |
4621454 |
|
|
Rock Creek Lake Park Pond (north) |
512526 |
4621802 |
|
|
Rock Creek Lake Park Pond (west) |
511190 |
4620719 |
|
|
Stephens State Forest Reichelt Unit Lake |
511067.31 |
4616575.07 |
|
Jefferson |
Bonnifield Lake |
587914.03 |
4541523.96 |
|
|
Jefferson Co. Park New Pond |
584904 |
4537775 |
Southwest edge of Fairfield |
|
Jefferson Co. Pond #1 |
584866 |
4537540 |
Southwest edge of Fairfield |
|
Jefferson Co. Pond #2 |
585164 |
4537540 |
Southwest edge of Fairfield |
|
Jefferson Co. Pond #3 |
585084 |
4538602 |
Southwest edge of Fairfield |
|
Jefferson Co. Pond #4 |
585272 |
4538373 |
Southwest edge of Fairfield |
|
Pleasant Lake |
588370.59 |
4542079.46 |
|
|
Round Prairie Park Entry Pond |
600087 |
4529881 |
12 miles southeast of Fairfield |
|
Round Prairie Park Quarry Pond |
600304 |
4529660 |
|
|
Walton Reservoir |
589629.66 |
4540841.99 |
|
|
Whitham Woods Pond |
583314 |
4540070 |
1 mile west of Fairfield |
|
Zilman's Pond |
592387 |
4536617 |
|
Johnson |
Broodmoor Pond |
616993 |
4621423 |
East side of North Liberty |
|
Burlington Street Dam |
621477 |
4612805 |
On the Iowa River in Iowa City under the Burlington Street bridge |
|
Coralville Reservoir |
622294.37 |
4620498.12 |
4 miles north of Iowa City |
|
Dovetail Pond |
620021 |
4617910 |
|
|
Ewalt Pond |
614915 |
4617216 |
West side of Coralville |
|
Fox Run Pond |
615638 |
4624756 |
North side of North Liberty |
|
Fox Valley Pond |
614671 |
4619683 |
Southwest of North Liberty |
|
Freedom Pond |
614993 |
4621721 |
North Liberty |
|
Goose Pond |
613471 |
4624028 |
West side of North Liberty by I-380 |
|
Iowa River Landing Pond |
620047 |
4615397 |
Just south of I-80 at Iowa River landing |
|
Kent Park Lake |
605587.26 |
4620021.73 |
2.5 miles west of Tiffin |
|
Lake Macbride |
619078.11 |
4628229.25 |
4 miles west of Solon |
|
Liberty Centre Pond |
615500 |
4622936 |
One block west off Hwy 965 on Cherry Street |
|
North Ridge Park Pond |
616966.57 |
4616718.45 |
Just north of I-80 in Coralville |
|
Oakdale Ponds |
616042 |
4618778 |
East of Hwy 965 |
|
Redbird Farms W.A. Ponds |
607294.48 |
4607914.17 |
9 miles southwest of Iowa City |
|
S.T. Morrison |
617764 |
4615107 |
Coralville |
|
Terry Trueblood Lake |
622528 |
4608957 |
1.5 miles south of Hwy 6 on Gilbert Street in Iowa City |
|
Town Dam |
619489 |
4614596 |
On the Iowa River along 1st Avenue in Iowa City |
|
West Pond |
613582 |
4621842 |
|
Jones |
Central Park Lake |
653870.14 |
4663855.76 |
2 miles west of Center Junction |
|
Hale Ponds |
663097 |
4654211 |
3 miles east of Hale |
|
Monticello Dam |
650809 |
4678560 |
On the Maquoketa River on the east side of Monticello |
|
Olin R.A. Pond |
654322.31 |
4652393.1 |
1 mile north of Olin |
Keokuk |
Belva Deer Park Pond #1 |
572399 |
4580789 |
5 miles northeast of Sigourney |
|
Belva Deer Park Pond #2 |
572552 |
4580701 |
5 miles northeast of Sigourney in the campground |
|
Belva Deer Park Pond #3 |
572712 |
4580705 |
5 miles northeast of Sigourney in the campground |
|
Griffin Lake |
554502.09 |
4582351.74 |
Southeast corner of What Cheer |
|
Griffin Pond #1 |
554809 |
4582606 |
|
|
Griffin Pond #2 |
555034 |
4582531 |
|
|
Lake Belva Deer |
573367 |
4581022 |
5 miles northeast of Sigourney |
|
Yenruogis Pond |
566866.17 |
4581105.04 |
2 miles north of Sigourney |
Kossuth |
Burt Lake |
387755.38 |
4817117.51 |
4 miles west, 8 miles north of Swea City |
|
Hurlburt W.A. Pond |
400846.96 |
4772904.56 |
|
|
Lake Smith |
399004.66 |
4775327.52 |
3 miles north of Algona |
|
Plum Creek W.A. Pond |
403565.97 |
4776155.8 |
|
|
St. Benedict W.A. Pond |
411428.97 |
4763547.16 |
2 miles southwest of St. Benedict |
|
Whittemore Pit |
386031.74 |
4767988.65 |
1.5 miles southeast of Whittemore |
Lee |
Bitternut |
607002 |
4502463 |
3 miles north of Farmington |
|
Black Oak |
608922 |
4499870 |
2 miles northeast of Farmington |
|
Chatfield Lake |
631418.04 |
4477352.55 |
3 miles northwest of Keokuk |
|
Devil's Creek Lake |
635244 |
4494311 |
|
|
Grape Chute |
655552 |
4502801 |
|
|
Lead Island Chute |
648559 |
4501028 |
|
|
Martens Pond |
612682 |
4498974 |
Just off Highway 2 in Shimek State Forest |
|
Martin Pond |
612689 |
4498943 |
|
|
Pollmiller Park Lake |
632044.15 |
4508067.78 |
East edge of West Point |
|
Rabbit Island Lake |
638603 |
4497196 |
|
|
Shagbark |
612763 |
4500242 |
6 miles northeast of Farmington |
|
White Oak |
609402 |
4498526 |
2 miles east of Farmington |
|
Wilson Lake |
627747 |
4500241 |
4 miles east of Donnellson |
|
Wilson Pond #1 |
627532 |
4500070 |
|
|
Wilson Pond #2 |
627327 |
4500075 |
|
Linn |
Central City Ponds |
620723.06 |
4674042 |
|
|
Coggon Impoundment |
620851.21 |
4682196.87 |
On Buffalo Creek on the northwest edge of Coggon |
|
Five in One Dam |
609949 |
4648267 |
On Cedar River under I-380 in Cedar Rapids |
|
Manhattan Robbins Lake Park |
607509.52 |
4651345.38 |
On the Cedar River in northwest Cedar Rapids |
|
Mohawk Park Lake |
608932 |
4650761 |
East side of the Cedar River off J Avenue |
|
Mount Vernon Quarry |
631572 |
4641831 |
Between Mount Vernon and Lisbon on the north side of Highway 30 |
|
Murphy Lake |
619876 |
4645502 |
1 mile northwest of Bertram on the west side of Highway 13 |
|
Pleasant Creek Lake |
598199.61 |
4664125.85 |
4 miles north of Palo |
|
Prairie Park Fishery |
613355 |
4644988 |
1.5 miles south-southeast of Cargill on Otis Road, along the Cedar River in Cedar Rapids |
|
Seminole Valley Park Lakes |
605042.16 |
4650789.19 |
Along the Cedar River in northwest Cedar Rapids |
|
South Cedar Pond |
630066.45 |
4638533.71 |
|
|
Wakpicada Natural Area Pit 1 |
621944 |
4671998 |
1 mile south of Central City |
|
Wakpicada Natural Area Pit 2 |
622013 |
4670928 |
1 mile south of Central City |
Louisa |
Beebe Pond |
660348 |
4562333 |
|
|
Big Goose Pond |
660725 |
4561162 |
|
|
Big Timber Complex |
658059 |
4569957 |
|
|
Blackhawk Chute |
670734 |
4551602 |
|
|
Cairo Woods Pond |
638996.46 |
4562293.45 |
|
|
Coolegar Slough |
658114.44 |
4570795.74 |
|
|
Fox Pond |
659185 |
4564105 |
|
|
Hidden Acres |
657929 |
4566569 |
|
|
Kilpeck Island Chute |
660469 |
4574879 |
|
|
Lake Odessa |
660024.13 |
4560444.9 |
5 miles east of Wapello |
|
Little Fox Pond |
659618 |
4563856 |
|
|
Louisa Interpretive Center Pond |
654884 |
4569511 |
|
|
Otter Island |
662381 |
4561346 |
|
|
Prairie Pocket |
659290 |
4565212 |
|
|
Swarms Pond |
659731 |
4562325 |
|
|
Turkey Chute |
660327 |
4563388 |
|
|
Virginia Grove R.A. Pond |
640596.11 |
4556176.98 |
4 miles northwest of Morning Sun |
Lucas |
Ellis Lake |
478118 |
4539959.96 |
1 mile east of Chariton |
|
Morris Lake |
479091.71 |
4540050.46 |
3 miles east of Chariton |
|
Red Haw Lake |
477089.37 |
4538562.46 |
1 mile east of Chariton |
|
Red Haw Pond 1 (east) |
476871 |
4537515 |
|
|
Red Haw Pond 2 (middle) |
476686 |
4537455 |
|
|
Red Haw Pond 3 (north) |
476651 |
4537780 |
|
|
Stephen's Forest Lucas Unit Pond 1 |
458776.18 |
4541052.58 |
|
|
Stephen's Forest Lucas Unit Pond 2 |
459618.26 |
4540360.97 |
|
|
Stephen's Forest Whitebreast Pond 1 |
458068.38 |
4537864.95 |
|
|
Stephen's Forest Whitebreast Pond 2 |
457718.44 |
4536796.84 |
8 miles west of Chariton |
|
Williamson Pond |
482052.92 |
4549089.51 |
2 miles east of Williamson |
Lyon |
Jasper Pool |
209438.86 |
4822553.45 |
|
|
Lake Pahoja |
219000.7 |
4809227.87 |
4 miles south, 2 miles west of Larchwood |
|
Locker Park Pond |
256720.45 |
4803663.21 |
In city park in George |
Madison |
Badger Creek Lake |
423893.93 |
4591432.25 |
5 miles southeast of Van Meter |
|
Badger Creek Pond |
423780 |
4592988 |
6 miles southeast of Van Meter |
|
Cedar Lake |
416544.42 |
4580433.65 |
2 miles northeast of Winterset |
|
Criss Cove County Park Pond |
412630.06 |
4562897.31 |
7 miles south of Winterset |
|
Deer Creek Wildlife Unit Pond |
416883.11 |
4560928.89 |
|
|
Fellowship Forest Pond |
410740 |
4570020 |
|
Mahaska |
Cedar Bluffs N.A. Pond |
514213.22 |
4566947.03 |
|
|
Edmunson Pond |
528946.31 |
4570391.36 |
|
|
Hawthorn Lake (a.k.a. Barnes City Lake) |
545229.09 |
4591852.64 |
1 mile south of Barnes City |
|
Hawthorn Lake Watershed Ponds |
|
|
|
|
Lake Keomah |
538546.94 |
4571495.74 |
6 miles east of Oskaloosa |
|
Russell W.A. Pond |
531042.96 |
4578939.74 |
6 miles north of Oskaloosa |
|
White Oak Conservation Area Lake |
543838.8 |
4569253.88 |
2 miles south of Rose Hill |
Marion |
Bauer Park |
473515.3 |
4561127.02 |
4 miles west of Melcher-Dallas |
|
Knoxville Pond |
489340.69 |
4573756.55 |
1 mile southwest of Knoxville |
|
Pella S.G.M.A. Ponds |
508282.51 |
4580049.2 |
|
|
Red Rock Reservoir |
500001.33 |
4581031.68 |
4 miles north of Knoxville |
|
Roberts Creek Lake |
495830.2 |
4585975.08 |
6 miles northeast of Knoxville |
|
Sand Pit |
503020.85 |
4579588.17 |
|
|
Sunken Gardens Park Pond |
507044.28 |
4584467.25 |
|
|
Tower Pond |
501083.29 |
4578269.23 |
|
|
Wilcox W.A. Pond |
504275.37 |
4566180.27 |
4 miles east of Attica |
Marshall |
Center Street Dam |
506615 |
4656548 |
On the Iowa River on the north edge of Marshalltown |
|
Green Castle Lake |
511581.56 |
4641843.27 |
1 mile south of Ferguson |
|
Marshall County Lake |
501181.94 |
4653756.22 |
4 miles west of Marshalltown |
|
Sand Lake |
511500 |
4655700 |
On the northeast edge of Marshalltown |
Mills |
Folsom Lake |
262956.75 |
4551866.61 |
2 miles west of Glenwood |
|
Glenwood Lake |
270109.51 |
4547391.54 |
East edge of Glenwood |
|
Keg Creek Lake |
264085.12 |
4541300.49 |
2 miles southwest of Pacific Junction |
|
Lake George |
293010.52 |
4544369.48 |
|
|
Malvern Pond (a.k.a. Bohner Pond) |
282046 |
4542498 |
West edge of Malvern |
|
Mile Hill Lake |
265997.5 |
4548659.57 |
2 miles west of Glenwood |
Mitchell |
Interstate Lake (Mitchell Impoundment) |
509569.33 |
4796205.54 |
West edge of Mitchell |
|
Otranto Impoundment |
501476.14 |
4811770.78 |
|
|
Stacyville Impoundment |
517933.94 |
4809237.57 |
|
Monona |
Blue Lake |
238595.91 |
4659728.09 |
3 miles west of Onawa |
|
I-29 Access Area borrow pit – Dry |
242812.82 |
4646066.83 |
|
|
Johnston Pit |
257800 |
4676400 |
1 mile east of Rodney |
|
Loess Hills State Forest – Jones Creek |
257215 |
4639517 |
|
|
McDonald Pit |
257276 |
4675844 |
1 mile east of Rodney |
|
Middle Decatur Lake |
234152.8 |
4655809.5 |
|
|
Oldham Lake |
268988.65 |
4654477.44 |
1 mile north of Soldier |
|
Pawnee Rec. Area Pit (NE) |
258042 |
4677144 |
|
|
Pawnee Rec. Area Pit (SW) |
257900 |
4677000 |
|
|
Peters Park |
256800 |
4676000 |
1 mile east of Rodney |
|
Savery Pond |
263720.03 |
4638997.9 |
2 miles southeast of Moorhead |
|
Upper Decatur Bend |
232403 |
4655429 |
|
|
Whiting Woods Pond |
261406.53 |
4669982.78 |
|
Monroe |
Albia (lower) |
515300 |
4544600 |
1 mile north of Albia |
|
Albia City Reservoir |
514850 |
4544350 |
1 mile north of Albia |
|
Carmack Park Pond |
505562.4 |
4552081.85 |
2 miles west of Lovilia |
|
Lake Miami |
512952.93 |
4551706.67 |
5 miles southeast of Lovilia |
Montgomery |
Anderson Area Pond 1 |
316415.17 |
4544876.14 |
2 miles east of Red Oak |
|
Anderson Area Pond 2 |
316156.26 |
4543807.56 |
2 miles east of Red Oak |
|
Hacklebarney East |
334300 |
4538900 |
4 miles north of Villisca |
|
Hacklebarney West |
333600 |
4538400 |
4 miles north of Villisca |
|
Pilot Grove Lake |
328614.32 |
4557101.13 |
5 miles east of Elliott |
|
Viking Lake |
329002.05 |
4538071.21 |
4 miles east of Stanton |
Muscatine |
Cedar Bluffs R.A. Ponds |
640775.91 |
4578442.02 |
|
|
Chicken Creek Lake |
653073 |
4595470 |
8 miles northwest of Muscatine (CCB) |
|
Deep Lakes |
660751 |
4581647 |
|
|
Drury Slough |
672542 |
4587295 |
|
|
Environmental Discovery Park North Pond |
660000 |
4588800 |
Muscatine CCB, east of Muscatine |
|
Environmental Discovery Park South Pond |
659750 |
4588600 |
Muscatine CCB, east of Muscatine |
|
Gedney Lake |
641241.83 |
4584761.77 |
|
|
Hershey Slough |
671496 |
4588165 |
|
|
Hog Island |
665859 |
4588186 |
|
|
Muscatine Slough (Kent-Stein Park) |
661049.98 |
4586403.35 |
Southwest edge of Muscatine |
|
Spring Lake |
660814 |
4577870 |
|
|
Wyoming Slough |
671745 |
4588758 |
|
O'Brien |
Dog Creek (Lake) |
298538.13 |
4756818.5 |
2 miles east, ½ mile south of Sutherland |
|
Douma Area Pond |
279975.69 |
4782398.84 |
2 miles west, 1 mile south of Sanborn |
|
Mill Creek (Lake) |
282302 |
4762515 |
1 mile east of Paullina |
|
Negus Recreation Area Pond |
297040.75 |
4756751.02 |
|
|
Sheldon Community Pond |
271108.1 |
4784622.5 |
|
|
Tjossem Pond |
286969.84 |
4771788.04 |
|
Osceola |
Ashton Park Pond |
274303.65 |
4799335.56 |
|
|
Ashton Pits Wildlife Management Area |
274931.84 |
4800219.8 |
|
|
May City Pit |
298016.91 |
4800337.63 |
|
|
Ocheyedan Pit #1 |
294636.06 |
4806765.04 |
2 miles south of Ocheyedan |
|
Ocheyedan Pit #2 |
294509 |
4807219 |
2 miles south of Ocheyedan |
|
Ocheyedan Pit #3 |
294291 |
4807392 |
2 miles south of Ocheyedan |
|
Peters Pit |
269633.43 |
4817562.63 |
|
|
Thomas Pit |
295840.01 |
4802894.09 |
|
|
Willow Creek |
288284 |
4812127 |
4 miles west of Ocheyedan |
Page |
Pierce Creek Pond |
301186.8 |
4522851.23 |
5 miles north of Shenandoah |
|
Pioneer Park Pond |
312336.38 |
4512741.41 |
10 miles north of Clarinda |
|
RAPP Park Lakes |
300880 |
4517554 |
North edge of Shenandoah |
|
Ross Area Pit |
334046.4 |
4497246.63 |
8 miles southeast of Clarinda |
Palo Alto |
Five Island Lake |
364129.71 |
4776858.57 |
North edge of Emmetsburg |
|
Lost Island Lake |
345236.73 |
4781980.63 |
3 miles north of Ruthven |
|
Mulroney Recreation W.A. Pond |
371544.92 |
4763574.23 |
|
|
Silver Lake (Palo Alto) |
346427.93 |
4766118.97 |
2 miles west of Ayrshire |
|
Sportsman Park Pond |
373841.73 |
4774577.66 |
|
|
Virgin Lake |
345799.11 |
4773993.31 |
2 miles south of Ruthven |
Plymouth |
Hillview R.A. Pond |
227889.37 |
4726319.16 |
2 miles west of Hinton |
|
LeMars Pit |
246489.6 |
4739176.68 |
|
|
Meadow W.A. Pond |
260939.3 |
4748626.59 |
|
|
Rivers Bend Wildlife Area Lake |
206448 |
4743942 |
|
|
Silver Maple County Park Pond |
206580.89 |
4745257.62 |
|
|
Southeast Wildwood Park Pond |
253515.73 |
4720561.95 |
|
Pocahontas |
Cooper's Cove Park Pond |
379947.83 |
4720030.24 |
7 miles east of Palmer |
|
Fonda Reservoir |
348315.07 |
4715687.24 |
|
|
Lizard Lake |
377543.34 |
4725444.04 |
|
|
Meredith Park Pond |
367541.9 |
4751724.52 |
1.5 miles north of Plover |
|
Northwest Recreational Park Pond |
349680.49 |
4745166.51 |
Southeast edge of Laurens |
Polk |
Acorn Valley Pond |
440086 |
4620848 |
Within Acorn Valley campground on the west side of Saylorville Reservoir 3 miles north of Johnston |
|
Ankeny Lake (DMACC) |
449512 |
4617135 |
Ankeny, DMACC campus |
|
Big Creek Lake |
438321.15 |
4629479.46 |
2 miles north of Polk City |
|
Birdland Park Pond |
448932.83 |
4606930.51 |
|
|
Blue Heron Lake (Raccoon River Park) |
439020.58 |
4599899.06 |
Southwest of West Des Moines; Raccoon River Park |
|
Copper Creek |
455930 |
4605980 |
North side of University Avenue in Pleasant Hill along Four Mile Creek |
|
Dale Maffitt Reservoir |
434202.42 |
4596457.29 |
6 miles southwest of Des Moines |
|
Discovery Pond |
434952.67 |
4626039.47 |
|
|
Donald McRae Park Pond |
448020.25 |
4602131.04 |
|
|
Easter Lake |
453737.61 |
4599264.29 |
Southeast edge of Des Moines |
|
Ewing Park Pond |
451685.09 |
4598800.16 |
|
|
Fort Des Moines Pond |
449107 |
4596329 |
|
|
Grays Lake |
446619.95 |
4602226.81 |
Fleur Drive, Des Moines |
|
Greenwood/Ashworth Park Pond |
443179.91 |
4603320.13 |
|
|
Hawkeye Park Pond |
449411.16 |
4620502.87 |
Ankeny |
|
Lake Petocka |
463217.99 |
4617300.7 |
Northeast edge of Bondurant |
|
Lake View Pond |
439386 |
4609789 |
|
|
McHenry Park Lagoon |
447691.3 |
4608112.63 |
|
|
Saylorville Reservoir |
442684.68 |
4618588.91 |
North edge of Des Moines |
|
Skull Pond |
434961 |
4626036 |
Within Jester Park 2.5 miles northeast of Granger |
|
Teal Pond |
434504 |
4625778 |
Within Jester Park 2.5 miles northeast of Granger |
|
Terra Lake |
441169 |
4612454 |
Within city of Johnston south of Pioneer Parkway |
|
Thomas Mitchell Lake |
468053.88 |
4610166.83 |
3 miles southwest of Mitchellville |
|
Walker-Johnston Pond |
438255 |
4608532 |
Within Walker-Johnston Park in the city of Urbandale |
|
Witmer Park Pond |
444651.4 |
4606515.45 |
|
|
Yellow Banks Park Pond |
461572.92 |
4598783.73 |
Southeast edge of Des Moines |
Pottawattamie |
Arrowhead Pond |
283406.45 |
4590411.46 |
1½ miles southeast of Neola |
|
Big Lake (incl. Gilbert's Pond) |
260371.03 |
4575268.64 |
North 25th Street exit off Interstate 29, Nash Blvd. to Big Lake Road, northeast Council Bluffs |
|
Carter Lake |
255489.46 |
4576242.85 |
North edge of Carter Lake |
|
Farm Creek Lake |
305790 |
4565600 |
5 miles east of Carson |
|
Lake Manawa |
260203.21 |
4565635.29 |
Southwest edge of Council Bluffs |
|
Riepe Pond |
307915 |
4565321 |
|
|
Saganaush Pond |
256320 |
4568090 |
On grounds of Western Historic Trails Center in western Council Bluffs, accessed via Richard Downing Avenue |
Poweshiek |
Arbor Lake |
522262.02 |
4620025.39 |
On the southwest edge of Grinnell |
|
Diamond Lake |
537371.4 |
4604053.83 |
1 mile west of Montezuma |
|
Diamond Lake Pond |
538009 |
4604190 |
1 mile west of Montezuma |
|
Miller |
523211 |
4620090 |
On the southeast edge of Grinnell |
Ringgold |
Fife's Grove Park Pond |
395138.61 |
4510343.9 |
1 mile north of Mount Ayr |
|
Fogle Lake S.W.A. |
386067.75 |
4519129.71 |
½ mile west of Diagonal |
|
Kokesh R.A. Pond |
387027.06 |
4516600.61 |
|
|
Loch Ayr |
395377.92 |
4511185.33 |
2 miles north of Mount Ayr |
|
Mount Ayr Game Area Ponds |
388320.85 |
4504889.89 |
5 miles southwest of Mount Ayr |
|
Mount Ayr Old Reservoir |
396421.06 |
4509142.84 |
½ mile north of Mount Ayr |
|
Poe Hollow Park Pond |
399172.78 |
4507465.25 |
|
|
Ringgold CCB Ponds |
395164 |
4510341 |
1 mile north of Mount Ayr |
|
Ringgold Management Area Ponds |
404084.61 |
4494965.08 |
11 miles southeast of Mount Ayr |
Sac |
Almer Noyd W.A. Pit |
343857.65 |
4683121.44 |
|
|
Arrowhead Lake |
330911.52 |
4684793.63 |
South side of Lake View |
|
Black Hawk Lake |
333592.47 |
4684763.6 |
East edge of Lake View |
|
Black Hawk Pits |
330522 |
4682062 |
1½ miles south of Lake View |
|
Eden Prairie R.A. Pits |
319758.78 |
4707958.74 |
|
|
Jana R.A. Pit |
338824.24 |
4687134.39 |
|
|
L Pond |
330582 |
4681897 |
|
|
Reiff Park Pond |
323169.89 |
4700594.24 |
|
Scott |
Bluegrass Lake |
692799.99 |
4599833.86 |
.25 miles west of Davenport (CCB) |
|
Buena Vista Public Use Area Ponds |
688198.91 |
4622022.22 |
|
|
Cody Lake |
705361.42 |
4620767.89 |
|
|
Cordova Slough |
722599 |
4620589 |
|
|
Crow Creek W.A. Lake |
703587.12 |
4609911.64 |
East edge of Mount Joy |
|
Davenport Harbor |
698411 |
4596521 |
|
|
Enchanted Island |
695840 |
4593464 |
|
|
Grant Slough |
722010 |
4620391 |
|
|
Lake of the Hills |
693798.96 |
4599251.97 |
.25 miles west of Davenport (CCB) |
|
Lambach Lake |
693953.02 |
4599816.3 |
.25 miles west of Davenport |
|
Le Claire Canal |
717084 |
4606489 |
|
|
Lost Grove Lake |
713121 |
4616355 |
6 miles east of Eldridge |
|
Lost Grove Lake Pond |
|
|
|
|
Pride Lake |
705741.49 |
4619857.29 |
|
|
Railroad Lake |
693213.11 |
4599729.1 |
.25 miles west of Davenport (CCB) |
|
Steamboat Slough |
722736 |
4620149 |
|
|
Wapsi River Center Pond |
683785.63 |
4626415.39 |
|
Shelby |
Elk Horn Creek Pond |
325720.04 |
4604192.81 |
|
|
Manteno Park Pond |
295232.85 |
4636522.07 |
8 miles northwest of Defiance |
|
Nishna Bend R.A. Ponds |
305993.99 |
4604617.39 |
4 miles south of Harlan |
|
Pioneer Park Pond |
306202 |
4613751 |
Within Harlan city limits |
|
Prairie Rose Lake |
315022.56 |
4608076.17 |
8 miles southeast of Harlan |
|
Schimeroski Pond |
299608.55 |
4627446.47 |
East edge of Earling |
|
Speery Pond |
305460 |
4612920 |
Within Harlan city limits |
Sioux |
Alton Roadside Park Pond |
254874.7 |
4764719.04 |
.5 miles north of Alton |
|
Big Sioux Recreation Area |
214559 |
4765664 |
|
|
Fairview Area Impoundment |
217068.02 |
4792010.78 |
5 miles south, 3 miles west of Inwood |
|
Nassau W.A. Pond |
252253.29 |
4758384.74 |
|
|
Oak Grove Pond |
216911.5 |
4773041.27 |
Oak Grove County Park |
|
Otter Creek R.A. Pond |
256088.72 |
4793184.47 |
4.5 miles north of Boyden on L14 |
|
Rock Valley Pit |
230911.25 |
4789780.59 |
In city park in Rock Valley |
|
Sandy Hollow Park Lake |
246404.47 |
4772715.56 |
|
|
Sioux Center Pit |
240949.87 |
4769579.74 |
|
|
Vander Weerd Pit |
259830 |
4767780 |
|
|
Winterfield Pond (a.k.a. Van Zee Pit) |
232630.55 |
4789617.55 |
North edge of Rock Valley |
Story |
Ada Hayden Heritage Park Lake |
448174.92 |
4657208.55 |
North side of Ames, west of Grand Avenue/Highway 69 |
|
Cambridge Pond |
454936.39 |
4642902.35 |
|
|
Dakin Lake |
475677.46 |
4668780.3 |
2 miles northeast of Zearing |
|
Hickory Grove Lake |
470564.02 |
4648264.23 |
3 miles southwest of Colo |
|
Lake Laverne |
446406.96 |
4652629.02 |
|
|
McFarland Pond |
452861.05 |
4660393.21 |
4 miles northeast of Ames |
|
Moore Memorial Park Pond |
446172.06 |
4654939.44 |
|
|
Petersons Pit (west) |
450738.3 |
4659450.24 |
4 miles northeast of Ames |
|
Robison Wildlife Acres Pond |
463583.65 |
4641878.25 |
|
Tama |
Cherry Lake |
534572 |
4645482 |
On the southwest edge of Tama |
|
Columbia W.A. Pond |
538064.71 |
4639700.32 |
4 miles southeast of Tama |
|
Otter Creek Lake |
539761.59 |
4654810.53 |
6 miles northeast of Toledo |
|
Otter Creek Pond |
540216 |
4654983 |
Just east of Otter Creek Lake, within county park |
|
Union Grove Lake |
522799.61 |
4664064.32 |
4 miles south of Gladbrook |
|
Union Grove W.A. Pond |
522365.05 |
4663357.32 |
4 miles south of Gladbrook, on southwest corner of Union Grove State Park |
Taylor |
Bedford Impoundment |
355314 |
4504855 |
|
|
East Lake (Lenox) |
369538.35 |
4528640.04 |
½ mile north of Lenox |
|
Lake of Three Fires |
357231.61 |
4508111.37 |
3 miles northeast of Bedford |
|
Sands Timber Lake (Blockton Reservoir) |
373269.1 |
4498496.49 |
1 mile northwest of Blockton |
|
West Lake (Lenox) |
369018.64 |
4528368.21 |
1 mile north of Lenox |
|
Wilson Park Lake |
369940.42 |
4521759.13 |
2½ miles southeast of Lenox |
|
Windmill Lake |
345779.77 |
4510308.98 |
3½ miles east of New Market |
Union |
Afton City Reservoir |
398287.94 |
4543422.16 |
1 mile west of Afton |
|
Green Valley Lake |
383661.65 |
4550950.63 |
2½ miles northwest of Creston |
|
Groesbeck W.A. Lake |
404231.4 |
4550318.84 |
|
|
McKinley Lake |
383582.18 |
4545574.05 |
|
|
Summit Lake |
382469.75 |
4546927.06 |
West edge of Creston |
|
Talmadge Hill Lake/Marsh |
407807.79 |
4542658.84 |
5 miles east of Afton |
|
Thayer Lake |
410388.46 |
4541669.78 |
1 mile south of Thayer |
|
Three Mile Lake |
397910.93 |
4547597.32 |
3 miles northwest of Afton |
|
Twelve Mile Creek Lake |
394545.86 |
4545747.38 |
4 miles east of Creston |
Van Buren |
Cantril Pond |
578466.3 |
4499991.73 |
|
|
Indian Lake |
605465.38 |
4498406.87 |
1 mile southwest of Farmington |
|
Lacey Keosauqua Park Lake |
586944.13 |
4507027.86 |
1 mile southwest of Keosauqua |
|
Lake Miss (Tug Fork W) |
582203.21 |
4506424.17 |
5 miles southwest of Keosauqua |
|
Lake Sugema |
585661.49 |
4504193.59 |
3 miles southwest of Keosauqua |
|
Morris Memorial Park Pond |
601368.13 |
4527099.57 |
|
|
Piper's Pond (Tug Fork E) |
582409.8 |
4506415.2 |
5 miles southwest of Keosauqua |
Wapello |
Arrowhead Lake |
555813.87 |
4535928.93 |
3 miles east of Ottumwa |
|
East Greater Ottumwa Central Park Pond |
548123 |
4540330 |
Inside Ottumwa city limits |
|
Eldon Pond |
567256.76 |
4529893.75 |
|
|
Memorial Park Pond |
550420.63 |
4542425.32 |
|
|
North Greater Ottumwa Central Park Pond |
547952 |
4540649 |
Inside Ottumwa city limits |
|
Ottumwa - Waterworks Dam |
549101 |
4540659 |
|
|
Ottumwa Lagoon |
548207 |
4539654 |
Southeast edge of Ottumwa |
|
Pioneer Ridge Nature Area Pond (Nature Center) |
550055.85 |
4527975.72 |
|
|
Pioneer Ridge Nature Area Pond (Parking lot pond) |
550334 |
4527929 |
|
|
Pioneer Ridge Nature Area Pond (south pond) |
549872 |
4528018 |
|
|
South Greater Ottumwa Central Park Pond |
548065 |
4540029 |
Inside Ottumwa city limits |
|
Unmanaged Greater Ottumwa Central Park Ponds |
548330 |
4540159 |
|
|
West Greater Ottumwa Central Park Pond |
547996 |
4540189 |
|
Warren |
Annett Nature Center Pond (Lester) |
451693.92 |
4571892.04 |
4 miles south of Indianola |
|
Banner Lake (north) |
454077 |
4588169 |
4½ miles north of Indianola |
|
Banner Lake (south) |
453834.69 |
4587561.79 |
4½ miles north of Indianola |
|
Grant Nature Land Pond |
472357.58 |
4585777.95 |
5 miles south of Swan off Fenton Street |
|
Hickory Hills Park Pond |
448921.8 |
4558819.73 |
|
|
Hooper Area Pond |
450695.82 |
4569434.84 |
6 miles southwest of Indianola |
|
Lake Ahquabi |
450319.32 |
4571145.83 |
5 miles southwest of Indianola |
|
Otter Creek Park Pond |
455547.34 |
4565886.93 |
|
Washington |
Clemons Creek Area Pond |
605490 |
4573460 |
2 miles west of Washington, CCB |
|
Crawford Pond |
621826.79 |
4577093.39 |
3 miles north of Ainsworth |
|
Darling Campground pond |
592365 |
4560165 |
Lake Darling State Park |
|
Darling Youth Camp pond |
592865 |
4561394 |
|
|
Foster Pond |
622590 |
4557960 |
|
|
Foster Woods Pond |
596014.92 |
4589260.98 |
1.5 miles southwest of Wellman |
|
Iowa Township Pond |
618490.31 |
4593583.71 |
.5 miles north of Riverside |
|
Lake Darling |
592526.11 |
4561019.3 |
4 miles west of Brighton |
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 1 |
591959 |
4561972 |
|
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 10 |
594554 |
4560251 |
|
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 11 |
594322 |
4560139 |
|
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 12 |
593874 |
4559921 |
|
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 13 |
593969 |
4559630 |
|
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 14 |
593653 |
4559630 |
|
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 15 |
593521 |
4559890 |
|
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 16 |
593109 |
4560079 |
|
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 17 |
592332 |
4560184 |
|
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 18 |
591972 |
4559932 |
|
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 19 |
591707 |
4559840 |
|
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 2 |
592051 |
4561895 |
|
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 20 |
591264 |
4559919 |
|
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 21 |
591168 |
4559920 |
|
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 22 |
590959 |
4559865 |
|
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 23 |
592146 |
4560997 |
|
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 24 |
591935 |
4561227 |
|
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 25 |
591700 |
4561404 |
|
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 3 |
592168 |
4561808 |
|
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 4 |
592250 |
4561693 |
|
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 5 |
592629 |
4561526 |
|
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 6 |
592821 |
4561744 |
|
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 7 |
592936 |
4560961 |
|
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 8 |
593121 |
4560812 |
|
|
Lake Darling Watershed Pond 9 |
594664 |
4560228 |
|
|
Marr Park Lake |
619220 |
4571485 |
1 mile west of Ainsworth |
|
Marr Park Pond |
619159.71 |
4571622.68 |
1 mile west of Ainsworth |
|
Schmitter Pond (north) |
594190 |
4563450 |
|
|
Schmitter Pond (south) |
594155 |
4563164 |
|
|
Sokum Ridge Pond |
612791.94 |
4563691.64 |
5 miles south of Washington |
|
Willow Pond |
607059 |
4535425 |
|
Wayne |
Bob White Lake |
466282.9 |
4507270.67 |
1 mile west of Allerton |
|
Corydon Reservoir |
471714.34 |
4511517.65 |
West edge of Corydon |
|
Humeston Reservoir |
457368.6 |
4525586.56 |
1 mile north of Humeston |
|
Lineville Reservoir |
456747.3 |
4494458.64 |
North edge of Lineville |
|
Seymour Reservoir |
489648.91 |
4502091.94 |
.5 miles south of Seymour |
Webster |
Armstrong Park Pond |
402127.19 |
4707563.34 |
|
|
Badger Lake |
402117.43 |
4715601.85 |
4½ miles north of Fort Dodge |
|
Bob Hay Memorial Conservation Area Pond |
399087.96 |
4704626.41 |
|
|
Brushy Creek Lake |
419317.11 |
4693493.89 |
5 miles east of Lehigh |
|
Ft. Dodge - Lower Dam |
402435 |
4705264 |
|
|
Ft. Dodge - Upper Dam |
401405 |
4707790 |
|
|
Lake Ole |
411729.41 |
4678897.29 |
|
|
Moorland Pond |
394584.84 |
4700601.82 |
|
Winnebago |
Ambroson Pit (east) |
448224 |
4796718 |
3½ miles north of Forest City |
|
Ambroson Pit (middle) |
448083.53 |
4796806.07 |
3½ miles north of Forest City |
|
Ambroson Pit (north) |
448219 |
4797019 |
3½ miles north of Forest City |
|
Ambroson Pit (west) |
447981 |
4796879 |
3½ miles north of Forest City |
|
Dahle Park Pond |
453467.21 |
4812755.4 |
|
|
Florence Park Pond |
431055.17 |
4803054.02 |
|
|
Hadacek R.A. Pond |
446604.45 |
4794340.68 |
|
|
Lake Catherine |
438336.32 |
4789827.68 |
6 miles west of Forest City |
|
Lande River Conservation W.A. Pond |
452220.22 |
4810136.14 |
|
|
Rice Lake |
458817.54 |
4804514.54 |
1 mile south, 1 mile east of Lake Mills |
Winneshiek |
Lake Meyer |
588587.31 |
4780856.03 |
2.5 miles southwest of Calmar |
|
Lower Dam Impoundment |
610007.88 |
4799419.9 |
|
|
Silver Springs Pond |
599452.68 |
4776706.39 |
|
|
Upper Dam Impoundment |
607370.28 |
4797024.26 |
|
Woodbury |
Bacon Creek Lake |
225556.49 |
4710043.68 |
East edge of Sioux City |
|
Browns Lake |
226224.76 |
4689445.5 |
2 miles west of Salix |
|
Little Sioux Park Lake |
269611.94 |
4703249.66 |
2 miles south of Correctionville |
|
Midway Park Lake |
251408.28 |
4714219.6 |
3 miles northeast of Moville |
|
Snyder Bend Lake |
225516.18 |
4684455.41 |
1½ miles west of Salix |
|
Southwood Conservation Area Pond (east) |
256098.42 |
4678037.87 |
½ mile west, ½ mile south of Smithland |
|
Southwood Conservation Area Pond (west) |
256014 |
4677987 |
½ mile west, ½ mile south of Smithland |
|
Stone State Park Pond |
214847.43 |
4716891.21 |
|
Worth |
Kuennen's Pit W.A. (north) |
483241 |
4806793 |
2 miles south, ½ mile east of Northwood |
|
Kuennen's Pit W.A. (south) |
483262.09 |
4806542.03 |
2 miles south, ½ mile east of Northwood |
|
Mill Pond |
465620.81 |
4790170.28 |
|
|
Silver Lake (Worth) |
466247.61 |
4814365.2 |
10 miles west, 3½ miles north of Northwood |
|
Worth County Lake |
485623.1 |
4801876.18 |
2 miles northeast of Kensett |
Wright |
Fishpond Park |
426518.28 |
4724992.42 |
|
|
Lake Cornelia |
443606.06 |
4737316.08 |
3½ miles north, 2 miles east of Clarion |
|
Morse Lake |
443361.94 |
4743180.96 |
3½ miles west of Belmond |
Item 81. Amend 567—Chapter 65, Table 4a, as follows:
TABLE 4a
Phosphorus Removal for Iowa Crops
Source: PM 1688, A General Guide for Crop Nutrient and Limestone Recommendations in Iowa, revised October 2013
CROP |
UNITS |
P2O5(pounds/unit) |
Corn |
bu. |
0.375 0.32 |
Corn silage |
ton (65% H2O) |
3.5 |
Soybeans |
bu. |
0.8 0.72 |
Alfalfa, alfalfa grass |
ton |
12.5 13 |
Oat and straw |
bu. |
0.4 0.294 |
Wheat |
bu. |
0.6 0.55 |
Smooth brome |
ton |
9 7.9 |
Orchard grass |
ton |
14 12 |
Tall fescue |
ton |
12 11 |
Switch grass |
ton |
12 11 |
Sorghum-Sudan |
ton |
12 11 |
Vetch |
ton |
12 |
Red clover-grass |
ton |
12 11 |
Perennial rye grass |
ton |
12 11 |
Timothy |
ton |
9 7.9 |
Wheat straw |
ton |
4 3.7 |
Oat straw |
ton |
5 6.4 |
Item 82. Amend 567—Chapter 65, Table 6, table of distances to water wells, as follows:
TABLE 6
Required Separation Distances for Confinement Feeding Operations Constructed
on or after March 1, 2003—Swine, Sheep, Horses, Poultry, and Beef and Dairy Cattle
DISTANCES TO WATER WELLS |
||||
Type of Structure |
Public Well |
Private Well |
||
Shallow |
Deep |
Shallow |
Deep |
|
Aerobic structure, anaerobic lagoon, earthen manure storage basin Unformed manure storage structure and egg washwater storage structure |
1,000 feet |
400 feet |
400 feet |
400 feet |
Formed manure storage structure and confinement building |
200 feet |
100 feet |
200 feet |
100 feet |
Item 83. Amend 567—Chapter 65, Table 6a, table of distances to water wells, as follows:
TABLE 6a
Required Separation Distances for Confinement Feeding Operations Constructed on or after
January 1, 1999, but prior to March 1, 2003—Swine, Sheep, Horses and Poultry
DISTANCES TO WATER WELLS |
||||
Type of Structure |
Public Well |
Private Well |
||
Shallow |
Deep |
Shallow |
Deep |
|
Aerobic structure, anaerobic lagoon, earthen manure storage basin Unformed manure storage structure and egg washwater storage structure |
1,000 feet |
400 feet |
400 feet |
400 feet |
Formed manure storage structure and confinement building |
200 feet |
100 feet |
200 feet |
100 feet |
Item 84. Amend 567—Chapter 65, Table 6b, table of distances to water wells, as follows:
TABLE 6b
Required Separation Distances for Confinement Feeding Operations Constructed
on or after January 1, 1999, but prior to March 1, 2003—Beef and Dairy Cattle
DISTANCES TO WATER WELLS |
||||
Type of Structure |
Public Well |
Private Well |
||
Shallow |
Deep |
Shallow |
Deep |
|
Aerobic structure, anaerobic lagoon, earthen manure storage basin Unformed manure storage structure and egg washwater storage structure |
1,000 feet |
400 feet |
400 feet |
400 feet |
Formed manure storage structure and confinement building |
200 feet |
100 feet |
200 feet |
100 feet |
Item 85. Amend 567—Chapter 65, Table 6c, table of distances to water wells, as follows:
TABLE 6c
Required Separation Distances for Confinement Feeding Operations Constructed
prior to January 1, 1999—Swine, Sheep, Horses and Poultry
DISTANCES TO WATER WELLS |
||||
Type of Structure |
Public Well |
Private Well |
||
Shallow |
Deep |
Shallow |
Deep |
|
Aerobic structure, anaerobic lagoon, earthen manure storage basin Unformed manure storage structure and egg washwater storage structure |
1,000 feet |
400 feet |
400 feet |
400 feet |
Formed manure storage structure and confinement building |
200 feet |
100 feet |
200 feet |
100 feet |
Item 86. Amend 567—Chapter 65, Table 6d, table of distances to water wells, as follows:
TABLE 6d
Required Separation Distances for Confinement Feeding Operations Constructed
prior to January 1, 1999—Beef and Dairy Cattle
DISTANCES TO WATER WELLS |
||||
Type of Structure |
Public Well |
Private Well |
||
Shallow |
Deep |
Shallow |
Deep |
|
Aerobic structure, anaerobic lagoon, earthen manure storage basin Unformed manure storage structure and egg washwater storage structure |
1,000 feet |
400 feet |
400 feet |
400 feet |
Formed manure storage structure and confinement building |
200 feet |
100 feet |
200 feet |
100 feet |
Item 87. Amend 567—Chapter 65, Table 7, table of distances to water wells, as follows:
TABLE 7
Required Separation Distances for Open Feedlot Operations, Stockpiles from Open Feedlot
Operations, Stockpiles from Dry Manure Confinement Operations and Stockpiles from
Dry Bedded Confinement Operations
DISTANCES TO WELLS FOR OPEN FEEDLOT STRUCTURES |
||||
Type of Structure |
Public Well |
Private Well |
||
Shallow |
Deep |
Shallow |
Deep |
|
Settled Unformed settled open feedlot effluent basin |
1,000 feet |
400 feet |
400 feet |
400 feet |
Open feedlot, open feedlot solids settling facility, formed settled open feedlot effluent basin, AT system and feed storage runoff basin |
200 feet |
100 feet |
200 feet |
100 feet |
DISTANCES TO RESIDENCES AND SPECIAL AREAS FOR MANURE STOCKPILES1, 2 |
||||
Residence, commercial enterprise, bona fide religious institution, educational institution, or public use area (does not apply to stockpiles from SAFO sized confinements and open feedlots) |
1,250 feet |
|||
Designated area other than a high-quality water resource |
400 feet3 |
|||
High-quality water resource |
800 feet |
|||
Terrace tile inlet or surface tile inlet – unless methods, structures or practices are implemented to contain the stockpiled manure |
200 feet |
|
1Manure stockpiles are prohibited on grassed waterways or where water pools on the surface. Manure stockpiles are also prohibited on land with slopes greater than 3% unless methods, structures or practices are implemented to contain the stockpiled manure to prevent or diminish precipitation-induced runoff from the stockpiled manure. 2See subparagraph 65.2(3)"d"(4) and paragraph 65.11(8)"c" for exemptions pertaining to dry manure stockpiles. 3For Stockpiles from dry manure confinement operations, the separation distance is 800 feet to agricultural drainage wells and known sinkholes. |
|
This notice is now closed for comments. Collection of comments closed on 6/3/2016.
The official published PDF of this document is available from the Iowa General Assembly’s Administrative Rules page.
View the Iowa Administrative Bulletin for 4/13/2016.
The following administrative rule references were added to this document. You may click a reference to view related notices.
Rule 567-110.11(8) Rule 567-62.4(12) Rule 567-65.1 Rule 567-65.10(10) Rule 567-65.10(2)"a" Rule 567-65.10(3)"b" Rule 567-65.10(5) Rule 567-65.10(7)"a" Rule 567-65.10(8)"a" Rule 567-65.100 Rule 567-65.101 Rule 567-65.101(1) Rule 567-65.101(2) Rule 567-65.101(2)"a" Rule 567-65.101(3) Rule 567-65.101(6) Rule 567-65.101(8) Rule 567-65.101(9) Rule 567-65.101(9)"c" Rule 567-65.102 Rule 567-65.103 Rule 567-65.104(10) Rule 567-65.104(3) Rule 567-65.104(4) Rule 567-65.104(6) Rule 567-65.104(9) Rule 567-65.104(9)"b" Rule 567-65.104(9)"e" Rule 567-65.105 Rule 567-65.105(3) Rule 567-65.105(4) Rule 567-65.105(5) Rule 567-65.106 Rule 567-65.106(2) Rule 567-65.107 Rule 567-65.107(2)"f" Rule 567-65.108 Rule 567-65.109 Rule 567-65.109(1) Rule 567-65.109(2)"c" Rule 567-65.109(3) Rule 567-65.109(7) Rule 567-65.11(1) Rule 567-65.11(2) Rule 567-65.11(3) Rule 567-65.11(4) Rule 567-65.11(7) Rule 567-65.11(8)"c" Rule 567-65.11(9) Rule 567-65.110 Rule 567-65.110(3) Rule 567-65.110(5) Rule 567-65.110(6)"h" Rule 567-65.110(7)"h" Rule 567-65.111 Rule 567-65.112 Rule 567-65.112(7) Rule 567-65.112(8) Rule 567-65.112(8)"e" Rule 567-65.113 Rule 567-65.115 Rule 567-65.12(1) Rule 567-65.12(1)"b" Rule 567-65.12(2) Rule 567-65.12(6) Rule 567-65.12(7) Rule 567-65.12(8) Rule 567-65.15(1)"b" Rule 567-65.15(11) Rule 567-65.15(13) Rule 567-65.15(14) Rule 567-65.15(14)"a" Rule 567-65.15(14)"c" Rule 567-65.15(17)"a" Rule 567-65.15(17)"f" Rule 567-65.15(2) Rule 567-65.15(6) Rule 567-65.15(7)"b" Rule 567-65.15(7)"c" Rule 567-65.16 Rule 567-65.16(1) Rule 567-65.16(7) Rule 567-65.17 Rule 567-65.17(1)"a" Rule 567-65.17(1)"c" Rule 567-65.17(12) Rule 567-65.17(13) Rule 567-65.17(16) Rule 567-65.17(17) Rule 567-65.17(17)"b" Rule 567-65.17(17)"e" Rule 567-65.17(18)"c" Rule 567-65.17(20) Rule 567-65.17(3)"i" Rule 567-65.17(4) Rule 567-65.17(4)"c" Rule 567-65.17(6)"a" Rule 567-65.19(4)"a" Rule 567-65.199 Rule 567-65.2(3) Rule 567-65.2(3)"d" Rule 567-65.2(9)"a" Rule 567-65.2(9)"c" Rule 567-65.200 Rule 567-65.201 Rule 567-65.202 Rule 567-65.203 Rule 567-65.204 Rule 567-65.205 Rule 567-65.206 Rule 567-65.207 Rule 567-65.208 Rule 567-65.209 Rule 567-65.21 Rule 567-65.210 Rule 567-65.3(3)"h" Rule 567-65.3(4) Rule 567-65.3(4)"a" Rule 567-65.3(4)"c" Rule 567-65.3(4)"d" Rule 567-65.6 Rule 567-65.7(1) Rule 567-65.7(2)"d" Rule 567-65.7(4) Rule 567-65.7(5) Rule 567-65.7(7) Rule 567-65.7(8)"a" Rule 567-65.7(9) Rule 567-65.8 Rule 567-65.8(1) Rule 567-65.8(3)"e" Rule 567-65.9(1) Rule 567-65.9(3) Rule 567-65.9(4) Rule 567-65.9(5) Rule 567-65.9(6) Rule 567-65.9(7) Rule 567-65.9(8) Rule 567-65.9(8)"a" Rule 567-71.13 Rule 567-71.3 Rule 567-72.3The following Iowa code references were added to this document. You may click a reference to view related notices.
Iowa Code 22.2 Iowa Code 266.49 Iowa Code 455B Iowa Code 459 Iowa Code 459.202 Iowa Code 459.203 Iowa Code 459.204B Iowa Code 459.205 Iowa Code 459.303 Iowa Code 459.307 Iowa Code 459.310 Iowa Code 459.310, subsection 4 Iowa Code 459.311(2) Iowa Code 459.312 Iowa Code 459.317 Iowa Code 459.502 Iowa Code 459.604 Iowa Code 459A Iowa Code 459A.205 Iowa Code 460.205 Iowa Code 808 Iowa Code 809 Iowa Code 809AThe following keywords and tags were added to this document. You may click a keyword to view related notices.
Alluvial soils submittal requirements Annual reporting requirements for CAFOs with AT systems Applicant demand for hearing before the commission Applications that cannot be approved Bedrock separation Berm erosion inspection and repair CAFOs Certification term Complaint investigations Concentrated animal feeding operations; NPDES permits Concrete standards Construction Construction certification Construction in floodplains Construction permit application Construction permit application plan review criteria Construction permit applications that cannot be approved Construction permits Current nutrient management plan Declaratory orders and flood plain determinations Definitions Definitions and incorporation by reference Designated areas Determination by the department Determination of groundwater table Drainage tile investigation and removal Exemption to separation distance requirements from cemeteries Expansion of existing animal feeding operations Expiration of construction permits Floodplain requirements Formed animal truck wash effluent structures General requirements Hydrology Hydrology—groundwater table Incorporation by reference Inspections and record keeping Karst terrain Karst terrain submittal requirements Liner design and construction Manure management plan content requirements Measurement of separation distances Minimum monitoring requirements for AT systems New animal feeding operations Notification Nutrient management plan Nutrient management plan requirements Permanent artificial lowering of groundwater table Permit conditions Permit prior to construction Permit renewal Permits for dam construction Permits involving use of AT systems Plan review criteria Plan review criteria; time for approval or disapproval Private wells Professional engineer design certification Public notice Public wells Quarterly reporting requirements for CAFOs with AT systems Record inspection Record keeping Reporting of subsequent findings Revocation of construction permits Separation distances Settled open feedlot effluent basins Soils and hydrogeologic report Time for approval or disapproval Transfer of legal responsibilities or title Unformed animal truck wash effluent structures Unformed settled open feedlot effluent basins Use of the phosphorus index Variances Verbal report Waiver of notification requirement Water well separation distances for animal truck wash facilities Water well separation distances for open feedlot operations Written report© 2025 State of Iowa | Privacy Policy