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Some Riverside County farmers eligible for monitoring group


Friday, January 2nd, 2009
Issue 01, Volume 13.
Joe Naiman
Village News Correspondent


The San Diego County Farm Bureau has created a runoff monitoring

group to help its members comply with new water quality regulations, and Riverside County Farm Bureau members within the boundaries of the San Diego Regional Water

Quality Control Board are eligible to join the group.

Because Regional Water Quality Control Board boundaries are based on hydrologic regions, Region 9 includes portions of Orange and Riverside Counties and does not include all of San Diego County (the most notable exclusion is Borrego Springs). Members of the Orange County Farm Bureau or the Riverside County Farm Bureau will be eligible to join the San Diego County Farm Bureau's San Diego Region Irrigated Lands Group (SDRILG).

In 2007 the San Diego Regional Water Quality Control Board adopted regulations which require all agricultural and nursery operations to test wet-weather and dry-weather runoff for pollutants and report the test results. The regulations allow for growers to undertake such monitoring and reporting responsibilities themselves and report directly to the RWQCB, and growers are also allowed to participate as a member of a group. "We formed a monitoring group in response to that," said San Diego County Farm Bureau executive director Eric Larson. "We formed a monitoring group for Farm Bureau members to join."

Although participation in any runoff monitoring group is voluntary, the concept of a group allows farmers to share costs. The RWQCB estimates a cost of $18,000 for the preparation of a program and submittal of necessary reports. That figure does not include sampling and testing estimated costs of $1,440 per collection and $635 per sample analysis.

Growers who are not Farm Bureau members, as well as Farm Bureau members who believe that another monitoring group would be more suitable to their needs, may join another Advertisement
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group, if one exists. "Anybody else could form a monitoring group," Larson said. "We couldn't tell anybody not to."

The San Diego County Farm Bureau created a discount from the one-time fee in order to encourage early sign-ups which will allow the Farm Bureau to fund the program once it takes effect. Those who joined the monitoring group in 2008 paid $500 or $100 per acre, whichever is less, while those who join between January 2009 and June 2009 will pay $750 or $150 per acre, whichever is less. After July 1, 2009, all members will pay $200 per acre up to $1,000.

The sign-up fee covers organizational costs and also creates a source of funding which is available to provide matching funds for grants. The SDRILG, which will perform or contract for the sampling and testing, will also assess an annual acreage fee after the requirement takes effect. The acreage fee is yet to be determined but will be spread among all monitoring group members.

A monitoring group will establish and staff the operations and administration components of a program, register participants, and hire a consulting engineering firm for the testing which involves select sampling sites downstream from farms in watersheds, taking water samples and testing for compliance, and reporting back to the monitoring group. The monitoring group will then report the results to the RWQCB, and if pollution is discovered efforts will be made to remediate the problem.

Each grower or monitoring group must file a notice of intent with the RWQCB by January 1, 2011. Throughout the state some county farm bureaus and water districts have agreed to be program administrators, some 501(c)(3) non-profit organizations have been created, and some commodity groups have formed coalitions.


 

1 comments


Comment Profile ImageRay
Comment #1 | Tuesday, Jan 6, 2009 at 5:09 pm
This is a good start to addressing agricultural pollution in our region. I hope all the farmers in the area sign up for this. It is a win-win situation where the farmers get to avoid mandatory regulation and the public should get cleaner water in our creeks and lakes. The next step is to make the water quality data collected available to the public to insure that progress is being made on reducing pollutants to our waterways. The real goal should be clean water for everyone.

Article Comments are contributed by our readers, and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Valley News staff. The name listed as the author for comments cannot be verified; Comment authors are not guaranteed to be who they claim they are.

 

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