Minnesota Administrative Rules
Agency 105 - Agriculture Department
Chapter 1573 - Division of Pesticide and Fertilizer Management
Part 1573.0030 - STATEWIDE WATER RESOURCE PROTECTION REQUIREMENTS.
Universal Citation: MN Rules 1573.0030
Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 13, September 23, 2024
Subpart 1. Prohibitions.
A. A responsible party must not make:
(1) a fall application of nitrogen fertilizer
to cropland located in a drinking water supply management area from a municipal
public water supply well with nitrate-nitrogen levels greater than or equal to
5.4 mg/L at any point in the previous ten years;
(2) a fall application of nitrogen fertilizer
to cropland located in a quarter section where vulnerable groundwater areas
make up 50 percent or more of the quarter section or government lot;
or
(3) an application of nitrogen
fertilizer to cropland with frozen soil located in:
(a) a vulnerable groundwater area;
or
(b) a drinking water supply
management area that has nitrate-nitrogen levels greater than or equal to 5.4
mg/L at any point in the previous ten years.
B. The commissioner shall annually develop a
fall application restrictions map. The commissioner shall post the fall
restrictions map on the department's Web site by January 15 of each
year.
C. Any responsible party in
charge of cropland in a vulnerable groundwater area as depicted on the
commissioner's vulnerable groundwater area map is subject to item A.
Subp. 2. Exclusions.
A. A responsible party in a county or a
portion of a county is excluded from the fall application restriction
requirements under subpart 1 if the county or the portion of the county meets
one of the following conditions:
(1) the
spring frost-free date in the county or a portion of the county is on or after
May 22 and has a leaching index less than or equal to -12 inches as determined
by the commissioner;
(2) the spring
frost-free date in the county or a portion of the county is on or after May 29
and the leaching index is less than or equal to -10 inches as determined by the
commissioner; or
(3) the spring
frost-free date in the county or a portion of the county is on or after June 5
and the leaching index is less than or equal to -6 inches as determined by the
commissioner.
B. The
exclusion under this subpart applies to an entire county if a condition under
item A is represented on 50 percent or more of the land area of the
county.
C. For purposes of
determining the exclusion under item A, the commissioner may subdivide a county
by geographical boundary if there is a clear change in conditions represented
in a specific area of the county.
D. The exclusion under this subpart does not
apply to a drinking water supply management area with nitrate-nitrogen levels
greater than or equal to 5.4 mg/L.
E. If cropland makes up less than three
percent of a county's total land area, the county is excluded from the
requirements in subpart 1, item A.
F. The commissioner shall exclude responsible
parties in a drinking water supply management area from the fall application
restrictions in subpart 1 if the commissioner determines there is a point
source of nitrate-nitrogen contamination, including but not limited to an
improperly sealed well, an animal feedlot, or an agricultural chemical
incident, that is a significant source of nitrate-nitrogen contamination in the
drinking water supply management area's well. In determining whether there is a
significant point source of nitrate-nitrogen contamination, the commissioner
shall:
(1) review the evaluation of point
sources identified in the wellhead protection plan approved under chapter 4720
for nitrate-nitrogen contributions to the municipal public water supply well;
or
(2) conduct a detailed review of
potential contaminant sources in the area; evaluate the condition and
vulnerability of the municipal water supply well; determine the hydrogeology
and groundwater flow paths for groundwater flowing into the municipal public
water supply well; and if necessary, sample soil or other wells in the area;
and
(3) based on the information
obtained in subitem (1) or (2), determine whether, but for the contamination
from the point source, the municipal water supply well would not exceed the
reference value of 5.4 mg/L. If the municipal water supply well would not
exceed the reference value of 5.4 mg/L but for the contamination from the point
source, the responsible parties within the drinking water supply management
area are excluded from fall application restrictions under subpart 1, item
A.
G. The commissioner
shall exclude part of a drinking water supply management area from the fall
application restriction if the commissioner determines that the area is not
contributing significantly to the contamination of the well in the drinking
water supply management area. In determining whether an area is not
contributing significantly, the commissioner shall apply the following:
(1) for drinking water supply management
areas greater than 100,000 acres, only the designated capture zone and
vulnerable groundwater areas are subject to the fall application restrictions
under subpart 1, item A;
(2) for
drinking water supply management areas that are less than 100,000 acres and for
areas within a designated capture zone for drinking water supply management
areas greater than 100,000 acres:
(a) areas
within the wellhead protection plan as approved by the Department of Health
under chapter 4720 that identify an area as low vulnerability are not subject
to the fall application restrictions under subpart 1, item A; or
(b) areas within a drinking water supply
management area that have a ten-foot or greater confining layer, as defined in
part 4725.0100, subpart 24a, are not
subject to fall application restrictions under subpart 1, item A, unless
computer modeling indicates that leaching and infiltration of nitrate from
sources at or near the ground surface is predicted to result in nitrate
exceeding 5.4 mg/L in the aquifer being monitored;
The commissioner shall regulate areas under this part by quarter section or by using the boundaries in the wellhead protection plan for the drinking water supply management area.
Subp. 3. Exceptions.
A. Notwithstanding
subpart 1, a responsible party may make a fall application of nitrogen
fertilizer in a vulnerable groundwater area or drinking water supply management
area if the responsible party uses applicable nitrogen rates, as defined in
item B, in the following situations only:
(1)
when nitrogen fertilizer is required to establish winter grains planted in the
fall;
(2) when nitrogen fertilizer
is required for pasture fertilization;
(3) when nitrogen fertilizer is required for
perennial crops;
(4) when nitrogen
fertilizer is required for grass seed production. For purposes of this subitem,
grass seed production does not include corn production;
(5) when nitrogen fertilizer is required for
cultivated wild rice; or
(6) when
nitrogen fertilizer is required for growing cover crops for the specific
purpose of reducing commercial applications of soil fumigants to the subsequent
potato crop.
B. For
purposes of item A, "nitrogen rates" means:
(1) the nitrogen rates included in the
nitrogen fertilizer best management practices adopted by the commissioner under
Minnesota Statutes, section
103H.151,
subdivision 2; or
(2) if applicable
nitrogen rates have not been adopted by the commissioner under Minnesota
Statutes, section
103H.151,
subdivision 2, the nitrogen rates included in the Fertilizer Guidelines for
Agronomic Crops in Minnesota as published by the University of Minnesota
Extension.
C.
Notwithstanding subpart 1 and in addition to item A, a responsible party may
make a fall application in a vulnerable groundwater area in the following
situations:
(1) when applying ammoniated
phosphate or micronutrient formulations containing nitrogen, so long as the
applied nitrogen rate does not exceed an average of 40 pounds per acre in a
field. Fields that have had a soil analysis completed by a certified lab and
determined to have low to very low phosphorus levels according to the
Fertilizer Guidelines for Agronomic Crops in Minnesota are not subject to the
40 pounds per acre total nitrogen rate;
(2) when making a land application of
agricultural-chemical-contaminated soil and other media according to Minnesota
Statutes, section
18D.1052;
or
(3) when making an application
of nitrogen fertilizer for agricultural research and demonstrations for
academic purposes. Application of nitrogen fertilizer for agricultural research
and demonstrations is limited to 20 acres or less unless a higher acreage
amount is approved by the commissioner.
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