Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 13, September 23, 2024
Subpart 1.
Application.
This part applies to responsible parties in drinking water
supply management areas.
Subp.
2.
Evaluation of nitrate-nitrogen concentrations in
groundwater.
The commissioner shall evaluate nitrate-nitrogen concentrations
in groundwater from public wells in drinking water supply management areas for
purposes of making drinking water supply management area mitigation level 1 and
2 designations. The commissioner shall use public well nitrate-nitrogen
concentration data provided by the commissioner of health or the commissioner
of health's designee under chapter 4720 for this purpose. The commissioner
shall initially designate a drinking water supply management area as a
mitigation level 1 or a mitigation level 2 drinking water supply management
area according to the criteria in subpart 3. The commissioner shall make
mitigation level determinations by January 15 for monitoring data received by
the commissioner before July 15 of the previous year, unless there is good
cause for delay. The data shall be submitted to the commissioner on forms or in
a format specified by the commissioner and shall meet data requirements
specified by the commissioner.
Subp.
3.
Criteria for initial mitigation level designation.
A. The commissioner shall use the following
criteria to make mitigation level designations for drinking water supply
management areas.
(1) To be designated as a
mitigation level 1 drinking water supply management area, the groundwater
nitrate-nitrogen concentration of the public well in the drinking water supply
management area has been greater than or equal to 5.4 mg/L but less than 8.0
mg/L at any point in the previous ten years.
(2) To be designated as a mitigation level 2
drinking water supply management area, the groundwater nitrate-nitrogen
concentration data of the public well in the drinking water supply management
area meets one of the following:
(a) the
statistical analysis of the groundwater nitrate-nitrogen concentration data for
the previous ten years demonstrates that the groundwater nitrate-nitrogen
concentration of the public well is projected to exceed the health risk limit
in the next ten years; or
(b) the
nitrate-nitrogen concentration of the public well has been 8.0 mg/L or greater
at any point in the previous ten years.
B. For a nonmunicipal public water supply
well, the commissioner may make exceptions for increasing a mitigation level
designation based on whether there has been a change in cropland use within the
drinking water supply management area and computer modeling or published
leaching loss data indicates that the reduction in leaching of nitrate is
predicted to result in the public well not exceeding the criteria for a
mitigation level.
C. The
commissioner shall exclude responsible parties in a drinking water supply
management area from mitigation level designations in subpart 2 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 wellhead protection plans 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 public well; determine the hydrogeology and groundwater
flow paths for groundwater flowing into the public 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 public well would not exceed the criteria for increasing a
mitigation level.
D. The
commissioner shall exclude part of a drinking water supply management area from
a mitigation level designation if the commissioner determines that the area is
not contributing significantly to the contamination of the public well. In
determining whether the area is not contributing significantly, the
commissioner shall apply the following:
(1)
areas within the wellhead protection plan as approved by the Department of
Health under chapter 4720 that identify an area as low vulnerability shall not
be included in the mitigation area designation; or
(2) the commissioner shall not include 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, in the
mitigation level designation, 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. 4.
Determination of
nitrogen fertilizer best management practices and mitigation levels.
A. For a mitigation level 2 drinking water
supply management area, the commissioner shall determine the nitrogen
fertilizer best management practices applicable for that drinking water supply
management area. The commissioner may form a local advisory team to consult on
the determination of applicable nitrogen fertilizer best management
practices.
B. The commissioner
shall provide notice to the public of the designation of a drinking water
supply management area as a mitigation level 2 and the nitrogen fertilizer best
management practices that are applicable to that drinking water supply
management area through publication in the legal newspaper for the affected
drinking water supply management area and on the Department of Agriculture's
Web site.
Subp. 5.
Monitoring.
A. The commissioner
shall monitor a drinking water supply management area's nitrate-nitrogen
concentrations pursuant to Minnesota Statutes, section
103H.251,
subdivision 2. For purposes of the monitoring required by this subpart, the
commissioner may:
(1) use groundwater
nitrate-nitrogen concentrations of a public well provided by the commissioner
of health or the commissioner's designee; or
(2) establish a groundwater monitoring
network to determine changes in water quality in the drinking water supply
management area.
B. If
the commissioner establishes a groundwater monitoring network, the commissioner
must design the groundwater monitoring network to represent the drinking water
supply management area or a portion of the drinking water supply management
area being monitored.
C. The
commissioner may conduct residual soil nitrate tests to evaluate changes in
residual soil nitrate for cropland within a drinking water supply management
area.
Subp. 6.
Nitrogen fertilizer best management practices evaluation.
A. The commissioner shall conduct an
evaluation in designated mitigation level 2 drinking water supply management
areas to determine whether the nitrogen fertilizer best management practices
approved by the commissioner have been implemented by responsible parties on at
least 80 percent of the cropland, excluding soybean cropland. The commissioner
shall not conduct an evaluation under this subpart for at least three growing
seasons subsequent to the publication of the nitrogen fertilizer best
management practices applicable to the drinking water supply management area.
The commissioner may conduct periodic evaluations during the three growing
seasons to monitor the drinking water supply management area's
progress.
B. When conducting an
evaluation under this subpart, the commissioner shall consider:
(1) cropland where a responsible party has
implemented approved alternative management tools as being in compliance with
nitrogen fertilizer best management practices applicable to that drinking water
supply management area;
(2)
cropland certified by the Minnesota Agricultural Water Quality Certification
Program as being cropland in compliance with all nitrogen fertilizer best
management practices;
(3) nitrogen
fertilizer best management practices not to be implemented if the responsible
party does not provide information or provides insufficient information to the
commissioner to make a determination related to the implementation of nitrogen
fertilizer best management practices on that cropland; and
(4) practices that do not meet the nitrogen
fertilizer best management practices to be in compliance with the nitrogen
fertilizer best management practices if the noncompliance is due to an
agricultural emergency or other extreme circumstance as determined by the
commissioner.
Subp.
7.
Mitigation level 2 drinking water supply management area;
mitigation designation review.
A. The
commissioner shall review the water quality and monitoring data of a mitigation
level 2 drinking water supply management area and either provide a new
mitigation level designation or maintain the existing mitigation level
designation for the drinking water supply management area after no fewer than
three growing seasons or the lag time, whichever is longer, following the
commissioner's initial mitigation level 2 designation. However, if residual
soil nitrate testing is conducted, the review period shall not be less than
three growing seasons. The commissioner shall review the mitigation level
designation not less than every three growing seasons thereafter.
B. The commissioner shall designate a
mitigation level 2 drinking water supply management area as a mitigation level
1 drinking water supply management area if the commissioner determines that the
statistical analysis for nitrate-nitrogen concentrations in the public well is
not projected to exceed the health risk limit and the groundwater
nitrate-nitrogen concentration has been below 8.0 mg/L for ten years.
C. The commissioner shall designate a
mitigation level 2 drinking water supply management area as a mitigation level
3 drinking water supply management area if responsible parties within the
drinking water supply management area have implemented nitrogen fertilizer best
management practices on less than 80 percent of cropland and:
(1) the statistical analysis of the
nitrate-nitrogen concentration of the public well within the drinking water
supply management area for the past ten years is projected to exceed the health
risk limit in the next ten years; or
(2) the nitrate-nitrogen concentration of the
public well within the drinking water supply management area is 8.0 mg/L or
more at any point in the previous ten years.
D. The commissioner shall designate a
mitigation level 2 drinking water supply management area as a mitigation level
3 drinking water supply management area if the net residual nitrate in soil
below the root zone is increasing after not less than three growing seasons
within the drinking water supply management area.
E. The commissioner shall designate a
mitigation level 2 drinking water supply management area as a mitigation level
3 drinking water supply management area if the statistical analysis indicates
the nitrate-nitrogen concentration is increasing for the public well or
groundwater monitoring network.
F.
The mitigation level remains a mitigation level 2 unless one of the criteria in
items B to E is met.
G. If
responsible parties within a drinking water supply management area have
demonstrated progress by changing agricultural or land use practiceswithin the
drinking water supply management area, so that the public well does not meet
the criteria of a mitigation level 3 as shown by computer modeling data or
residual soil nitrate testing, the commissioner may grant a onetime exemption
from designating a mitigation level 2 drinking water supply management area as
a mitigation level 3 drinking water supply management area for a period equal
to the period for the mitigation level designation decision under item
A.
Subp. 8.
Mitigation level 3 drinking water supply management areas; mitigation
level designation review.
A. The
commissioner shall review the water quality and monitoring data of a mitigation
level 3 drinking water supply management area and either make a new mitigation
level designation or maintain the existing mitigation level designation for the
drinking water supply management area after no fewer than three growing seasons
or the lag time, whichever is longer, following the commissioner's initial
mitigation level 3 designation. However, if residual soil nitrate testing is
conducted, the review period shall not be fewer than three growing seasons. The
commissioner shall review the mitigation level designation not fewer than every
three growing seasons thereafter.
B. The commissioner shall designate a
mitigation level 3 drinking water supply management area as a mitigation level
1 drinking water supply management area if the commissioner determines that the
statistical analysis for nitrate-nitrogen concentrations in the public well is
not projected to exceed the health risk limit and the groundwater
nitrate-nitrogen concentration has been below 8.0 mg/L for ten years.
C. The commissioner shall designate a
mitigation level 3 drinking water supply management area as a mitigation level
4 drinking water supply management area if the nitrate-nitrogen concentration
of the public well within the drinking water supply management area is 9.0 mg/L
or higher for any three samples in the previous ten years unless a statistical
trend analysis indicates nitrate-nitrogen concentrations have
decreased.
D. The commissioner
shall designate a mitigation level 3 drinking water supply management area as a
mitigation level 4 drinking water supply management area if net residual
nitrate in soil below the root zone is increasing after not less than three
growing seasons within the drinking water supply management area.
E. The commissioner shall designate a
mitigation level 3 drinking water supply management area as a mitigation level
4 drinking water supply management area if the statistical analysis of the
nitrate-nitrogen concentration in the public well or in the groundwater
monitoring network is increasing.
F. The mitigation level remains a mitigation
level 3 unless one of the criteria in items B to E is met.
G. If responsible parties within a drinking
water supply management area have demonstrated progress by changing
agricultural or land use practices, so that the public well does not meet the
criteria of a mitigation level 4 as shown by computer modeling data or residual
soil nitrate testing, the commissioner may grant a onetime exemption from
designating a mitigation level 3 drinking water supply management area as a
mitigation level 4 drinking water supply management area for a period equal to
the period for the mitigation level designation decision under item
A.
Subp. 9.
Mitigation level 4 drinking water supply management area; mitigation
level designation review.
A. The
commissioner shall review the water quality and monitoring data of a mitigation
level 4 drinking water supply management area and either make a new mitigation
level designation or maintain the existing mitigation level 4 designation for
the drinking water supply management area after no fewer than three growing
seasons or the lag time, whichever is longer, following the commissioner's
initial mitigation level 4 designation. However, if residual soil nitrate
testing is conducted, the review period shall not be less than three growing
seasons. The commissioner shall review the mitigation level designation every
three growing seasons thereafter.
B. The commissioner shall designate a
mitigation level 4 drinking water supply management area as a mitigation level
3 drinking water supply management area if:
(1) the statistical analysis for groundwater
nitrate-nitrogen concentrations in the public well shows that the well is not
projected to exceed the health risk limit for a period of ten years;
and
(2) the groundwater
nitrate-nitrogen concentrations in the public well have not reached or exceeded
9.0 mg/L for any three samples in the past ten years.
Subp. 10.
Limitation on
change in designation.
The commissioner shall not designate a drinking water supply
management area more than one mitigation level higher than the drinking water
supply management area's previous designation for a minimum of three growing
seasons.