‘Sad and debilitating’: rural midwesterners contend with well water tainted by livestock waste
by Marin Scotten in Winona county, Minnesota from on (#6K4GV)
Nitrate-fouled water from concentrated animal feed operations causes a host of medical problems for nearby residents
For nearly three decades, Jeff Broberg couldn't drink water from his tap.
He lives on a sprawling, 170-acre grain and legume farm in Winona county, a rural part of south-east Minnesota saturated with animal agriculture. Like most properties in the area, Broberg's has a well connected to his faucet. On a whim, when Broberg first moved in in 1986, the now 69-year-old retired geologist started testing his water for nitrate - an invisible, odorless and tasteless compound found in animal manure and commercial fertilizer. Consuming it in high quantities has been linked to a variety of health risks.
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