Ohio Farmers Union

Serving Family Farmers and Consumers Since 1934



United to Grow Family Agriculture Since 1934

  • About
    • The Farmers Union Triangle
    • Vision
    • OFU Leadership
  • Issues
    • 2020 Virtual Lobby Days
    • OFU Policy & NFU Policy
    • 2019 Lobby Day Registration
    • Get Involved!
    • NFU Climate Leaders
  • Education
    • 2019 OFU Essay Contest
    • Ohio Farmers Union Scholarships
    • Farm Safety
    • Renewable Energy Curriculum
  • Insurance
    • Hastings Mutual Insurance Co.
    • Health & Other Offerings
    • Ohio BWC Group Coverage
  • Join Us
    • Member Benefits
    • Insurance
  • Blog

A few words on Toledo water crisis

August 6, 2014 By Ron Sylvester 2 Comments

Share
Share on Google Plus
Share
Share on Facebook
Share
Share this
Pin
Pin this

Well, when roughly half a million people in and around Ohio’s fourth largest city can’t shower, wash clothes and dishes or drink their tap water for two days, the politicians start to pay attention to the annual environmental catastrophe known as the Lake Erie algal bloom.

If you’ve followed the Ohio Farmers Union’s take on water quality and agriculture’s role, you’ll know that OFU acknowledges the science that places agriculture at the top of the list of contributors of nutrients into Lake Erie and other surface waters and we are committed to having agriculture be a major part of the solution.

In reviewing the State’s response to our water quality problems, we believe there is one segment of nutrient management that has been ignored by the decision-makers in Columbus. That’s the use of manure from large animal feeding operations. Ohio is home to many thousands of these industrial scale livestock facilities. Only the 200 largest of which are managed under oversight of the Ohio Department of Agriculture (ODA). Manure from confined animal feeding operations supplies a significant proportion of the nutrients that Ohio farmers use to boost crop production.

We believe that there are serious loopholes in the permitting system for the 200 largest operations and a woeful lack of regulatory oversight for the remaining (nearly 4000) operations. For whatever reason, manure was left off the table during recent deliberations of S.B. 150, the so-called “nutrient management” bill.

S.B. 150 is now law and the upshot is that farmers all over Ohio will be required to become certified to apply chemical fertilizers. OFU remained neutral on this bill because it established a broad, untargeted regulatory burden on users of chemical fertilizer, while manure was left out of the bill. We believe any regulations should be targeted to areas where problems exist and should be inclusive of all nutrient sources, including manure. Early drafts of what would become the bill had language that was broad enough to include manure as a “fertilizer.” Big Ag won the day and had the bill re-written to exclude manure.

This year’s algal bloom in the western basin of Lake Erie may not end up being the worst ever in terms of size, but it has produced alarming levels of the toxin microcystin. This toxin caused 2,000 residents of Carroll Twp. to go without township water service for 12 days in 2013 and the recent two-day advisory for users of City of Toledo water to not drink or in some cases even bathe in the water.

Manure contains phosphorous an element that in high concentrations is linked to algal blooms. There is a concentration of large-scale animal feeding operations in and around the Maumee River watershed. The Maumee is the largest tributary into Lake Erie and in fact the largest in all the Great Lakes. It just stands to reason that the use of manure as a nutrient should be considered when state officials act to solve water quality problems in Lake Erie.

To be sure, there are other issues as well. Aging water treatment infrastructure maintained by cities and other local governments in the region needs to be upgraded or rebuilt. The entire blame for Lake Erie’s woes should not be laid at the feet of farmers. On the other hand, OFU remains supportive of targeted, reasonable regulation to hold agriculture accountable for its role. We just shouldn’t hold some types of farmers accountable to state rules while other nutrient users are ignored.

Share this:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Fertilizer, Lake Erie, Manure, Nutrient Management, SB 150, SB 490, Toledo, Water

Comments

  1. Karen Wood says

    August 6, 2014 at 5:56 pm

    Excellent! Thank you.

    Reply
    • Tom Harrison says

      August 7, 2014 at 5:32 pm

      The OFU has been right on this major water issue- we need a Press Release to all newspapers in Ohio! Tom Harrison

      Reply

Leave a Reply to Tom HarrisonCancel reply

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • RSS
  • YouTube

Latest News from the Ohio & National Farmers Union

National Farmers Union Week of Action for Strong Farm Bill

National Farmers Union (NFU) today concluded the Week of Action that gathered more than 100 farmers from across the country to the halls of Congress … Read More

How Do Tariffs Affect Family Farms?

A Talk in Kent, Ohio with Ohio Farmers Union and Others Have you noticed the price of eggs? Who hasn’t! How do government actions and tariffs … Read More

NFU Praises Sale of E15 Through Summer

National Farmers Union (NFU) applauds the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) emergency fuel waiver allowing nationwide sale of E15 gasoline … Read More

Farmers Union Supports Congressional Oversight of Trade and Tariffs

National Farmers Union (NFU) today sent a letter to the U.S. House and Senate, urging lawmakers to support the Trade Review Act of … Read More

Check Out the Entire Blog

NATIONAL FARMERS UNION

Click to Take Action



Contact

Ohio Farmers Union
P.O. Box 363
1011 N. Defiance Street
Ottawa, Ohio 45875
Phone: (419) 523-5300
Toll Free: (800) 321-3671

Copyright Ohio Farmers Union© 2025 | Site by: RCS Communications