Ogden, UTAH – State officials have announced that the Utah Department of Agriculture and Food is concerned about the agricultural producers and have been in discussions with their partners at the Division of Water Quality to develop the best approach to prevent, to the extent possible, animal waste from entering into adjacent ditches and waterbodies, and reduce the possibility of DWQ enforcement, which includes potential penalties.
Ladies and gentlemen, if you are at risk of having wastewater leave your operation, or if this has already occurred, we recommend that you do the following:
- Contact Don Hall at DWQ within 24 hours of a discharge, at (801) 536-4492 or [email protected]. If you haven’t discharged, but it may be a possibility, keep Don in the loop.
- Keep records of the precipitation you are getting at your farm and document the efforts you have made to avoid having a discharge. Take pictures to document before and after conditions at your location.
- If you must discharge, please do so to your fields. We understand that soils are completely saturated, but we have been advised that pumping ponds, bunkers, or other structures directly into canals, ditches, or other waters of the state violates the Utah Water Quality Act. If possible, make an effort to berm the fields and retain wastewater on site.
DWQ has given us the guidance to avoid discharges, if possible, and to promptly notify DWQ if any occur or are planned. If you are enrolled in AgVIP through UDAF, and have followed your nutrient management plan, you may be protected from penalties resulting from a discharge resulting from catastrophic weather and snow-melt events.