Skip repetitive navigation links.
United States Department of AgricultureFarm Service Agency
 Go to FSA Home  Go to FSA Home  Go to About FSA  Go to State Offices  Go to News and Events  Go to Online Services  Go to Forms  Go to Help  Go to Contact Us  Go to Spanish Languages
Search FSA
 All FSA
 Commodity Operations
 Conservation Programs
 Direct and Counter-Cyclical Programs
 Disaster Assistance
 Economic and Policy
 Environmental Compliance
 Cultural Compliance
 Farm Loan Programs
 Laws and Regulations
 Outreach and Education
 Price Support
 Tobacco
 All USDA
Go To Advanced Search
Go To Search Tips
Browse by Audience
 Agribusiness
 Cooperatives
 Congress
 FSA Employees
 Landowners
 Conservationists
 Lenders and Banks
 Media
 Parents and Caregivers
 Producers
 Researchers
 Academic Community
Browse by Subject
Go to Aerial Photography
Go to Commodity Operations
Go to Conservation Programs
Go to Direct and Counter-Cyclical Programs
Go to Disaster Assistance Programs
Go to Economic and Policy Analysis
Go to Environmental and Cultural Resource Compliance
Go to Farm Loan Programs
Go to Laws and Regulations
Go to Outreach and Education
Go to Price Support
Go to Tobacco
Environmental and Cultural Resource Compliance
Compliance Issues

 
COOPERATIVE CONSERVATION CASE STUDY

 
Murdock Clean Water Partnership

 
Trees Help Clean Up Rural Water Contamination

 
Location: Midwest/Northern High Plains Region: Nebraska

 
Project Summary: The community of Murdock, Nebraska, and state and federal partners, used innovative technologies to solve ground and surface water contamination.

 

 
Innovation/Highlight

 
A combination of tree plantings and other natural treatments, including an innovative new spray technology, helped resolve ground and surface water contamination, while enhancing recreational opportunities for local residents.

 

 
Resource Challenge

 
Not long ago, children who used Murdock, Nebraska's school athletic fields in the summertime played on parched grass and exposed gravel. At the same time, a nearby creek was virtually unusable because of limited public access and because carbon tetrachloride, used decades ago to fumigate stored grain, had entered the aquifer that lay beneath the town and that fed the creek.

 
Two problems turned out to have one very creative solution. Faced with the need to treat contaminated groundwater and protect the creek, State and Federal governments, regulators, the local school district, the village, and private citizens set up an innovative system that is dramatically improving the community's recreational and educational opportunities while at the same time ridding the town of its contaminated water.

 

 
Examples of Key Partners

 
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, USDA Farm Service Agency, U.S. Department of Energy Argonne National Laboratory, Nebraska Department of Environmental Quality, Stock Seed Co., Village of Murdock, Elmwood-Murdock Public School, local landowners, and others.

 

 
Results and Accomplishments

 
The Murdock Partnership used an innovative system that combines multiple technologies to address surface and groundwater contamination. Near the contamination source, pumps extract contaminated ground water, which goes to a spray irrigation system that dissipates carbon tetrachloride harmlessly into the air. The treated water is reused on the school's athletic fields, nurturing a healthy, grassy surface for the children.

 
To supplement the spray technology, partners worked with landowners, the town, and local farmers, planting more than 2,000 trees downstream from where the groundwater enters the creek. These trees take up contaminated water and break down polluting chemicals naturally, a process called phytoremediation. Native prairie plants around and between the trees intercept rainwater and force the trees to draw most of their water from the aquifer.

 
This year, partners are restoring a downstream wetland to intercept lingering traces of the polluting chemical before it enters the creek. They are also installing an ADA-accessible trail at both the tree plantation and the wetland for public use. Interpretive signs will enhance the visitor's experience and facilitate use of the site as an outdoor "living" classroom.

 
Further partnerships will be formed as installation is completed and the community begins to fully use the new resources.

 

 
Project Contact

 
Steve and Bonnie Bruttig
Nebraska Landowners
402-867-2274

 
Related Topics
 Bullet Commodity Credit Corporation Programs
 Bullet Farm Service Agency Programs
 Bullet Compliance Issues
 Bullet Lead-Based Paint
Media Help
 To view PDF files you must have Adobe Acrobat Reader installed on your computer.

To view Flash files you must have Macromedia Flash Player installed on your computer.

 FSA Home | USDA.gov | Common Questions | Site Map | Policies and Links
FOIA | Accessibility Statement | Privacy Policy | Nondiscrimination Statement | Information Quality | USA.gov | White House