Aquifers are being depleted by irrigation. Reservoirs are filling with settlement. Fertilizer runoff is contamination water and feeding toxic algae. Kansas water experts provided lawmakers a sobering overview of quantity and quality issues facing all areas of the state. While more money and bureaucratic reshuffling were floated as solutions, the Special Committee on Water left Topeka last week without a clear path forward for the 2023 Legislature. “I think it’s pretty clear: If we continue business as usual, it’s not going to end well,” said Jim Butler, a Kansas Geological Survey geohydrologist.
Source: Salina Journal