CRWD ready to start its biggest water-quality project

After big rains, stormwater-detention site could be larger than Austin’s East Side Lake

Cedar River Watershed District
5 min readMay 3, 2018
Yellow dots show where Cedar River Watershed District will build two water-detention structures (known as Dobbins 1) in Red Rock and Dexter townships in the uplands of Dobbins Creek’s north branch, which is highly prone to flash flooding. Austin is lower left; blue lines are Dobbins’ watershed boundaries.

Thursday, May 3, 2018 — After a big rainfall, an upcoming project temporarily could detain stormwater that covers more than 50 acres– larger than Austin’s East Side Lake — to improve water quality and reduce flooding.

Known as “Dobbins 1,” the biggest project under Cedar River Watershed District’s nearly $8.4 million Capital Improvement Plan (CIP) is nearing construction later this month in the upland area of Dobbins Creek’s north branch, southeast of Brownsdale. The project will use cropland and conservation land in Red Rock and Dexter townships.

A complex project, Dobbins 1 has been in the works for more than two years with multiple landowners and requiring a couple dozen signatures, said Cody Fox, CRWD project manager. Dobbins 1 will consist of two water-detention structures or earthen dams on land owned by the Kiser, Sash, Johnson and Binkley families.

Cody Fox, CRWD project manager

“A lot goes into planning and getting approvals for a water-detention project of this size,” Fox said. “We really are excited to get crews going on Dobbins 1 because it will help our watershed community’s goals for cleaner water and less flooding.”

Part of the project also involved enrolling 80 acres of farmland into the federal Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) through the USDA’s Farm Service Agency.

Dobbins 1 is targeted in the upland area of North Dobbins, a stream highly prone to flash flooding. North Dobbins flows into the South Branch of Dobbins Creek at Austin’s Jay C. Hormel Nature Center before becoming East Side Lake. Dobbins then flows into the Cedar River State Water Trail in Austin’s Driesner Park.

In large rain events, the Dobbins 1 structures temporarily will hold stormwater — more than 10 feet deep in some spots — that covers more land than the 40-acre East Side Lake created by a dam on Dobbins Creek. At its peak, Dobbins 1 could detain about 250 acre-feet of stormwater (81.5 million gallons) that drains out over two days rather than the typical 12 to 18 hours for this watershed. One acre-foot is like covering a football field (one acre) with one foot of water.

Blue-shaded areas show the maximum capacity for water storage — about 250 acre-feet of water — by the future Dobbins 1 water-detention structures planned for construction this year by CRWD in Red Rock and Dexter townships.

Once completed, Dobbins 1 is expected to reduce peak flood flows by 82 percent immediately downstream from its structures, keeping about 134 tons of sediment and 218 pounds of phosphorus per year out of Dobbins. One pound of phosphorus can create 300 to 500 pounds of wet algae in a waterway.

Upland storage structures decrease the amount and velocity or speed of stormwater flowing out from the Dobbins 1 site, reducing the potential for significant downstream streambank erosion. By slowing water, the structures keep a lot of soil and nutrients from entering local waterways while reducing flood damage to buildings, infrastructure and farm fields.

Pre-project — Stormwater flow at Dobbins 1
Post-project — Stormwater flow projection for Dobbins 1 with similar rainfall

In April, the CRWD Board of Managers reviewed 10 bids for Dobbins 1 and approved a low bid of $521,706 by Jensen Excavating & Trucking out of Clarks Grove, Minn.

CRWD board member Kevin Kiser, who represents Dodge County, is part of the Kiser family involved with the Dobbins 1 project and has been instrumental in getting everyone on board with the plans, Fox said.

CIP consists of CRWD’s top 25 prioritized projects that range in size, complexity and location. They generally relate to detaining stormwater in storage structures built in upland areas but also include ravine stabilization and flood-risk reduction.

With access to up to $3.8 million in state grants and a local project levy, CRWD can match a $3.2 million grant from The Hormel Foundation via Vision 2020 for the CIP initiative. A $2.2 million state bonding request being led by Sen. Dan Sparks and Rep. Jeanne Poppe is pending as a final funding source for CIP projects.

A year ago, CRWD staff and board members joined Sparks and Poppe at the first completed CIP project. Built for about $60,000 along North Dobbins, the Anderson-Oelkers project in Red Rock Township is downstream from the Dobbins 1 site.

State Rep. Jeanne Poppe and Sen. Dan Sparks join CRWD staff and board members in spring 2017 near North Dobbins Creek at the first completed CIP project site in Red Rock Township..

In fall 2017, crews hired by CRWD built three other CIP earthen berms south of Austin along the Cedar River for nearly $200,000 overall. The ravine-stabilization projects in Austin Township will slow and treat stormwater coming off more than 500 acres of mostly cropland before the water reaches the Cedar River.

These berms with the Hull-Pederson projects are expected to protect the Cedar River from receiving about 78 tons per year of sediment and 156 pounds of phosphorus per year.

Drone image showing one of three CIP ravine-stabilization berms built in fall 2017 by CRWD along the Cedar River in Austin Township.

Most CIP projects are planned for upstream of Austin, with a majority targeted in the Dobbins Creek subwatershed.

CIP projects aim to achieve 40 to 70 percent flow reductions on most individual sites and an 8 percent overall reduction at the Dobbins Creek-Cedar River confluence in Austin. CRWD’s long-term goal is for a 20 percent reduction at that confluence.

Cedar River Watershed District

In 2007, state and local officials formed the Cedar River Watershed District in response to the Cedar River Watershed’s worst-known floods occurring in 2000 and 2004. CRWD’s top priorities are aimed at reducing flooding and improving water quality within the Cedar River Watershed.

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Cedar River Watershed District

Formed in 2007, CRWD works to reduce flooding and improve water quality on the Cedar River State Water Trail and its tributaries in southern Minnesota.