Recent tests conducted by the Lower Big Blue Natural Resource District -- the NRD that contains nearly all of Saline County -- found that groundwater levels remain at record lows.
Last fall, the NRD measured the static water level of 172 irrigation and dedicated monitoring wells all across the district. The results were eye-opening.
From spring 2023 through late autumn 2023, groundwater levels in Saline County wells had declined an average 4.32 feet. This followed the results of 2022, when Saline County wells recorded their lowest levels since the NRD started measuring groundwater.
Results were even more dire in surrounding counties.
From spring 2023 to fall 2023, levels in Gage Country plummeted nearly 6 feet. In Jefferson County, levels fell nearly 6.5 feet.
The staggering drop in groundwater levels is due to irrigation and drought. As a result, the NRD has imposed a permanent moratorium (or stay) on the construction of new wells and increase in irrigated acres in the district.
See the NRD's groundwater monitoring page.
For Dorchester-specific information, the NRD, in cooperation with UNL School of Natural Resources Conservation and Survey Division, has outfitted a dedicated monitoring well in with a real-time data logger.
Dorchester's water level information is available online.
At last check, Dorchester's water level is significantly below its traditional levels, as this graphic illustrates.
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