Iowa Drainage District Association: summer meetings, legislation and a favorable Iowa Supreme Court ruling

Bremer County Board of Supervisors · January 27, 2026

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Subscribe
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

John Torbert of the Iowa Drainage District Association updated supervisors on association meetings, legislative monitoring and a recent Iowa Supreme Court decision finding railroads are not exempt from drainage assessments; he urged maintaining the IDDA litigation fund to defend district rights.

John Torbert, executive director of the Iowa Drainage District Association, presented the association’s annual update and a recent court victory that affects drainage assessments.

Torbert outlined the association’s meeting schedule and member feedback, including expansion of a summer meeting for drainage administrators and auditors. He said the association is tracking roughly 30 legislative bills relevant to drainage and will continue close monitoring.

Torbert highlighted a recent Iowa Supreme Court decision reversing a district court ruling: the high court held that railroads are not categorically exempt from drainage assessments, protecting counties’ ability to assess costs to affected property owners. He described the association’s litigation fund as an important tool that allows rapid legal response without special assessments in emergency situations and urged continued county support for that fund.

Board members asked about pipelines and other utilities crossing drainage infrastructure. Torbert cited an IDDA resolution that establishes standards and financial protections (including restoration obligations and bonding) when private or commercial projects cross drain‑district property and said those protections have been used successfully.

Torbert encouraged the county to use IDDA legal and technical resources and to consider participation in the association’s litigation fund to preserve drainage‑district authority and to cover potential future litigation costs.