Iowa Special Districts: Drainage, Water, and Infrastructure Authorities

Iowa's special districts for drainage, water, and infrastructure represent a distinct layer of local government authority, operating independently of county boards and municipal councils. These entities hold statutory powers to levy taxes, issue bonds, acquire property, and contract for public works — functions that shape agricultural productivity, flood control, and utility access across the state. The legal framework governing these districts is embedded primarily in Iowa Code Chapters 455B, 468, and 357A, establishing formation procedures, governance structures, and operational boundaries for each category.


Definition and scope

A special district in Iowa is a unit of local government created by statute to perform a specific public function within a defined geographic boundary. Unlike general-purpose governments such as counties or cities, special districts carry a singular or narrowly grouped mandate. Iowa Code Chapter 468 governs drainage and levee districts — the most prevalent infrastructure special district type in the state — while Chapter 357A addresses rural water districts, and Chapter 455B addresses water quality authority as exercised through the Iowa Department of Natural Resources.

Iowa hosts over 3,000 drainage districts alone (Iowa State University Extension and Outreach, Iowa Drainage Law publication), making drainage authorities among the most numerous local government entities in the state. Rural water districts, organized under Chapter 357A, deliver potable water services to areas outside municipal water systems, commonly in counties with dispersed agricultural land use.

Scope of this page: This page covers Iowa-specific statutory special districts for drainage, water, and infrastructure. It does not address municipal utility systems operated by cities, Iowa Department of Transportation road districts, or federal reclamation or flood-control projects administered at the federal level. Structures governed by the Iowa Utilities Board — such as investor-owned water utilities — fall outside this scope; that regulatory body is addressed separately at Iowa Utilities Board. For a broader orientation to Iowa's governmental structure, see the Iowa Government Authority site index.


How it works

Drainage districts

Drainage districts are established by petition to the county board of supervisors, which acts as the governing body for most drainage districts under Iowa Code § 468.3. The formation process requires:

  1. A petition signed by landowners representing a majority of acreage in the proposed district.
  2. A survey and engineer's report assessing drainage benefits and cost apportionment.
  3. A public hearing before the county board.
  4. A formal establishment order if benefits are found to exceed costs.

Once established, costs are assessed against benefited lands in proportion to the benefit each parcel receives — not uniformly per acre. The county board of supervisors levies a special assessment to fund maintenance, repairs, and capital improvements. Drainage district funds are legally segregated from general county funds under Iowa Code § 468.543.

Rural water districts

Rural water districts form under Iowa Code Chapter 357A through a petition process directed to the Iowa Secretary of State. A board of trustees — elected by district members — governs operations, sets rates, and manages debt. These districts frequently access federal financing through USDA Rural Development loan programs, with loan terms extending up to 40 years for major infrastructure. The Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship coordinates on agricultural water quality initiatives that intersect with rural water district service areas.


Common scenarios

Three operational situations recur most frequently within Iowa's drainage and water special district framework:


Decision boundaries

Drainage district vs. county road drainage

County secondary roads include roadside ditches maintained by county engineers under Iowa Code Chapter 309. These are not drainage district infrastructure. A drainage district lateral that crosses a county road right-of-way requires a permit from the county engineer, but maintenance responsibility remains with the drainage district — not the county road department.

Rural water district vs. municipal utility extension

When a city expands its boundaries through annexation, Chapter 368 annexation law governs whether municipal water service supplants rural water district service in the annexed area. Iowa Code § 357A.16 specifies terms under which a city may acquire or buy out rural water district infrastructure within annexed territory, including mandatory negotiation before condemnation. This boundary is frequently litigated when growing cities — particularly in Dallas County and Johnson County — encroach on established rural water district service areas.

Iowa DNR regulatory role vs. district operational authority

The Iowa Department of Natural Resources holds permitting authority over discharge, wetland impacts, and water quality under Iowa Code Chapter 455B. A drainage district must obtain DNR permits before modifying a drain that discharges into regulated waters of the state. The district retains operational authority over its internal infrastructure, but DNR environmental standards function as a regulatory ceiling on district activity — the district cannot approve its own discharge modifications unilaterally.


References