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Re: Deal to Weaken Protections for Communities Near Factory Farms



An Ill Wind From Factory Farms

By ROBERT F. KENNEDY Jr. and ERIC SCHAEFFER

Congress will hold hearings soon on the nomination of Gov. Michael Leavitt
of Utah to lead the Environmental Protection Agency. He's bound to be
asked about his efforts to eliminate protections for wilderness areas in his
state and his close ties to the mining and timber industries. But heshould
also be asked about another issue that has received far less attention:the
threat to the environment posed by the huge factory farms that dominate
meat production in the United States today.

These farms emit an enormous amount of pollutants that taint air, land and
water. Their noxious gases, studies suggest, contribute to respiratory
problems, gastrointestinal diseases, eye infections, depression and other
ailments. Department of Agriculture research has shown that
antibiotic-resistant bacteria are carried daily across property lines from
corporate hog farms into homes and small farms. The thousands of animals
crowded together on each giant feedlot produce waste that pollutes
waterways and contaminates drinking water.

For decades, the agribusiness lobby in Washington has invoked the small
family farmer in its campaign to expand subsidies and fend off regulation,
but it's mainly big producers that benefit. In 1998, the top four producers
marketed 57 percent of all hogs in the country, and large corporations
have cornered the market for chickens, cattle and dairy products as well.
Much of this production is handled through contract farms whose corporate
owners dictate how animals will be raised, housed and fed while disclaiming
any environmental responsibility and living far away from the consequences.

These operations pollute the air with the gases released from huge barns
and waste lagoons and by processes that "air out" manure before it is
applied to fields. Under the Clinton administration, the E.P.A. began
ordering farms to measure emissions and apply for Clean Air Act permits
just as factories do. Early results showed that Buckeye Egg Farm, an
egg-laying operation in Ohio, released hundreds of tons of particulate
matter every year.

But the Bush administration ordered such enforcement investigations
stopped two years ago. The Department of Agriculture studies on bacteria
were suppressed at industry's request, prompting the resignation of the
study's author, James Zahn. Earlier proposals to make corporate owners
responsible for wastewater discharges at contract farms were shelved.

Now the E.P.A. is considering a request from the pig and poultry
conglomerates to be shielded from Clean Air Act enforcement for a few
more years while industry begins to measure its own emissions. The amnesty
agreement would not require a corporate farm to clean up air pollution even
if the agency found that pollution was at dangerously high levels.

And no agreement should be signed that does not require companies to
clean up their operations when their emissions are too high. A coalition of
environmental groups and farm families have petitioned the E.P.A. to end
its moratorium on enforcement, and exercise its authority to order air
monitoring at some of the most notorious factory farms.

We hope the E.P.A. will remember its mission to protect public health and
act on this simple request. Governor Leavitt should know something about
this problem. Nine workers were hospitalized in 1998 after they were
overcome by fumes working at a giant hog operation in Utah, and a more
recent state study found high levels of respiratory illness among nearby
residents. But Utah has made it much harder for people to sue such
operations and for officials to regulate them. Perhaps Congress should ask
Governor Leavitt how long the victims of pollution from factory farming
will have to wait before they can breathe clean air again.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is president of Waterkeeper Alliance. Eric Schaeffer,
director of the Environmental Protection Agency's office of regulatory
enforcement from 1997 to 2002, is director of the Environmental Integrity
Project.

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/09/20/opinion/20KENN.html?th







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