Iowa
Related: About this forumGreat editorial on "Ag-Chemical Cabal" in Storm Lake Times
Most should remember hearing of Art Cullen who won a Pulitzer Prize with the Storm Lake Times
http://www.stormlake.com/articles/2018/05/23/how-much-more-manure-can-we-handle
How much more manure can we handle?
A rapid and significant expansion in swine facilities here and across Iowa with unheeded calls in the legislature for a moratorium on more building causes one to wonder just how much manure we can handle.
Even the Buena Vista County Board of Supervisors is starting to push back against plans for new hoghouses such as one just across the road from where a family intended to build its dream retirement home. There is no local control, the supervisors are getting heat and the state law ignores their concerns. Iowa Select will come in wherever it pleases.
This is the result of the pork industry insisting that any regulation of agriculture must be under the purview of the Iowa Department of Natural Resources. We remember then-Rep. Russ Eddie, R-Storm Lake, himself a pork producer, declaring that you cannot have 99 sets of rules for agriculture. Hence, the supervisors can only stand on the sidelines and complain, and perhaps ask themselves why we have 99 counties, and why we pay all those supervisors to stand on the sidelines. The system was set up so it could not be controlled. When the IDNR confined feeding coordinator, Gene Tinker, started to advise counties on how they might effectively object to new permits, Tinkers job was eliminated.
Now that statewide duty falls to Ken Hesenius of the Spencer IDNR office, who already was supposed to oversee 8,000 confinements in 10 Northwest counties.
None of us are actually certain how many confinements are in those 10 counties, or the 89 others, because IDNR cannot keep track of them all. Manure management plans are put on paper in a file cabinet and are kept dark so they do not decay.
Much much more at the link and well worth the time.
progressoid
(50,747 posts)I grew up around them, but this is a whole new level of stench and pollution.
rurallib
(63,198 posts)one of the places I stopped at was a farmhouse in Cedar County. The people had lived there for many years. About 2 years before that the neighbor put up a CAFO that stunk to high heaven.
The woman and her husband could barely breathe there but based on the laws there wasn't much they could do. One thing she did say was that they couldn't sell their house. Who would buy a house next to a stink like that? She was extremely mad. Her rep at the time was doing nothing for her.
IADEMO2004
(5,880 posts)I post this when ever CAFO is in the air. We are killing everything good in rural Iowa. Please click the link but you won't enjoy.
http://www.thegazette.com/subject/opinion/guest-columnists/lawmakers-look-at-what-youve-done-to-rural-iowa-20160828
Lets take a trip through the Eastern Iowa countryside, shall we? Dont forget the picnic basket! Ill bring the road map and yeah, Im a guy, but Ill ask for directions if we get lost on the gravel roads.
We motor toward the rolling hills of southeast Iowa County, to the Century Farm where Gary Nester and his wife plan to retire. We can spread the checkered tablecloth right here in the shade of this flowering crab tree and within reach of blooming orange impatiens in their front yard.
But we dont stay long enough to pass the potato salad. The east wind carries a discomforting odor. Flies, yes there are flies. What really prompts the packing away of our outdoor picnic plans are the neighbors.
Pigs, 2,400 squealing pigs split between two hog confinements, each housing about 1,200 head, each building about 750 feet away. We can hear (the squeals) inside the house, Gary says.
rurallib
(63,198 posts)Animal confinements are just exploding (pun not intended) in Iowa - pigs, chickens and turkeys. Is beef a confinement.
When I think of how these sentient animals are treated it helps me try to stay vegan.