Contact: Tricia Falter
JEFFERSON CITY, MO (July 7, 2004) Yesterday, despite industrial
livestock lobbying for confined animal feeding operations or CAFOs, Governor
Holden vetoed a bill that would have made it easier for 7499 hogs to be your
next door neighbor and contaminate your drinking water.
According to Gov. Holdens letter to the Missouri secretary of state, he vetoed House Bill 1177 because the bill prohibits enforcement activities where an accidental spill occurs and the discharge of effluent is wholly contained within the landowners property. This language would prevent the Missouri Department of Natural Resources from issuing violation notices or even investigating these spills, severely limiting the agencys ability to monitor pollution in and around a CAFO.
With the veto of this bill, family farmers rejoiced because organizations like Missouri Farmers Union, Farmers for the Future, Missouri Rural Crisis Center and Missouri Sierra Club fight for legislation that fights for family farms. Last year, Gov. Holden vetoed a similar bill that mirrored HB 1177s weakening of local county governments authority to pass health ordinances.
County-level ordinances are one of the only tools in Missouri that citizens have to protect their communities from the detrimental impacts caused by huge industrial livestock facilities, said Terry Spence of Northern Missouris Family Farmers for the Future. This bill was nothing more than a blatant attempt by CAFO owners to demise and destruct the fundamental regulations that hold them accountable for environmental degradation.
Industrial livestock facilities generate massive amounts of manure that poses a dangerous threat to the air and water in rural areas. In three counties of Northern Missouri, Premium Standard Farms produces 1.6 million hogs per year. These facilities generate the same waste as a city of more than 2 million people. These facilities have discharged more than one million gallons of liquefied feces into Missouris streams and rivers.
Fish kills and polluted streams are not what Missouris rural communities
want, said Carla Klein, Ozark Chapter Director for Missouri Sierra Club.
The pollution from these facilities can be devastating to the environment
and the health of residents living near factory farms. The Governor acted to
protect the rights of Missouri communities to shape their own future, rather
than caving to corporate pressure.
To add to Kleins point, Jim Compton, a livestock producer from Dallas
County and member of the Missouri Rural Crisis Center, said that in Missouri,
weve had more than a decade of experience to evaluate the impacts of industrial
livestock, and their record is not a good one. Far from being the savior of
rural areas, industrial livestock operations have been a disaster for Missouris
economy, environment and rural communities.
A University of Missouri-Columbia study found that industrial farms create a net loss of employment because they drive family farmers and the local merchants that depend upon them out of business. 12,000 hogs produced under industry farm contracts would create 9.44 jobs, but they would displace 27.97 jobs.This is why Missouri Farmers Union President Russ Kremer is excited about the veto.
The Governors veto is a solid victory for the true constituents
of Missouri-family farmers, rural residents, consumers and their communities,
said Kremer. We applaud Gov. Holden for recognizing the economic, environmental
and social benefits of family farm agriculture in Missouri.