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> Home > Healthy Great Lakes, Healthy Michigan > Animal Factory Pollution Animal Factory PollutionAnnouncing: Stopping CAFO Pollution, a new webpage to help you fight back
Announcing the Sierra Club Michigan Chapters new webpage Stopping CAFO Pollution designed to help you stop a polluting CAFO in your community, or to help you stop a new CAFO that's proposed for your community. You'll find easy-to-follow "How Tos", Facts, FAQs, a glossary, plus resources for both in-Michigan and for other states, too. You'll also find contacts to help you with questions and strategy. Check it out now! This typical Michigan animal factory has several huge barns that house hundreds or thousands of animals each, and several open raw sewage storage pits. Photo by Environmentally Concerned Citizens of South Central Michigan. Airplane provided by Lighthawk. Congratulations Michigan DEQ for an important court victoryThis win in the Circuit Court of the County of Newaygo assures that concentrated animal feeding operations will be treated the same as other potentially polluting industries. The time has come for Michigan Farm Bureau and the other plaintiffs in this lawsuit to stop trying to gut the laws and instead work with their members to figure out how to clean up CAFOs, build better livestock operations, and protect Michigan's precious waterways. You may download a copy of the court's opinion here. What are CAFOs and why are they bad for Michigan?
Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs): what are they? The past few months have seen some progess, with 2 major steps forward, plus interest from Congress. Our CAFO Water Sentinel Lynn Henning was at the May 12, 2008 Congressional Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure public hearing held by Congresswoman Candice Miller and Committee Chair James Oberstar to explain CAFOs' impacts on the surface water and the Great Lakes. You can download Lynn's testimony here. On July 1, the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality announced they had denied a water discharge permit for the proposed Bustorf Dairy in St. Joseph County. This is the first water discharge permit to be denied to a CAFO in Michigan, though the MDEQ has documented hundreds of water quality violations by CAFOs around the state. The applicant was required to demonstrate how "the potential lowering of water quality is necessary to support important social and economic development in the area. The DEQ's permit denial is based on rebuttals provided by Leonidas Township, local residents and other organizations to the statements contained in that antidegradation demonstration, which showed that neither the social or economic benefits listed in the antidegradation demonstration would benefit the local community." Click here to see the MDEQ's press statement. Local residents and officials did an outstanding job of rebutting the would-be CAFO's claims of regional economic growth if they built the Bustorf Dairy CAFO. On September 24, the MDEQ stated in a letter to Interested Parties, "...State Line Farms was unable to demonstrate an adequate level of control to mitigate the odors which resulted in an unreasonable interference with the comfortable enjoyment of life and property in violation of Michigan Administrative Code, 1980 AACS R 336.1901 (Rule 901). Therefore, State Line Farms has agreed to shut down the two swine barns with a shut-down date of November 9." Read the rest here. This is the first time the state has ordered a CAFO to be closed down due to odors. The Sierra Club initiated air testing around State Line Farms, and found extremely high levels of hydrogen sulfide, a dangerous pollutant. Watch the Sierra Club's acclaimed 24 minute documentary
Living a Nightmare: Animal Factories in Michigan, produced by Future Media Corporation of Okemos, Michigan. Scientific Review and Studies of CAFOs and Impacts Animal waste harms water Groundwater contamination is also a risk, from nitrates or pathogens like E. coli that move downward into aquifers with the filthy water. Air pollution harms people CAFOs harm farmers and rural community, and rural economy Reason for hope: Water discharge permits now required (top) Is an Animal Factory planned for your community? Information about pending CAFO water discharge permits can be found on the MDEQ website. You can help work to monitor Animal Factories and comment on proposed permits for new or existing Animal Factories. Contact Lynn Henning, Sierra Club's Michigan CAFO Water Sentinel, to learn more about this work. Lynn and her husband Dean are family farmers working land that has been in the Henning family for four generations. Eight years ago, when the first of the 12 concentrated animal feeding operations in the Hudson area of Michigan set up next door to her family’s farm, Lynn joined with other residents to form Environmentally Concerned Citizens of South Central Michigan to do water monitoring and fight to protect their homes, their health, and their way of life. Lynn became part of the Sierra Club Water Sentinels team as a volunteer, and in January 2005 came on staff as the Michigan Chapter’s CAFO Water Sentinel. Additional Information and Resources
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To find out more about Sierra Club's work to prevent pollution from animal factories contact CAFO Water Sentinel Lynn Henning Announcing: Help for Stopping CAFO Pollution Click here if you've come looking for help to stop a polluting CAFO in your community, of if you're trying to stop a CAFO from locating in your community. |
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