Kansas Natural Resource Council, Kansas Chapter
of Sierra Club and Kansas Audubon Council
ACTION ALERT!
Governor Signs Hog Bill as Industry Initiates Massive
Expansion in Kansas
Apparently pleased with the new environmental regulations
passed by the Kansas Legislature, and signed into law today by Governor
Graves, major hog producers prepare to move into Kansas in a big way:
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Seaboard Farms, Inc. on Friday announced that it has chosen
Barton County as the site for its 4 million hogs per year processing plant.
Seaboard officials are now saying that they do not expect much production
in the immediate vicinity of the plant. However, in earlier meetings with
Barton County citizens they indicated they would be putting under contract
some 2 million finishing hogs within 100 to 150 miles of the plant. This
move comes after citizens of Great Bend voted in four new members of the
city council, by write-in, who subsequently withdrew the city’s invitation
to the company.
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Southwest Pork, L.L.C. plans to double the size of their
Gray County operation to 38,400 head, 14 miles due east of Garden City.
The draft permit for this facility is now out for comment. If approved,
this facility will equal in size two Seaboard complexes in Morton County
as the largest in Kansas.
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Murphy Farms, Inc. has permits pending for 14,700 head in
Hodgeman County and 29,400 head in Lane County. The 34,000 breeding sows
at the two facilities will produce some 670,000 piglets per year for nurseries
and finishing facilities in the region. The Lane county facility will generate
wastes equivalent to a city of 90,000 people. Last year Hodgeman county
voters rejected corporate hog farms even though Murphy Farms campaigned
vigorously for their project. After the Hodgeman County vote Murphy announced
they planned to go in anyway under a loophole in the law.
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The state of Oklahoma recently imposed a one year moratorium
on large hog farms, giving incentive for these operations to move into
Kansas.
"Citizens of Kansas, in 21 county referenda and the city
election in Great Bend, have clearly stated that they do not want big hog
producers in the state." said Charles Benjamin, Legislative Coordinator
of the Kansas Natural Resource Council and the Kansas Chapter of Sierra
Club. "It is too bad that the Kansas legislature chose to ignore their
pleas for help. The Governor has the power to impose a moratorium on new
hog factories until we get scientifically based answers on odor control
and protection of the state’s surface and groundwaters. We urge the Governor
to exercise that authority."
For further information contact Charles
Benjamin, Legislative Coordinator, Kansas Natural Resource Council
and Kansas Chapter of Sierra Club at (785) 232-1555.
Contact
Governor Graves or your state representative via e-mail.
Read the full
text of the bill (321 KB, from http://www.ink.org)
Read a critique
of the bill by Craig Volland, an environmental engineer and technical
consultant to the Kansas Sierra Club and Stewards of the Land.
Links to help educate you on this issue
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There is no excuse for being uninformed on this issue! - HOG
FACTS home page
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Rural America -
An online magazine published by the Missouri Rural Crisis Center, this
has a lot of useful facts and publications.
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Farm Crisis Net - an excellent
resource for facts on various aspects of the problems facing family farms.
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Further afield, read about corporate
hog factories in Virginia, and how volunteers can help monitor and
report violations - The EIEIO home page.
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Pork, Pollution
and Pig Farming: The Truth about Corporate Hog Production in Kansas
- An article by Eric Voogt, from the Kansas Journal of Law and Public Policy,
Spring 1996..
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Families Against Rural Messes (FARM),
an Illinois group fighting mega hog operations. Includes the invaluable
article, "ARE LARGE HOG
OPERATIONS GOOD FOR RURAL COMMUNITIES?", by Nancy Thompson of the Nebraska
Center for Rural Affairs.
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Write a letter
to the editor of the Great Bend Tribune
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P.O.W.E.R.
- a grass roots effort to stop corporate piggery in Great Bend
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America's Animal
Factories - A report from the Natural Resources Defense Council, Dec.
1998, with a state-by-state update, including one for Kansas.
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Factory Farm WebSite - "Our goal:
to eliminate factory farming in favor of a sustainable food production
system which is healthful and humane, economically viable and environmentally
sound."