U.S. Factory Dairy Farms So Bad, They're A Tourist Attraction

Posted on Thursday, October 05 at 02:37 by BC Mary
“In a 16 mile corridor we have dairy operations dumping five times the amount of raw sewage as that produced by the entire population of Seattle onto our fields,” said Helen Reddout, president of Community Association for Restoration of the Environment in Yakima County, Washington. “Contaminated waste on our fields is dangerous as we can see in the California spinach case." "The U.S. EPA and state agencies turn a blind eye to the air and water pollution caused by giant dairies and other factory farms," explained Hauter. "Rural communities and U.S. consumers deserve better." “It’s sad that when there’s so much in Oregon agriculture that is right, we become known to the international community for operations like the Threemile Canyon Farm complex, that don’t represent the agriculture we value in our state,” said Kendra Kimbirauskas, a regional consultant with the GRACE Factory Farm Project. Factory farming can also affect the health of consumers far from the dairy. According to the American Public Health Association (APHA), the overuse of antibiotics for livestock is creating antibiotic-resistant bacteria that threatens human health. An estimated 70% of antibiotics used in the United States are for promoting growth and preventing disease in food animals. "We wanted to see U.S. factory dairies because big agriculture interests plans to export the factory farm model to Europe and replace our traditional family dairies," said Jean Cabaret, a French dairy farmer and member of the French farmers union Confederation Paysanne. “Europeans want sustainable, chemical free, and humanely raised dairy and meat products – not factory farm pollution." Industrial agriculture companies have dramatically expanded their operations in parts of Europe in recent years, transforming the landscape from one of numerous small family farms to one of giant animal confinement facilities. The European Union is considering reforms to its Common Agricultural Policy for dairy that could potentially drive European dairy farmers out of business and towards a model similar to the U.S system. Food & Water Watch supports efforts to encourage local food production through numerous sustainable family farms instead of an industrialized model that relies on factory farms. “Showing just how bad it is in Lenawee and Hillsdale Counties is one way to advocate for stronger laws here as well as to make sure Europeans don’t weaken their laws to allow these horrible facilities to move into their communities,” said Lynn Henning, Sierra Club CAFO Water Sentinel and a leader of the Environmentally Concerned Citizens of South Central Michigan. CONTACT: Food and Water Watch Jennifer Mueller: (202) 797-6553 jmueller@fwwatch.org

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  1. by avatar Jacob
    Thu Oct 05, 2006 4:54 pm
    It is not only in those three States that things are bad:

    Think about Coalinga along I-5 in California, and the smell of the miles and miles of feedlot rises sky-high.

    And in Arizona, the dairy operations are moving out of the urbanizing Phoenix area to west of Gila Bend along I-8.

    All these animals are fed on antibiotics that are banned in Canada and European countries. Grain fed beef is imported from Australia; hormone free milk is expensive.

    Tourist attractions for sure; examples on how not to do it.



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