Meat-Industrial Complex
How factory farms undercut public
health
by Mark Winne
In These Times magazine, March
2006
Drive through Don Oppligher's Feed Yard
in Clovis, New Mexico, and you'll see 35,000 head of beef cattle
confined to pens that stretch across the flat, barren landscape.
The constant shuffling of hooves raises
a bacteria-laden dust cloud that's carried by the prevailing winds
into west Texas, where it joins the plumes of hundreds of other
feedlots. At one end of the complex sits a giant lagoon that catches
the operation's chemicals, urine, antibiotics and other effluvia.
In the narrow strip of land that separates the fencing from the
road lie the carcasses of dead cows (a.k.a. "downers"),
eyes bugged out, tongues dangling and bellies bloated in the summer
heat.
Moving from bovine to porcine, factory
hog farms generate an odor so intense it would knock a buzzard
off a shit-wagon. In cramped warehouse structures, as many as
20,000 hogs are confined for their entire lives. After five months,
the mature hogs are sent off to the slaughterhouse to have their
throats slit and carcasses dipped in chemical vats to loosen their
skins. According to Anita Poole, legal counsel for the Oklahoma-based
Kerr Center, which has fought that state's takeover by the hog
industry, "The average Joe Blow who might stumble into a
hog facility would never want to eat pork again:'
US. shoppers spend less on food as a percentage
of their total annual expenditures than anyone else in the world.
But this is because factory livestock farms-labeled "concentrated
animal feeding operations" (CAFOs) by government agencies-don't
pay for the natural resources they have squandered, the farm labor
they have maltreated, the declining health of residents who live
near their operations, or the animals that have been exploited
far beyond their biological capabilities.
Texas County is in Oklahoma's Panhandle
region. In 1990 it had 11,000 hogs. Today, according to the Kerr
Center, the number has swollen to more than one million. For a
region that was in economic decline, the offer by Seaboard Farms
to locate an industrial-style hog operation held out the promise
of reinvigorating the flagging economy, creating desperately needed
jobs and re-filling the empty school desks.
But it came with a price. Seaboard demanded
and received $60 million in local and state government assistance.
This worked out to $27,552 per new job, a tolerable sum if the
jobs paid $20 per hour, but the average hourly Seaboard wage was
less than $8. In spite of the low wages, the deal might have been
justified if the community received a commensurate growth in tax
revenues. But by the time the county completed the financing deal
with Seaboard, they had agreed to taxes of $9,700 per year until
2017 on a business site valued at $100 million. Even after Seaboard
agreed to pay $175,000 annually to the district's school board
for the next 25 years, this still amounted to the county forgoing
$120,000 per year.
Factory hog operations not only pay a
meager return on a community's investment, they also extract a
high price from the surrounding region. With Seaboard's influx
of jobs came an increase in population, which in turn brought
about a sharp rise in crime. From 1990 to 1997, crime in Texas
County increased by 74 percent compared to a 12 percent decline
in other rural Oklahoma counties. And factory farm workers in
the West and Midwest are increasingly Mexican immigrants, only
about half of whom are legally documented. They bring with them
a host of needs that these rural communities are unequipped to
handle.
But the worst problems are created by
the ungodly amount of manure-an estimated 15 million pounds per
day in Texas County. Because of water run-off from factory farms,
both groundwater and surface water quality have declined. Even
worse, the Ogallala Aquifer upon which the region depends for
its water is being depleted at a rapid rate. The Oklahoma Water
Resource Board reported that water levels in many Texas County
wells have dropped 50 to 100 feet over the last 30 years, due
in large part to the high water demand of factory hog operations
and the irrigated farmland that supports them.
Across the nation, factory farms of all
types are wreaking environmental havoc. A 1995 North Carolina
manure spill killed lo million fish and closed 364,000 acres of
coastal shellfish beds. In 2004 the Iowa Department of Natural
Resources recorded ammonia levels near a hog factory that were
six times the recommended health standard. In California's San
Joaquin Valley, air pollution from factory dairy farms is a major
reason that the region's children have asthma rates three times
the national average. In eastern New Mexico-the state's factory
dairy farm belt-recent research discovered antibiotic-resistant
bacteria in dairy yards. For these reasons, the American Public
Health Association has urged all levels of government to impose
a moratorium on new CAFOs until a comprehensive environmental
and health assessment can be conducted.
Herein lies the rub. The same government
and private industry partnership that brought CAFOs to America's
marginalized rural communities is highly invested in not just
keeping them there, but in seeing them metastasize. Through lax
environmental regulations or the under-funding of agencies charged
with regulating CAFOs, state governments have fostered CAFO-friendly
policies at the public's expense. To further protect their flank,
factory farm interests have worked aggressively in state legislatures
to restrict the ability of local government to keep CAFOs out
of their communities. And just to be sure, New Mexico's dairy
industry considers it an act of "civic duty" for its
farmer members to "serve" on local commissions and boards.
The halls of academe have likewise been
compromised by CAFO industry "donations" to universities.
Rather than use their scientific talents to assess the impact
of CAFOs, research faculty are required to solve the industry's
problems (e.g., disposing of Himalayan mountains of manure). In
1998, New Mexico State University researcher Stephen Arnold found
serious air and water quality problems near dairy operations in
southern New Mexico. When the results were released through professional
journals and conferences, the dairy industry complained so vehemently
to the university that Arnold abandoned his research. And the
Kerr Center's Poole reports, "Oklahoma State University won't
do community impact research because of all the money they get
from the pork industry."
Barely 5 percent of U.S. farms now raise
54 percent of the country's beef and dairy cattle. Corporations
now produce 98 percent of all poultry. Small to mid-size family
livestock farms are going the way of the dodo. While "local
food movements" and a resurgent interest in grass-fed and
free-range animal production are gaining traction and deserve
our full support, they will never be enough to stem the "blood-dimmed
" of the livestock industry.
Are the research reports, the scientific
studies, and the occasional manure spill only isolated "factoids"
in an otherwise benign landscape of inevitable agricultural modernization?
Or is the increasing flow of data and the growing number of incident
reports the proverbial canary in a coal mine? A recent World Watch
Institute paper pronounced, "Factory Farms are breaking the
cycle between small farmers, their animals and the environment,
with collateral damage to human health and local communities."
And the Washington Post reported on North Carolina State University
professor C.M. "Mike" Williams, who has spent five years
researching how to treat manure from the state's lo million hogs.
He concluded, "I do not feel that system [of factory hog
farms] is long-term sustainable."
Dr. Charles Benbrook, a former executive
director of the Board of Agriculture for the National Academy
of Science, shares Williams' assessment. After years spent studying
the dairy industry, Benbrook says he is "perplexed"
by the growth of gargantuan dairy farms west of the Mississippi
where subsidized water supplies in an otherwise dry landscape
have made the expansion of dairy herds feasible-in the short term.
In the long term, says Benbrook, further expansion of factory
dairy farms "doesn't make sense and is patently unsustainable
because water will become too costly, and in not less than five
years, but surely no more than 20, the dairy waste stream will
overwhelm the absorptive capacity of the local environment:'
In other words, our food system may be
looking at a doomsday denouement before the middle of this century.
It is becoming increasingly certain that the water will run out,
the land will no longer absorb the torrent of nutrient waste spread
upon it, and the over-bred, antibiotic and hormone-injected animals
will eventually succumb to their natural limitations. Poole puts
it this way, "The factory system of food production will
simply implode." Until the citizens of the heartland rise
up in sufficient numbers to hold their government and the corporations
accountable, this is both the best and worst we can hope for.
MARK WINNE is a freelance writer and consultant
who specializes in food, nutrition and agriculture issues. He
lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
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