Issue Polls
AGRICULTURE »» RANCHING »» FEEDLOTS »» Dec 18, 2023
Today's factory livestock operations generate huge amounts of hog, chicken and cattle waste. Most of these feedlot operations store and evaporate this waste in large open lagoons, some of it to eventually be used as fertilizer. However, these manure pits can leak if retaining walls fail or if flooding or overfilling occurs. Advocates warn of serious health problems resulting from pathogens invading our water supply, not to mention the damage to air quality, fisheries and ecosystems. Critics of large factory farms say they confine thousands of animals in cramped, unsanitary conditions thereby placing the safety of our food at risk. Large farms also pollute our air and water, harm the welfare of animals, exploit workers, extract wealth from rural communities, increase the risk of antibiotic resistant bacteria, and have a stranglehold on our food supply. According to the EPA, feedlot waste discharges have been blamed for polluting at least 35,000 miles of our nation's rivers and streams, as well as contaminating groundwater supplies in at least 16 states. The EPA believes there are more than 20,000 large feedlots now operating in our country – of which less than half have federal effluent discharge permits. It reports that 75% of these operations are allowing pollutants into our waterways. Critics say the EPA has failed to enforce the 1972 Clean Water Act’s requirements on large animal feedlots. They claim the implementation of these regulations has been severely handicapped by legal loopholes and agribusiness influence. Pending Legislation: H.R.797 - Farm System Reform Act of 2023 Sponsor: Rep. Ro Khanna (CA) Status: House Subcommittee on Livestock, Dairy, and Poultry (Agriculture) Chair: Rep. Tracey Mann (KS)
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