| To all the self-styled fiscal conservatives who are angry about taxpayer dollars funding pig odor research: Iowa's progressives and environmentalists could have used your help last year when our legislature was considering the odor study bill.
We tried to tell you that Iowa taxpayers already paid for a similar study in 2002.
We tried to tell you that research in other states (funded all or in part by industry polluters, not taxpayers) "has already been done on cost effective ways to mitigate odor":
Included are better siting methods, and the use of biofilters and covers on lagoons. Iowa's taxpayers should not be required to fund another round of studies on proven technologies when the legislature has not shown any willingness to act on the information already gathered from previous studies. Instead we should require producers to implement what we already know.
Minnesota has enacted ambient air quality standards that limit hydrogen sulfide to 0.05 parts per million and is working on limiting ammonia emissions. Missouri, Nebraska, and Colorado regulate sulfur emissions and emissions of other types. [...]
Ammonia and hydrogen sulfide, two odor causing gases emitted from confined feedlot operations, are known to cause serious respiratory problems.
The bacteria found within particulates emitted from livestock operations create lung inflammation that leads to non-allergic asthma. Twenty-five percent of those who work in confined feedlot operations have some form of respiratory disease, 10% higher than the United States working population as a whole.
We sent out action alerts urging legislators to reject this bad bill, to no avail.
How did the odor study bill pass? Read all the gory details on this page from the Sierra Club's Iowa website. To make a long story short, the bill started in the House Agriculture Committee chaired by Representative Dolores Mertz (whose family is in the CAFO business). It passed out of Mertz's committee but would have died after the legislature's second "funnel" date, if House leaders had not salvaged it by assigning the bill to a different committee.
Last year Democrats held a 53-47 majority in the Iowa House. The odor study bill passed with almost all the Republicans and a minority of Democrats--mostly leadership, first-term Democrats or those representing fairly conservative districts. (Click here for the roll call.) House Speaker Pat Murphy and Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy pushed this bill against the wishes of most of their caucus. Corporate ag groups lobbied heavily in favor of the odor study bill, because they knew it would delay regulation of CAFO pollution.
In the Iowa Senate, most of the Republicans and a bare majority of Democrats also approved the odor study bill. Environmental advocates argued that taxpayers should not be funding this research, but they don't have as much clout at our statehouse as corporate ag groups.
By the way, Governor Chet Culver demonstrated last week that he can kill a pending bill by threatening to veto it, but he was missing in action when legislators considered the odor study bill. He signed the bill last May despite calls from many environmentalists and organizations to veto it.
A few days ago, Salon's Alex Koppelman defended Harkin's earmark on the grounds that livestock odor is
dangerous stuff that cause serious health problems, both physical and mental, in people. It can even contribute to asthma in children.
One study of people living near large hog farms in North Carolina, for instance, concluded "persons exposed to odors from intensive hog operations experienced 'more tension, more depression, more anger, more fatigue and more confusion' than a group of unexposed persons."
A 1998 workshop about the subject, held at Duke University and featuring 50 experts, came to the conclusion that "Our current state of knowledge clearly suggests that it is possible for odorous emissions from animal operations, wastewater treatment, and recycling of biosolids to have an impact on physical health. The most frequently reported symptoms attributed to odors include eye, nose, and throat irritation, headache, nausea, hoarseness, cough, nasal congestion, palpitations, shortness of breath, stress, drowsiness, and alterations of mood."
Trouble is, the odor study bill approved last year in Iowa does not require any research into the health effects of livestock odors. Representative Mark Kuhn and Senator Joe Bolkcom both introduced amendments that would have required such research, but their amendments were rejected.
Even worse, the odor study bill does not require that CAFOs implement any effective measures identified by the research Iowa and federal taxpayers are funding.
The sad truth is that the odor study bill was not about addressing the problems caused by CAFO odors. On the contrary, the bill was strongly backed by "a Who's Who of Industry":
They included lobbyists for the Iowa Pork Producers Association, Iowa Cattlemen's Association, Iowa Poultry Association, Iowa Soybean Association, Iowa Turkey Federation, Iowa Farm Bureau Federation and Iowa Select Farms, LLP. [...]
So, now, Iowans are faced with yet another bill that will stall any improvement in mitigating foul odors emanating from large hog lots for at least another five years. Sierra Club believes that's just too long to wait. Polluters should pay for their industrial waste and that includes the livestock industry -- not the taxpayers.
Again, this bill passed because the Democratic leaders worked with Republicans to serve corporate interests that continually seek to delay efforts to clean up hog lot pollution. Within the Democratic House and Senate caucuses, there was substantial opposition to the bill.
So I am not too excited that Harkin's earmark will fund research into "what hogs eat and how the stench can be reduced." Nor am I confident that this research will, in Harkin's words, help CAFOs operate "in an environmentally friendly way and be good neighbors."
We've had enough research. It is time to deal with pollution by making CAFOs pay for the harm they cause. |