Waterkeeper Alliance

Industrial Agriculture: Poisoning
Our Waters and Our Homes
WATERKEEPER ALLIANCE

American food production is undergoing the most dramatic consolidation in
our history. Industrial meat factories and corporate controlled farms are
replacing family, "hands-on" farms. These facilities are owned by or
indentured to a handful of giant corporations with little or no interest in
socially responsible agriculture. Their livestock factories contaminate
water bodies across the nation with nutrients, pesticides, antibiotic
residues and other pollutants.

One of the nation's largest environmental problems stems from the vast
amounts of waste generated at Confined Animal Feeding Operations, or CAFOs.
These facilities shoehorn thousands of animals into barns full of small
pens, where they are fed nutrient rich imported feed, laced with antibiotics
and growth stimulants. Waste from these facilities is often piped into open
pits, euphemistically called "lagoons," and then applied to adjacent fields.
Nutrient and pesticide laden animal waste contaminates streams, lakes and
rivers, local groundwater, and ultimately, has created a New Jersey-sized
dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico.

Waterkeeper Alliance's campaign against this threat began in 1993 with Rick
Dove, the first Neuse Riverkeeper. When Rick retired from the United States
Marine Corps, he picked up his childhood dream of becoming a commercial
fisherman on North Carolina's Neuse River. Rick's dream was soon crushed as
pollution from industrial hog production contaminated his beloved river,
rendering the fish he caught unfit for market. Even worse, the nutrient rich
waters spawned an outbreak of Pfiesteria piscicidia, a micro-organism that
causes lesions in infected fish, and poisons humans as well. Pfiesteria
kills fish, and brings disabling illness to fishermen, bridge workers and
people enjoying the state's rivers.

Over the past two years, Waterkeeper Alliance has initiated a series of
lawsuits targeting waste disposal at large hog facilities. In February 2001,
the Alliance filed a lawsuit in federal district court for the Eastern
District of North Carolina. Our suit claims that Smithfield Foods, the
nation's largest hog producer, has polluted local waterways in violation of
the Clean Water Act and the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA),
two of the nation's primary environmental laws. In September 2001, District
Court Judge Malcolm Howard rejected Smithfield's attempt to have the case
dismissed; the case will proceed to trial late in 2002.

In the months and years since that initial commitment, the Alliance has
launched a national campaign designed to reform this industry, to restore
healthy landscapes and waterways, and to return good stewardship, prosperity
and democracy to America's rural communities. Waterkeeper Alliance partners
with family farm advocates, environmental groups, animal welfare advocates
and private citizens who are concerned about rural life in America.

YOU ARE WHAT YOU EAT
Consumers have the real power to solve this environmental and social crisis.
As you buy meat, milk, cheese, and produce take the extra step to learn more
about it. Where did it come from? Were pesticides, chemical fertilizers,
hormones or antibiotics used? Your choices at the market can make a big
difference in the struggle to keep agriculture healthy and sustainable.
Hands-on farmers, using proven techniques that reduce chemical use and
animal cruelty, are the strongest link between healthy food and a secure
environment. Please, think twice before buying corporate pork and other
factory grown food!

WHAT YOU CAN DO NOW !!
We have YOU and THE LAW on our side, and with generous financial support
form concerned people like yourself, we'll be able to continue our efforts
to rein in this industry.




...............................................
Be the change
you want to see in the world.
-- Mahatma Gandhi



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