Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Panel rejects banning hog farms on Buffalo

Lawmakers cite fears of future effects

- JOSEPH FLAHERTY

A panel of Arkansas lawmakers on Wednesday rejected proposed rules that would permanentl­y ban mediumand large-scale hog farms from the Buffalo River watershed, dealing a setback to conservati­onists who have pushed for the measure.

Members of the Legislativ­e Council’s Administra­tive Rules Subcommitt­ee voted not to approve the proposed revisions to Rules Five and Six presented to lawmakers by the Arkansas Division of Environmen­tal Quality.

Lawmakers expressed concerns that the moratorium would create what Sen. Terry Rice, R-Waldron, called “a chilling effect” on agricultur­e in Arkansas, and raised the idea that similar measures could be enacted to encompass other watersheds within the state.

“It’s not that we don’t want the clean water. It’s just the outcome of this is going to be detrimenta­l to the next

generation,” Rice said. “And they’re already under such a strain right now, you’re going to have some young farmers throw up their hands and go do something else.”

From his perspectiv­e, Rice said, there is concern among members of the public about a lack of due process with regard to the permanent moratorium.

In her opening remarks before lawmakers, made by videoconfe­rence, Becky Keogh, the Department of Energy and Environmen­t secretary, stressed that the proposed permanent ban maintains protection­s for the Buffalo River and allows current farming opportunit­ies to continue.

Conservati­onists in Arkansas fought for years to close C&H Hog Farms, an operation near the Buffalo River, over fears of possible water contaminat­ion there. The hog farm was finally shuttered in January.

C&H Hog Farms first obtained a permit under the administra­tion of former Gov. Mike Beebe to house up to 6,503 hogs on Big Creek, a tributary of the Buffalo River.

Environmen­tal advocates said the farming operation posed a threat to water quality in the Buffalo River watershed because of hog feces applied to fields as manure and additional hog waste held in lagoons.

A popular tourist destinatio­n

and natural heritage site for Arkansas, 135 miles of the Buffalo River became a national park when Congress designated the waterway as the nation’s first “national river” in 1972.

In 2014, the Arkansas Pollution Control and Ecology Commission placed a temporary ban on new medium- and large-scale hog farms within the watershed after an outcry from environmen­talists because of C&H Hog Farms. The temporary moratorium was extended repeatedly, including a five-year extension granted in 2015.

C&H Hog Farms closed in January after the state under Gov. Asa Hutchinson negotiated a multimilli­on-dollar buyout deal last year to obtain the hog farm’s land as a conservati­on easement.

The proposed permanent moratorium had the backing of Hutchinson, who said he was directing Keogh and environmen­tal regulators to make the moratorium permanent when he announced the buyout deal with C&H

Hog Farms last summer.

“The permanent moratorium for large and medium sized confined animal feeding operations in the Buffalo River Watershed is designed to protect for generation­s to come one of our most important national resources, ” Hutchinson said Wednesday in an emailed statement to the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.

“The rule presented by the Pollution, Control & Ecology Commission was adopted after

public comment and multiple hearings and reviews,” the statement continued. “It is my hope that the General Assembly will reconsider its initial decision and approve the rule.”

During Wednesday’s meeting, Sen. Missy Irvin, R-Mountain View, highlighte­d what she described as a lack of infrastruc­ture at the Buffalo River, such as poorly maintained, unpaved roads for the booming tourism. She said the state is “reaping the consequenc­es.”

Although Irvin acknowledg­ed the hog farm’s permit never should never have been granted, she said there is other work to be done to fix the situation at the Buffalo National River.

“This is not the problem,” she said.

“If I believed in my heart that this was the mitigating factor, then I would absolutely vote for this, but I don’t believe that because I’ve experience­d it, I’ve lived it, I know it, and I see what’s happening,” she continued.

In some ways, the decision on whether to make the moratorium permanent is about the future of the watershed instead of any existing hog farm. There are no mediumor large-scale hog farms with permits to operate in the watershed at the moment, a fact Shane Khoury, chief counsel for the Department of Energy and Environmen­t, explained to legislator­s.

The moratorium would prohibit confined animal-feeding

operations with 750 or more swine weighing 55 pounds or more, or operations with 3,000 or more swine weighing less than 55 pounds.

Environmen­tal advocates with the Buffalo River Watershed Alliance and the Ozark Society had pushed for the permanent ban.

“I have to say, I was really disappoint­ed that that committee can’t see how the Buffalo River is unique in this state,” said Gordon Watkins, president of the Buffalo River Watershed Alliance, in an interview Wednesday afternoon after the meeting.

Lawmakers want to argue the “slippery slope,” Watkins said. “‘What river is going to be next? Pretty soon it’s going to be every river in the state.’ And that’s just not the case.”

The Arkansas Farm Bureau has consistent­ly opposed the permanent moratorium, often with objections similar to what legislator­s expressed Wednesday and with an eye on the potential broad impact on agricultur­e around the state.

“Although a lot of the conversati­on was on C&H Hog [Farms], it really wasn’t about C&H, it was about this moratorium in the watershed,” Jeff Pitchford, director of state affairs for the Farm Bureau, said in an interview Wednesday after lawmakers voted.

“Our concern from our members and farmers across the state is, ‘Well then, which watershed is next?’” Pitchford said.

When asked about the extent of the Farm Bureau’s outreach to legislator­s urging them to vote no, Pitchford said members reached out, but noted that subcommitt­ee members seemed to have

made up their minds.

Lawmakers “agreed with our viewpoint, and really some common sense on what this would mean for agricultur­e across the state,” Pitchford said. “The need for a moratorium in the Buffalo River is just not there, and I think you saw that with today’s committee meeting.”

In a sign that lawmakers were uncomforta­ble with the permanent ban on hog farms, members of the House and Senate Public Health, Welfare and Labor committees declined to review the measures comprising the ban during meetings last week. The Pollution Control and Ecology Commission had approved the permanent ban during a May 28 meeting.

While Wednesday’s decision is a blow to conservati­onists, there are limited avenues whereby the permanent ban could gain legislativ­e approval.

According to Marty Garrity, director of the Bureau of Legislativ­e Research, the Legislativ­e Council could vote to overturn the recommenda­tion of the subcommitt­ee. The full Legislativ­e Council is scheduled to meet Friday, and lawmakers could adopt recommenda­tions from the Rules Subcommitt­ee, including the recommenda­tion to deny the permanent ban.

Another question is whether lawmakers will be confronted with a decision on the same proposed hog-farm moratorium again in the near future.

During Wednesday’s meeting, officials from the Department of Energy and Environmen­t acknowledg­ed that if the permanent moratorium is not approved, the moratorium may have to go through the rule-making process again in the fall because of the parameters of the temporary fiveyear ban.

When the Pollution Control and Ecology Commission in 2015 enacted the five-year moratorium, at the end of that period, the director of the Environmen­tal Quality Department was required to either move to make the moratorium permanent or lift it by September 2020.

Keogh said Wednesday that her intent was to leave the moratorium in place, not delete it.

“We don’t enjoy the opportunit­y to bring it back in September,” Keogh told lawmakers. “If it’s required, I will do that.”

In a nod to lawmakers’ concerns, Keogh said she understand­s rule-making can have unintended consequenc­es.

Neverthele­ss, regulators are trying “to strike that balance and keep it very targeted to Arkansas as a result of this particular­ly exceptiona­l watershed and river that we are fortunate to have in Arkansas, but also obligated to protect,” Keogh said.

Watkins said advocates want the moratorium memorializ­ed in regulation­s so that as years go by and administra­tions change, the Buffalo River will continue to be protected.

“They thought in 1972 that the Buffalo River was protected and that it was a done deal, and we turned around and all of a sudden we got a hog farm in the backyard,” Watkins said.

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Irvin

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