Chattanooga Times Free Press

Outdoor groups monitor chicken plant suit

- BY MARK PACE STAFF WRITER

Several outdoor organizati­ons are monitoring a lawsuit filed against Walker County that claims government officials are secretly “conspiring to install a largescale chicken slaughterh­ouse” in McLemore Cove.

Area residents worry it could bring foul smells and heavy traffic to the site, a detriment to the county’s new outdoor marketing plan.

The 50,000-acre McLemore Cove sits about 3 miles south of Chickamaug­a, Georgia, in the valley below the convergenc­e of Lookout and Pigeon mountains. The cove is home to several creeks and is used for caving, cycling, Ironman and other outdoor activities because of its natural beauty and scenic views. It’s on the National Register of Historic Places and is an area the county wants to market as an outdoor destinatio­n.

“One of the reasons people like to bike and hike and rock climb is it’s a beautiful location. We don’t want to encourage this type of operation in a place like that,” said Blackwell Smith, an outdoorsma­n who has lived in the cove for about 30 years. “… It seems like a bad idea.”

Walker County Economic and Community Developmen­t Director Robert Wardlaw and Commission­er Shannon Whitfield have said they can’t discuss any potential plans because of nondisclos­ure agreements.

In the meantime, outdoor groups and advocates in the region are monitoring the situation. Lula Lake Land Trust and South Chickamaug­a Creek Greenway Alliance officials are against putting a chicken plant in the cove. The headwaters of the creek’s watershed flow into the cove, and the trust aims to preserve the natural and historic landscapes in Rock Creek, Bear Creek and their tributarie­s, which flow through the area.

“With this overarchin­g mission in mind and the proximity of our protected lands to the proposed site, we cannot in good [conscience] support the relocation of a poultry processing facility to McLemore Cove,” Executive Director Mike Pollock wrote in an email. “While we wholeheart­edly support business and industry in our county, we see the longterm effects of the facility conflictin­g with our mission.”

The Lookout Mountain Conservanc­y, meanwhile, has not created a plan with respect to the potential chicken plant but is following discussion­s on the issue.

The outdoors is becoming ingrained in the county’s culture. In the last two years, the U.S. Department of Education has awarded Green Ribbons to two local elementary schools. They represent an honor for the most environmen­tally conscious schools in the country. The county is also home to renowned outdoor destinatio­ns such as Pettyjohn’s Cave, has multiple outdoor organizati­ons and has recreation­al areas like Cloudland Canyon State Park — which features hiking, camping and mountain biking.

Outdoor advocates regularly tout the county as one of the most beautiful in the region because of the cove, surroundin­g mountains, miles of greenery and open roads.

Walker County officials plan to unveil a new outdoor initiative in the coming weeks. Wardlaw asked the the county’s Developmen­t Authority to consider a new marketing campaign focused on natural resources during an April 10 meeting, his first since Whitfield hired him to lead the county’s economic growth efforts.

Wardlaw praised the “world class” outdoor recreation­al opportunit­ies and said people visit the county to go through “our beautiful byways up there on the mountain and in the cove.”

South Chickamaug­a Creek Greenway Alliance Chairwoman Sandy Kurtz is concerned about a potential chicken processing plant in the cove and attended a protest Thursday outside Pilgrim’s Pride’s existing plant in Chattanoog­a’s Southside.

“It just seems like the wrong place,” she said.

The McLemore Cove Preservati­on Society, the nonprofit that filed the lawsuit against the county, has recommende­d the chicken plant go in one of the county’s industrial parks.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY TIM BARBER ?? Ruth Almeter speaks Thursday outside the Pilgrim’s Pride chicken plant at 1591 Broad St. in Chattanoog­a about not wanting a plant in McLemore Cove. She is joined by Blackwell Smith, a longtime resident and business owner in Walker County.
STAFF PHOTO BY TIM BARBER Ruth Almeter speaks Thursday outside the Pilgrim’s Pride chicken plant at 1591 Broad St. in Chattanoog­a about not wanting a plant in McLemore Cove. She is joined by Blackwell Smith, a longtime resident and business owner in Walker County.

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