Rome News-Tribune

Right to Farm update clears Georgia Senate this week

♦ The controvers­ial measure still must be ratified by the House. Tickets Reserved Seating $25 - Main Floor $20 - Balcony

- By Dave Williams Capitol Beat News Service

ATLANTA — A controvers­ial update to Georgia’s Right to Farm Act cleared the state Senate Thursday after a debate of nearly two hours.

The bill, which originated in the Georgia House of Representa­tives last year, passed the Senate 29-21. Because of changes senators made to the measure, it must return to the House before gaining final passage.

The legislatio­n would make it more difficult for property owners living in areas zoned for agricultur­al use to file nuisance lawsuits against nearby farms generating offensive noise, dust, smells or sludge runoff.

In order to sue, owners would have to live within five miles of the alleged nuisance.

Also, under an amendment approved on the Senate floor Thursday, lawsuits would have to be brought within two years after a nuisance occurs. More restrictiv­e language in the original bill would have set the clock for lawsuits at within two years of an applicant obtaining a permit to start or change a farm operation.

Supporters argued the original Right to Farm Act the General Assembly enacted during the 1980s contains ambiguitie­s that expose farmers to costly lawsuits that could be avoided by a clearer statute.

“Georgia has a booming agricultur­al economy that makes a $75 billion (annual economic) impact on our state,” said Sen. John Wilkinson, RToccoa, chairman of the Senate Agricultur­e & Consumer Affairs Committee. “But people are not going to be able to continue to farm and invest millions of dollars in equipment if they don’t understand what they can and can’t do.”

The bill was endorsed by the state’s major agricultur­al organizati­ons in Georgia, including the Georgia Farm Bureau, Georgia Agribusine­ss Council and Georgia Poultry Federation.

But opponents, led by environmen­tal groups, said the measure was designed to provide a legal shield to large farms owned by outof-state or foreign corporatio­ns at the expense of small family farms.

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