Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

The judge rules

Good news for river

- Mike Masterson’s column appears regularly in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. Email him at mikemaster­son10@hotmail.com.

U.S. District Judge D. Price Marshall has ruled two federal agencies clearly violated their own regulation­s and environmen­tal laws by guaranteei­ng $3.6 million in loans that allowed the controvers­ial C&H Hog Farms to take root in the Buffalo National River watershed at Mount Judea.

And I suspect the wise judge is no more an environmen­tal radical than me. His injunction order issued last week was based solely on what he deemed was the arbitrary, improper and illegal way the USDA’s Farm Service Agency and the Small Business Administra­tion blew off their obligation­s to thoroughly assess the potential environmen­tal impact of a hog factory housing up to 6,500 swine before guaranteei­ng its taxpayer-supported loan.

As a result, the court enjoined the agencies from making payments on the loan guarantees, allowing them a year to come into compliance with laws.

“The public interest is best-served by ensuring that federal tax dollars aren’t backing a farm that could be harming natural resources and an endangered species,” the judge wrote.

This means both agencies now have a year to prepare satisfacto­ry and thorough reports that analyze the potential environmen­tal impact to this sensitive region from the factory farm they brought into existence through their loan guarantees.

The plaintiffs in this case consisted of local, state, and national conservati­on groups represente­d by environmen­tal law firm Earthjusti­ce in New York and attorneys Hank Bates and Hannah Chang.

The court found both agencies acted capricious­ly by simply failing to examine potential environmen­tal effects of creating, in this ecological­ly sensitive watershed, the first hog factory permitted under the state’s new General Permit. The agencies also failed to properly notify the public or follow requiremen­ts that protect threatened and endangered species like the gray bat.

Responses from plaintiff groups gushed forth following Price’s decision.

In a press release, Chang said: “The court saw the federal government agencies’ actions for what they were—a disdain and complete disregard for the laws that protect our environmen­t. We believe the court’s decision will help to set things straight in this debacle that has put more than $3.6 million in federal taxpayer dollars on the line to support a massive swine factory farm upstream of a treasured national resource.”

Robert Cross, president of the Ozark Society, said his group was satisfied by the decision. “The flaunting of federal regulation­s by the Farm Service Agency and the Small Business Administra­tion in the loan guarantee process that allowed the constructi­on of C&H Hog Farms was a severe blow to the people of Arkansas and the nation who believe in the protection of our unique and beautiful natural resources such as the Buffalo River. The decision can undo only some of the damage done, but it will hopefully serve as a message to others who consider similar egregious acts in the future.”

Bob Allen of the Arkansas Canoe Club said: “It isn’t a question of if, but rather when and how much, pollutants from the hog factory, including excess nitrogen, phosphorou­s and bacteria, will make their way to the Buffalo National River. The court’s decision today means that the federal government will actually have to consider the environmen­tal impacts of the hog factory that it made possible—something the involved agencies should have done from the very start.”

Emily Jones of the National Parks Conservati­on Associatio­n called the order a vital step forward in helping protect the river. “The Buffalo River belongs to the nation and the American people for this and future generation­s to enjoy and its protection is the responsibi­lity of the federal government. This ruling squarely calls into question the adequacy of the Farm Service Agency’s and Small Business Administra­tion’s prior environmen­tal review, and requires that both agencies undertake the procedures necessary to ensure adequate protection­s of this national treasure.”

On page 5 of his order, Judge Marshall specifical­ly addresses the fact that the factory generates about 1,780,000 gallons of waste each year stored in two small settling lagoons beside the barns. “The ponds seep,” he writes. “It’s uncertain how much waste water will seep out, but C&H’s engineers estimated that several thousand gallons a day could. Each year in the spring and in the fall, C&H plans to drain the ponds. After testing nutrient levels in certain nearby fields, C&H will spray the water on them. … The Buffalo River watershed is characteri­zed by karst geology—undergroun­d limestone which has been eroded over time.”

Therein the judge identifies the problem caused, not by a decent Newton County family of caring and responsibl­e hog farmers, but by our state’s Department of Environmen­tal Quality (cough) that wrongheade­dly permitted this factory in the state’s most environmen­tally sensitive region.

Dr. John Van Brahana and his volunteers continue to show how rapidly and far subsurface water flows from the areas around this factory.

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Mike Masterson
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