Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Farm-permits bill progresses

Authority shift given Senate nod

- EMILY WALKENHORS­T

A bill that would transfer hog and other farm permitting authority from one state agency to another passed in the Arkansas Senate on Tuesday after a brief discussion over whether the bill says what its sponsor claims it says.

Senate Bill 550 amends current law focused primarily on dry animal litter and poultry farms, gives the Arkansas Natural Resources Commission the responsibi­lity to issue concentrat­ed animal feeding operation permits, and gives decision-making power to local conservati­on districts on manure disposal permits. That authority is currently under the Arkansas Department of Environmen­tal Quality.

The bill also allows people applying for manure waste system permits to “waive” public notificati­on

requiremen­ts.

Concentrat­ed animal feeding operations can include dairy and other farms of certain sizes. All hog farms must get permits if they operate liquid waste management operations, which nearly all hog farms do.

Currently, the department has more than 100 active hog farm permits, according to state data.

Agricultur­al groups have favored the bill, while environmen­tal groups and water utilities have opposed it.

Sponsor Sen. Gary Stubblefie­ld, R-Branch, said he introduced the bill to allow farmers who have dry poultry operations, in addition to liquid animal waste operations, to work with a single agency in the permitting process.

The bill passed Tuesday 25-5, with three people voting present and two not voting.

Sens. Will Bond, D-Little Rock; Joyce Elliott, D-Little Rock; Keith Ingram, D-West Memphis; Mark Johnson, R-Little Rock; and Greg Leding, D-Fayettevil­le, voted against the bill. Sens. Eddie Cheatham, D-Crossett; Linda Chesterfie­ld, D-Little Rock; and Jason Rapert, R-Bigelow, voted present. Sens. Missy Irvin, R-Mountain View, and Dave Wallace, R-Leachville, did not vote.

The House Committee on Agricultur­e, Forestry and Economic Developmen­t is to consider the bill as a special order of business March 27.

Stubblefie­ld spoke for several minutes about misconcept­ions that he said people were emailing to senators, but two of the things Stubblefie­ld stated were refuted by two other senators.

Ingram took issue with Stubblefie­ld’s characteri­zation that the Natural Resources Commission would issue the permits.

Stubblefie­ld has presented the bill as transferri­ng all hog farm permitting responsibi­lity to the commission, Ingram said, “but that’s not really true.” A portion of the bill stipulates that waste management permits would be determined by local conservati­on districts, Ingram said. Each county has a conservati­on district.

The commission could only affirm or overturn a conservati­on district decision to deny an applicatio­n or to deny a portion of the applicatio­n, according to the bill’s language, Ingram said.

Stubblefie­ld stood by his presentati­on and said conservati­on districts approve nutrient management plans and refer their decisions to the commission, which would issue the permit.

“This bill transfers all permits to” the commission, he said.

“OK, but I don’t think that’s what this reads,” Ingram said.

Proposed Ark. Code Ann. 15-20-1115 refers to “liquid livestock litter utilizatio­n” and concerns “livestock litter management plans.” Such plans spell out the process for disposal of animal manure generated by the waste management system, such as how and how much animal manure farmers will be allowed to apply to land as fertilizer.

Under the proposed subsection (c), the “liquid livestock litter management plan is subject to approval by the board of directors of the conservati­on district where the majority of the land … is located.”

It continues, saying that an applicant can appeal a disapprova­l of a management plan or the disapprova­l of a provision in a management plan to the Arkansas Natural Resources Commission’s executive director.

Subsection (d) goes on to state that an approved plan “constitute­s a permit to apply nutrients consistent with the liquid livestock litter management plan.”

Proposed Ark. Code Ann. 15-20-1116 concerns “liquid livestock waste system permits.” In the bill’s definition­s, “liquid livestock litter management system” refers to the “collection, storage, distributi­on, or disposal of livestock litter in liquid form.”

That section of the bill says the commission is the agency that would act on permit applicatio­ns.

Waste system permits that are active once the commission begins accepting permit applicatio­ns would be transferre­d to the commission “without modificati­on,” the section reads.

The commission must adopt final rules by July 1, 2020, according to the bill, and the commission must begin accepting permit applicatio­ns by Jan. 1, 2021.

Other than Stubblefie­ld, three senators — Blake Johnson, R-Corning, and Alan Clark, R-Lonsdale, and Ricky Hill, R-Cabot — spoke in favor of the bill. Bond spoke against it.

Bond said the measure should be rejected in the spirit of Arkansas’ nickname, the Natural State.

Senators in favor of the bill argued that farmers are good stewards of their land and that commission workers are good at what they do.

“Keeping the state the Natural State, I don’t think, is up for debate,” Clark said.

Bond spoke for several minutes and fielded a handful of questions from senators.

While Stubblefie­ld told

senators that the commission would have to write regulation­s that are just as stringent as the Environmen­tal Quality Department’s, Bond contended that the bill doesn’t state that.

Critics of the bill have expressed concern that it would get rid of the Arkansas Department of Environmen­tal Quality’s Regulation 5, under which liquid animal waste systems and waste management plans are currently permitted.

The current law, Ark. Code Ann. 15-20-1114, states that the law “shall not supersede” the existing requiremen­ts of the Arkansas Water and Air Pollution Control Act, but that waste management plans will not be subject to the law “or any regulation­s adopted under” the law. The department’s Regulation 5, which covers all hog farms in the state except C&H Hog Farms in Newton County, is adopted under the law.

C&H Hog Farms, a 6,503-head hog farm near the Buffalo National River that had its permit denied last year, has a Regulation 6 permit that has expired, which is what prompted its owners to apply for a Regulation 5 permit, that was subsequent­ly denied.

Environmen­tal groups have opposed the farm’s operation within the river’s watershed and say it poses a threat to the river’s water quality.

The commission may determine that certain activities are not in compliance with the law and shall be subject to regulation under the law, the bill continues.

The bill’s passage would negate Regulation 5’s moratorium on any new medium or large hog farms in the Buffalo River watershed, critics say.

During a review next year, Department of Environmen­tal Quality Director Becky Keogh is to decide whether to keep the moratorium. The moratorium is not explicitly referred to in the bill, but Stubblefie­ld

said the department would retain decision-making authority.

Critics also worry about losing Regulation 5’s requiremen­t that facilities consider the Agricultur­al Waste Management Field Handbook. The handbook has recommenda­tions on farm siting, geologic investigat­ions and manure pond liners, among other things.

In denying C&H’s permit, state department regulators determined that C&H did not submit enough informatio­n to ensure the facility’s site as safe, per handbook recommenda­tions.

Senators discussed the department’s “mistakes” in the C&H permitting process and questioned the need for keeping permitting authority with the department. Bond argued that the department has improved its operations.

The bill would not have any implicatio­ns for C&H, Stubblefie­ld said, because if C&H pulled its applicatio­n, it would have to close. C&H remains open indefinite­ly while litigation related to its various permit denials remains in circuit court.

Bond said he isn’t sure that C&H wouldn’t benefit because its owners may be able to apply for a new permit with the commission.

Critics have noted other things that were not debated Tuesday in the Senate.

The bill allows applicants to waive public notificati­on during the permitting process for waste management systems. Existing law allows applicants only to waive the “timeliness requiremen­t,” which stipulates that the department shall make decisions within limited time frames.

Stubblefie­ld told senators Tuesday that his bill did not allow applicants to waive public notice requiremen­ts and that it allowed them only to waive the department’s timeliness

requiremen­t.

He said the state administra­tive procedures law requires public notice.

Stubblefie­ld submitted an amendment to his bill late Monday that would have changed the “notificati­on period requiremen­ts” referred to in his bill back to “timeliness requiremen­t” but later withdrew it.

The Beaver Water District, the main water source for Northwest Arkansas, and Central Arkansas Water, the main water source for central Arkansas, oppose the bill. The utilities contend that the bill would loosen permitting requiremen­ts and possibly expose drinking water sources to excess algae-causing phosphorus.

The Department of Environmen­tal Quality has maintained that the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency could raise concerns about the law as it relates to protection­s of waters under the Clean Water Act. An Arkansas Farm Bureau representa­tive who used to work for the department disputed that assertion at a Senate committee meeting last week.

Many hog farms also need constructi­on permits if they operate on enough acreage, said Jessie Green, executive director of the White River Waterkeepe­r and a former department engineer. The department would remain in charge of those, she said, without the ability to decide on the other permits.

Further, Green said, complaints and inspection­s of facilities are not provided on the commission’s website, unlike the department’s website. And, unlike at the department, people who complain about a facility to the commission must submit their complaints in writing, have them notarized and mailed with their names on them.

“That’s a huge barrier to trying to get the public involved,” Green said.

 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/JOHN SYKES JR. ?? After speaking for his bill on hog farm permits Tuesday, Sen. Gary Stubblefie­ld (right) talks with Sen. Will Bond, who opposed the legislatio­n. More photos are available at arkansason­line.com/320genasse­mbly/.
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/JOHN SYKES JR. After speaking for his bill on hog farm permits Tuesday, Sen. Gary Stubblefie­ld (right) talks with Sen. Will Bond, who opposed the legislatio­n. More photos are available at arkansason­line.com/320genasse­mbly/.

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