What she saw there left her, in her own words, "sad, angry and shocked."
Rimer described the disturbing experience of witnessing modern industrial agriculture's "concentrated animal feeding operations" or CAFOs in a recent post to her "Monday Morning" blog, prefacing it with a warning that some of the text "is graphic and may be disturbing." She reported:
We flew over Duplin County. As far as the eye could see, there were hog lagoons and low slung buildings that house thousands of hogs and chickens. From the air, we could see how hog waste is sprayed onto fields, how the effluent runs into ditches that run into creeks that lead to rivers, including the Neuse, and pollutes all it touches. We saw how close the spray would come to neighboring houses and could imagine how the wind would blow that disgusting liquid onto yards and even into houses. It felt like we had traveled back in time to the 19th or early 20th century, before modern means of waste disposal were used. Think of CAFOs as factories, like what Upton Sinclair wrote about in The Jungle. These aren't the bucolic farms of yesterday. Animals are raised strictly as products, crammed together in inhumane conditions, raised only to be slaughtered. There's nothing noble about CAFOs.Rimer's tour group also included Steve Wing, a UNC epidemiologist who studies hog farms' human health impacts; Jim Merchant, the former dean of the University of Iowa College of Public Health; and Rick Dove of the Waterkeeper Alliance. As Facing South reported recently, Merchant came to North Carolina earlier this month to address the state legislature on the health impacts of industrial hog farms only to have the hearing adjourned before he had a chance to speak.
After flying to Duplin County, Rimer's group was met by Devon Hall, co-founder of the Rural Empowerment Association for Community Health based in Warsaw, N.C. Hall took the group on a driving tour to show them how close the massive hog operations are to people's homes and drinking-water wells. Writes Rimer:
We stopped along the way to take pictures of the contents of a "dead box." A dead box is one of many dumping grounds for carcasses of dead animals. Earlier that day, I'd never even heard of a dead box, and now it is forever etched into my memory.Rimer noted how important UNC's research is to understanding the impact industrial livestock farms have on human health -- and she vowed to figure out how her school can be most helpful.
In the meantime, environmental advocates are asking North Carolina Gov. Beverly Perdue (D) to convene a task force to examine the environmental, human health and economic impacts of industrial production of hogs and other livestock. They've launched an online petition to Perdue that they're asking supporters to sign; to read it and add your name, click here.




They probably had sausage biscuits, bacon and eggs for breakfast while decrying the poor hogs they saw
July 29, 2009 8:11 PM | Reply
Whether one has eggs and ham or bacon wasn't the question. The broader issues of protection of water, air, workers, or allowing small farmers a shot at even making a living on the farm, are real concerns. Food security is national security, and this is without even looking at the antibiotics and superbug issues that CAFOs subject their workers' and neighbors' families to, or the ethics of what's going on here.
Good reporting. Too bad Alabama and Mississippi don't see they've become the new target--sewage does flow down the least regulated slope. With all their rivers imounded, their state's water supplies can go septic some hot dry summer form just a few lagoon releases, much less if the hurricanes get them like NC say in the late 90s.
And about those legacy poisons from industrial farming--arsenic from chickens and chicken litter going back to the '50s, still going on, and now arsenic levels so high in our drinking water that Johns Hopkins ties it to diabetes and obesity. At least Oklahoma has the big chickens in federal court over this. As the AG of OK says, 'if you loose your water...'
We'd all pay a little more for safer eggs and bacon--probably even to have it taste like it used to, instead of being 15% brine by weight and still labeled 'natural.'
Ban CAFOs. Demand source labeling. Everyone gains.
July 30, 2009 10:36 PM | Reply
Good comment. Are they vegetarians? Are they going to quit eating meat because of this? Or will they have a cheesburger for lunch tomorrow and keep braying obout the inhumane conditions the aminals were raised in? My guess, they are all talk and no action.
July 30, 2009 11:04 PM | Reply
Folks,
Besides the awful conditions the animals deal with, the putrid conditions inflicted on the neighbors of these CAFOs, and what could be in these meat sources (and I love pork chops!) is that these huge farm factories only work economically with low energy prices. Those days are coming to an end and the era of the "1500 mile salad" and the "12,000 mile inventory" for a local big box retail store is coming to an end as well. What I think we will see here is a much greater localization of food production. In other words, Charlotte, NC will get much more of its daily foodstuffs (to include chicken and pork) from a radius of at most 50 miles and from far smaller and many more producers. Is this the return of the Real McCoys and stifling rural isolation and exploitation? No, this will be a more thoughtful reuse of land that was slated for suburbia, and can now be used for feeding our people while providing a lot of jobs. We can either do this, turn to renewable energies, or continue to scour the world for more oil, even as other nations look for more oil as well. That could lead to "resource wars" that would make Iraq look like a picnic. But that is a comment for another day.
July 31, 2009 12:36 PM | Reply