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Waterkeeper Alliance; NRDC; Sierra Club
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
FEBRUARY 28, 2005
4:23 PM
CONTACT: Waterkeeper Alliance; NRDC; Sierra Club
Waterkeeper Alliance: Robert F. Kennedy Jr. 914-422-4343,
Jeff Odefey 914-674-0622 ext. 204
NRDC: Melanie Shepherdson 202-302-7306
Elliott Negin 202-289-2405
Sierra Club: Eric Huber 303-449-5595
 
EPA Factory Farm Pollution Rule Illegal, Says Federal Appeals Court
Rule Violated Clean Water Act, Threatens Public Health, Conservation Groups Say
 

NEW YORK -- February 28 -- A 2003 Bush administration farm pollution rule violates the Clean Water Act by allowing large-scale livestock farms to apply manure to land without federal or state oversight or public input, the U.S. Court of Appeals in New York ruled today. The ruling in Waterkeeper Alliance v. EPA was the result of a lawsuit filed by three conservations groups, which charged that the rule shielded factory farms from liability for damage caused by animal waste pollution.

The groups, Waterkeeper Alliance, Sierra Club, and NRDC (Natural Resources Defense Council), filed the suit in March 2003. The Environmental Protection Agency had issued the rule in February 2003 under a 1992 consent decree between the agency and NRDC. It went into effect in April of that year. (For a copy of the court ruling, contact Elizabeth Heyd at eheyd@nrdc.org.)

“These regulations were the product of a conspiracy between a lawless industry and compliant public officials in cahoots to steal the public trust,” said Robert F. Kennedy Jr., president of the Waterkeeper Alliance and an NRDC senior attorney. “I’m grateful that the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals has taken the government and the barons of corporate agriculture to the woodshed for a well earned rebuke.”

Thirty years ago, Congress identified concentrated animal feeding operations as point sources of water pollution to be regulated under the Clean Water Act’s water pollution permitting program. The scale of animal production at individual operations has dramatically increased since then, and factory farms today produce 500 million tons of manure a year. In December 2000, EPA proposed a new rule with initiatives that would have protected the environment, but the Bush administration stripped them from the final rule after agribusinesses objected.

Under the Bush administration rule, animal factories were able to continue to dump millions of gallons of liquefied manure into open pits, called lagoons, and then spray the liquid over fields. Typically the manure runs off the fields into nearby streams or seeps into underground water supplies, polluting water with viruses, bacteria, pesticides, antibiotics, hormones and excessive nutrients.

The court found that:

· The rule illegally allowed factory farms to write the part of their permits that limit spraying manure on fields without state or federal review or approval—and without notifying the public.

  • The EPA had failed to require factory farms to use the necessary technological controls to reduce bacteria and other pathogens from their pollution.
  • The rule violated the Clean Water Act by exempting factory farms from meeting water quality standards.

“The court agreed that polluters can’t be trusted to write their own permits,” said Melanie Shepherdson, an attorney with NRDC’s water program. “They have to be accountable, especially because they pose such a major threat to public health.”

“The court agreed that we can do better than the Bush administration’s plan,” said Eric Huber, a Sierra Club attorney. “When technology and existing law can keep animal waste out of our rivers, why should Americans have to settle for a plan that allows meat companies to pollute more?”

Waterkeeper Alliance is an international grassroots organization connecting and empowering 129 local Waterkeeper programs. Each Waterkeeper program is the voice for their waterway, serving as the investigator, advocate, scientist, educator and lawyer for their local waterbody. More information is available at www.waterkeeper.org.

Inspired by their personal connection to nature, the Sierra Club’s more than 700,000 members work together to protect the planet. The Sierra Club is the oldest, largest, and most influential grassroots environmental organization in America. For more information, go to www.sierraclub.org.

The Natural Resources Defense Council is a national, nonprofit organization of scientists, lawyers and environmental specialists dedicated to protecting public health and the environment. Founded in 1970, NRDC has more than 1 million members and e-activists nationwide, served from offices in New York, Washington, Los Angeles and San Francisco. More information on NRDC is available at its Web site, www.nrdc.org.

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