ALEC exposed: Protecting factory farms and sewerage sludge?
source: http://prwatch.org/news/2011/08/10922/alec-exposed-protecting-factory-farms-and-sewage-sludge
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- JanforGore
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However, in the past few decades, intensive corporatization of farming has threatened both the future of family farming and the ability of neighbors to regulate the development of industrial agricultural operations that have transmogrified many farms into factories. Small-scale farms that resembled Old MacDonald's farm (with an oink oink here and a moo moo there) have increasingly disappeared or been turned into enormous livestock confinements with literal lagoons of liquified manure and urine, super-concentrated smells that could make a skunk faint, or vast fields of monoculture crops grown with a myriad of chemicals and pesticides and sometimes even sewage sludge. For example, the decade before the first right to farm law was passed, it took one million family farms to raise nearly 60 million pigs but by 2001, less than ten percent (80,000 farms) were growing the same number of pigs.
Capitalizing on the sentiment of protecting traditional farming, giant agribusiness interests have convinced some states to revise their Right to Farm laws to stealthily protect the most egregious of industrial farming practices from legitimate nuisance suits. The Center for Media & Democracy has recently exposed and analyzed a cache of bills voted on by corporations and politicians behind closed doors and then introduced in state legislatures without any notice to the public of the role of the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) bill factory in the production of the legislation and no disclosure of the fact that corporations pre-voted on the bills, let alone disclosures of the names of those companies. In 1996, ALEC suddenly took an interest in expanding right to farm laws. ALEC's corporate backers, unsurprisingly, hale from the factory farm side of the equation.
ALEC's Corporate Backers
ALEC's corporate members and funders have included a number of agriculture interests, including Archer Daniels Midland (ADM), Cargill, and DuPont, as well as industry organizations like the National Pork Producers Council, the Illinois Corn Marketing Board, and the Illinois Soybean Association. Cargill is the nation's second largest beef processor, third largest turkey processor, and fourth largest pork processor. In three other areas, flour milling, soybean crushing, and production of animal feed, ADM joins Cargill as the biggest in the industry. Chemical giant DuPont is one of the world's largest makers of numerous pesticides, and in 1999, it purchased seed giant Pioneer Hi-Bred, the world's top seller of corn seeds, including genetically engineered seeds.
Unlike the corporations, the National Pork Producers Council (NPPC) is actually led by farmers ... and lobbyists for multinational pork processors, like Don Butler, past president of NPPC and lobbyist for Smithfield Foods, the largest pork processor in the world. The farmers who lead NPPC tend to own farms similar to that of NPPC president Doug Wolf. Wolf's farm produces 24,000 hogs per year - and it also has a beef feedlot and 1,200 acres of corn, soy, and alfalfa.
Perhaps the most surprising "agribusiness" donor to ALEC is the most powerful of all: Koch Industries. It turns out that an early part of the Koch empire was the Matador Cattle Company, founded in 1952. To this day, Koch Agriculture Company retains Matador Cattle Company, which has about 15,000 cattle. However, in the 1990's, Koch Beef Company was the nation's 10th largest cattle feeder, with feedlots that held up to 165,000 cattle. Koch bought a new feedlot in 1996 and, among other things, decided to expand its capacity by adding 20,000 more cows. The neighbors did not think that was a good idea:
Some businesses and farm owners expressed concerns over the health of their employees, some of whom would be housed within 300 feet of Koch's cattle pens. Other neighbors cited concerns over the potential for groundwater pollution, the amount of dirt, insects, and odors added to the area contributing to health problems, a decrease in the quality of life for nearby residents, and the possible devaluation of land.
Koch overcame their objections with the ruling of a friendly regulator in Texas, winning the right to expand. With all these corporate interests in limiting regulation of factory farming, thank goodness their pals at ALEC approved a model version of a Right to Farm bill in 1996!
Why Corporations Care About Laws For Farmers
While nearly all farms in the United States are technically "family farms" (a tiny fraction are owned directly by corporations), multinational agribusiness corporations have a major stake in how these farms are operated. Often family farms take the form of Wolf L & G Farms LLC, the farm owned by the family of Doug Wolf (mentioned above). Particularly for chickens and hogs, individual farmers often contract with meatpackers like Cargill, Smithfield, or Tyson. In contract farming arrangements, the corporations provide the animals, medications, and feed to the farmers; the farmer is responsible for the animals' housing, manure, and the bodies of animals that die prematurely. When the animals are fully grown, they are picked up by the corporation, which slaughters, processes, and markets the animal and plays the farmer for the weight the animal gained in his or her care. The farmers have most of the debt and risk and the corporation has most of the power and profit.
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WagonMaster
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Another friggin' shadow government that needs to be investigated.
- 10 months ago
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WagonMaster
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cmc101
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Thanks for posting this
I was borne and raised on the farm lived there until i was married worked for a coop and i watch the farmer surrender to futures which is nothing but sharecroppers selling to Alec supporters - 10 months ago
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cmc101
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queenofit
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Thanks for posting this one Jan. ALEC really needs a lot of attention. They have been getting by far too long with all their secret shenanigans. You know, I knew the corporate world was taking over our government, but I saw it more in terms the way they used their vast sums of money to alter the way legislation was decided. I had no idea (until recently) how ALEC was giving over to the corporate world in terms of what laws/legislation was even making it out of committee's.
(excerpt from Democracy Now regarding this topic) Aug 5/2011..
"TERRY GROSS: Why give corporations such a big say in drafting legislation?"
Me here...then Ellington goes on trying to play down the corporate influence. But here was DN guest Lisa Graves comment....
"LISA GRAVES: Well, it’s interesting, because what we saw and what we heard from inside yesterday is that, quite clearly, corporations can veto things before the public board that Noble Ellington sits on have a chance to approve it. So, in essence, if the corporations disagree on proposed legislation at the task force level, it never makes it to the board that Senator Ellington sits on."
Me again, this is sooooo critical, because if these corporations that meet at the ALEC meetings "veto" legislation before our own voted in legislators even see the proposed legislation, this is absolutely the corporations choosing what is decided in our country, PLAIN AND SIMPLE.
- 10 months ago
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queenofit
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JanforGore
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queenofit:
This is the crux of our dysfunction and corruption. They write the laws and place them right in the legislators hands! All behind closed doors in secrecy without our knowledge which nullifies our votes. It is the antithesis to all this country once stood for. And to think that this one organization can rewrite laws that favor the very entities poisoning this planet and our food all for the dollar is beyond immoral.They are the ones we need to expose.
- 10 months ago
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JanforGore
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queenofit
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JanforGore:
ALEC is operating as a legislative body, and not open to public scrutiny, we have completely lost our country to the corporate body and no one seems to care. I realize how difficult this is to comprehend, but if you look around and see how bad thing have become and the acceleration is numbing, it is obvious what we are heading toward. This is wrong on so many levels and I don't see how it can continue if enough of our public becomes aware? ALEC SHOULD BE IN THE NEWS EVERY DAY? IS IT? I have never heard of them until last week?
- 10 months ago
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queenofit
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GRC54
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Good story Jan for Gore. This is why I eat less meat products and support local farms here in Mass. We need more regulations not less or we will have a Koch steak and die.
- 5 days ago
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GRC54
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OlBlue
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Factory farming, in particular Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs), is bad for our country on so many levels.. Most of the animal products consumed in this country come from such horror shows.
--Animals receive antibiotics to offset crowding and poor sanitation, as well as to spur growth. At least 70 percent of all antibiotics sold in the U.S. are given to healthy food animals. Guess where those antibiotics end up.
--Horrible suffering endured by the animals throughout their short lives..
--Mass pollution of ground water and surface water, often hundreds of miles from the source.
--Huge govt. subsidies to factory farms.
--The demise of family farms.
--Terrible working conditions and low pay. Poultry processing has almost double the injury and illness rate than trades like coal mining and construction.
- 10 months ago
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OlBlue
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DominicBlackwellCooper
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More reasons why a sustainable living revolution may be on the horizon: http://current.com/specials/urban-mobility/93384098_terreform1-and-urban-sustain...
- 10 months ago
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DominicBlackwellCooper
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JanforGore
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http://current.com/community/93153561_food-chain-breach-radioactive-sludge-used-...
This also relates to wastes from fracking.
- 10 months ago
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JanforGore
