-Caveat Lector-

http://cgi.pathfinder.com/time/magazine/archive/1996/dom/960318/agriculture.html

TIME Magazine

March 18, 1996 Volume 147, No. 12


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HOGGING THE TABLE

Corporate pig factories are supplanting traditional farms--and critics are
raising a stink about it

JOHN GREENWALD

Colorado farmers Galen Travis and Jim Dobler have seen the future, and it
stinks. Just upwind of
their grain fields, a company called Midwest Farms, owned by hog entrepreneur
Ronald Houser,
plans to build an $80 million facility that will raise 450,000 hogs a year. From
Colorado to the
Carolinas, enterprising growers like Houser and agribusiness giants such as
Cargill and Continental
Grain are building such livestock factories to mass-produce hogs for packers
like Hormel Foods
and John Morrell.

But even job-short rural communities are squealing, fearful of environmental
problems and resentful
of yet another mechanized assault on their way of life. In Colorado, Travis and
Dobler are leading a
fight to keep Midwest out. It's not just the olfactory affront posed by tons of
reeking hog manure
that worries them. The megafarm will lap up millions of gallons of water,
threatening part of the
Oglalla Aquifer, the underground lake that provides drinking and irrigation
water to much of the
western Great Plains. The farmers are also concerned that the deep lagoons where
hog waste is
stored could seep through the dry soil and pollute the aquifer. "We don't see
any good coming of
this," Travis says. "The hogs are only going to bring trouble."

The vast livestock factories are a long way from the here-a-pig, there-a-pig
operations of traditional
hog farms. The plants turn out pigs as if they were piggy banks from football
field--length buildings,
where the animals are confined to small pens and fed, medicated and monitored
with an exacting
precision that fattens them to 265 lbs. in six months. Then it's off to
slaughterhouses, where porkers
become pork chops, spareribs and bacon.

These porkopolises are multiplying like rabbits across the U.S. The newcomers
increased their share
of the $30 billion U.S. pork industry from 7% to 17% between 1988 and 1994;
experts say the
factories will live higher on the hog by the end of next year, capturing nearly
30% of the market.

Don't expect the factory pigs to be entered in the county fair. "There's a
serious question as to
whether these facilities can still be called agriculture," argues Nancy
Thompson, staff attorney for the
Center for Rural Affairs in Walthill, Nebraska, which opposes the megafarms.
"They are more like a
commercial industry than a farm."

The march of commerce is being challenged by environmentalists and advocates of
rural values. In
North Carolina, where a population of 8.5 million hogs exceeds the state's 7.2
million people,
opposition surged last summer after a rain-swollen lagoon spilled 22 million
gal. of hog feces and
urine over the countryside. At a "Hog Summit" two weeks ago, environmental
activists made 12
recommendations to the state, including measures to reduce odors and limit the
construction of farms
near watersheds.

In Kansas, voters in 12 of the 14 counties that have put factory farms on the
ballot in recent years
have elected to keep them out. In Nebraska, a state ban on corporate farms has
sharply slowed
their growth. Elsewhere, opponents have used zoning and environmental laws to
block plans for new
farms. Residents are also seeking to shut plants now in operation. "The smells
are horrendous,"
complains Carla Smalts, an Oklahoma farm wife who has sued to prevent a pig
palace from opening
near her home. She's also helping to coordinate anti-hog farm movements in five
states. In
Colorado, where water rights are often a heated issue, Travis, Dobler and an
organization called
Alliance Conserving Tomorrow used state groundwater laws that restrict new wells
to stop Midwest
Farms from drilling on the 8,000 acres that it is acquiring for its site.

Nationally, the battle may be decided at the dinner table. Health-conscious
Americans are eating
more of "the other white meat." Thanks in part to marketing campaigns that
stress the low fat content
of pork, consumption in the U.S. has edged up, from 49 lbs. per capita to 53
lbs. during the past
nine years, even as beef consumption has fallen, from 79 lbs. per capita to 68
lbs. (Americans eat
poultry, the current king of the table, at the per-capita rate of 73 lbs. a
year.) The lofty goal of the
National Pork Producers Council is to overtake beef by the year 2000. Growing
even faster are
U.S. exports of pork, which have quadrupled, to 720 million lbs. a year over the
past eight years.

There are a few towns--hamlets, if you will--where the factories are being
welcomed. Rol Hudler,
mayor of Burlington, Colorado (pop. 3,000), smells prosperity in the 200 jobs
Midwest Farms has
promised to bring to town. "The benefits for us will be mind boggling," Hudler
says. For his part,
Midwest president Houser must meet state regulations limiting the amount of
nitrates and other
manure products that leach into the soil. Among other things, the company plans
to line the 30
lagoons that will contain hog wastes with heavy plastic sheeting designed to
prevent the fetid brew
from oozing into the aquifer. But Travis is still holding his nose. Says he:
"We're not giving up until
we can be convinced that there will be minimal impact." As minimal an impact as
450,000 pigs can
make.

--Reported by Lisa H. Towle/Raleigh and Richard Woodbury/Kersey

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