> Legislative Push Would Exempt Livestock Pollution
> From Superfund
>
>
> House lawmakers are floating draft legislation that
> would exempt pollution
> from livestock feeding farms from Superfund cleanup
> requirements, a plan
> that could undercut groundbreaking new lawsuits
> charging the industry is
> liable for contamination and resource damages from
> animal manure.
>
>
> At the same time, EPA has been working on a legal
> agreement with the
> agriculture industry to temporarily exclude it from
> certain pollution
> reporting requirements.
>
>
>
<http://insideepa.com/secure/data_extra/dir_05/epa2005_1369a.pdf>The
> House
> proposal, reportedly drafted by Rep. Charles Taylor
> (R-NC), appears to go
> further than previous legislative attempts by Sen.
> Larry Craig (R-ID) to
> exempt concentrated animal feeding operations
> (CAFOs) from requirements to
> report emissions under Superfund law, because the
> House plan suggests the
> industry would not be responsible for cleanups or
> natural resource damages
> (NRD).
>
>
> Environmentalists close to the issue say Taylor
> considered offering the
> language as an amendment to a conference report for
> EPA’s spending bill,
> which was approved in committee July 26. Taylor, who
> chairs the House
> Appropriations subcommittee on Interior, environment
> and related agencies,
> declined to offer the amendment after
> environmentalists mounted an
> aggressive lobbying campaign to oppose it, these
> sources say.
>
>
> Spokespersons for Taylor and Craig could not be
> reached for comment, and it
> is unclear if they will try to find another vehicle
> for the legislation.
>
>
> The language would have specified that animal manure
> is not a “hazardous
> substance” or a “pollutant or contaminant” as
> defined under Superfund law.
> The effect would be to exempt manure waste from both
> cleanup and reporting
> requirements under the law.
>
>
> Last year, Craig proposed an amendment to EPA’s
> spending bill that would
> have said emissions from agricultural facilities are
> not considered a
> “release” under Superfund. The impact would have
> been to exempt CAFOs from
> reporting requirements under Superfund and the
> Emergency Planning and
> Community Right-to-Know Act.
>
>
> One environmentalist says it is unclear if the
> earlier Craig amendment
> would have also achieved exemptions from cleanup
> requirements, but the most
> recent language would explicitly do so. “I think the
> Craig language was
> intended to do the same thing, it was just really
> sloppy drafting,” the
> source says.
>
>
> A series of high-profile court decisions, including
> Sierra Club v. Seaboard
> Farms, Inc. in 2004, held that large CAFOs are
> subject to reporting
> requirements under Superfund and the Emergency
> Planning and Community
> Right-to-Know Act -- without addressing cleanup
> responsibilities.
>
>
> But Oklahoma Attorney General Drew Edmunson (D)
> recently filed a lawsuit in
> June against 14 poultry companies arguing that
> animal wastes at CAFOs
> trigger cleanup and NRD liability under Superfund.
> Edmunson argued in its
> complaint to the court in The City of Tulsa v. Tyson
> Foods that the animal
> facilities released hazardous substances from
> poultry waste.
>
>
> A spokeswoman for Edmunson says he is involved in
> discussions with
> companies over the case, and could not comment on
> the possible effect of
> new legislation.
>
>
> A second lawsuit, The City of Waco v. Dennis
> Schouten, is pending in the
> U.S. District Court for the Western District of
> Texas and raises similar
> arguments, charging that dairy farms are subject to
> cleanup requirements
> under Superfund law.
>
>
> Meanwhile, EPA has once again extended the deadline
> for signing on to its
> controversial agriculture consent agreement that
> would temporarily exempt
> participating companies from the Clean Air Act and
> Superfund reporting
> requirements. The agency had earlier extended the
> deadline to July 29, but
> the new signup date will be Aug. 12.
>
>
> EPA acting enforcement chief Thomas Skinner
>
<http://insideepa.com/secure/data_extra/dir_05/epa2005_1369b.pdf>said
> in a
> July 28 letter to the National Milk Producers
> Federation (NMPF) that it was
> allowing the extension after dairy producers said
> they were hesitant about
> whether they could obtain funding to participate in
> the agreement. Skinner
> added that even if they signed up by the deadline,
> dairy companies would
> have additional time to back out until EPA forwards
> the consent agreements
> to its Environmental Appeals Board (EAB).
>
>
> “While the extension is shorter than requested, it
> is important to note
> that until final approval by EPA, those who
> participate in the agreement
> have no obligations,” Skinner wrote. “EPA will not
> forward dairy agreements
> to the EAB if NMPF informs us that funding is
> unavailable.”
>
> Date: August 2, 2005
>
> © Inside Washington Publishers
>
>
>
============================================================
> Ross Vincent
> Senior Policy Advisor
> Sierra Club
> 1829 South Pueblo Boulevard, #300
> Pueblo, CO 81005-2105
> 719-561-3117
> 415-946-3442(Fax)
> [log in to unmask]
>
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