Posted on Mon, Mar. 11, 2002 - Lexington Herald-Leader
Food not cheap if you figure cost to health, environment
By Aloma W. Dew
(Aloma W. Dew is the Sierra Club's conservation organizer for Kentucky)
How do we determine a fair price for our food? Is cheap food really
cheap? A recent editorial urged consumers to consider the price to the
"environment, public health, taxpayers, agriculture policy, worker safety
and U.S. border security" when buying chicken. Until we consumers realize
the power we have when making food choices, we will not correct the
problems and the lie of cheap food.
The Sierra Club has been working to educate citizens about the many
problems associated with concentrated animal feeding operations (known as
CAFOs) and the unsustainability of industrial agriculture. This type of
agriculture is neither sustainable nor farming -- these are animal
factories that create problems that cost us all, urban as well as rural
residents, in the long run.
Under Gov. Paul Patton's emergency CAFO regulations, which the General
Assembly has refused to accept and make permanent, the corporation that
owns the birds and controls their feed and medication is held jointly
liable for environmental problems caused by these facilities. Kentucky is
the first state to adopt such regulations to hold corporations like Tyson
accountable for the pollution caused by their factories. It makes good
sense for consumers, growers and neighbors, all of whom need protection.
The grower has no control over whether he receives a full shipment of
healthy birds, what they eat, what is in the feed or when they will be
picked up. The grower owns the dead birds and the waste, and must bear
the full burden for environmental problems. He or she becomes a manager,
not a farmer. The grower is entirely at the mercy of the corporation and
should not be left holding the bag when there is an environmental or
health problem. Neither should the taxpayer be left with this burden.
Those who live near poultry CAFOs tell of respiratory problems, sore
throats and nausea. They describe windows covered with flies and dust,
putrid stench and waves of rodents. They talk about the stress of being
captive in their homes, unable to enjoy their rural property, which in
many cases has been in a family for generations; the noise and lights;
and sleepless nights when chickens are being loaded for processing.
Although most readers will never have to contend with the overwhelming
odor, dust or flies, each of us will need to take antibiotics at some
time. We assume they will work and that infectious diseases will continue
to yield to the miracle of antibiotics. Yet recent reports by the
American Medical Association, the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, the Union of Concerned Scientists and other groups reveal
that antibiotic resistance is growing at an alarming rate.
This is caused in part by the fact that animals are given low doses of
antibiotics in their feed and water. Cipro (a fluoroquinolone) became a
household word after the post Sept. 11 anthrax threats. It is apparently
the most effective drug for the treatment of anthrax and many other
illnesses, but its usefulness has been eroded by the use of the same
family of drugs to help chickens grow faster.
Some companies recently announced that they would phase out use of
fluoroquinolones in broilers. The public needs to be assured that this is
done with all due speed and that it is done in all poultry products, by
all companies.
When animals are grown in smaller numbers and more humane conditions,
they do not need such medication. Perhaps we should preface our purchases
in stores and restaurants with inquiries as to where the food comes from,
how it was raised, whether it contains antibiotics and what the
conditions in the processing plant were. Our purchasing power is one way
we can bring about change.
The health of Kentuckians, the protection of our air, water and soil, and
support for those farmers who want to treat the Earth gently are goals we
all share, urban and rural. When you are at the grocery or restaurant,
keep in mind the issues of justice, the environment, health and the true
cost of cheap food.
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