Feedstuffs Magazine Hog Industry Insider Sept. 17, 2001 By STEVE MARBERY Feedstuffs Correspondent Sow unit pending Swine Graphics Enterprises Inc. of Webster City, Iowa, is awaiting approval for a 3,800-head breeding/farrowing complex in southern Iowa’s Clarke County, three miles northeast of Murray and 10 miles west of Osceola. A permit application for the proposed five-barn project has been pending for three months. Initial delays arose when the county failed to publish the permit application until last month. Iowa’s Department of Natural Resources (DNR) is reviewing the request and responding to 50 citizens opposing the project. Citizens have complained about odor and groundwater pollution potential. They also alleged the company broke the law by excavating before DNR approval. Allegations are included in a report citizens filed recently with the state. Craig Loffredo, company director of sow operations, said grading activities comply with state rules allowing earth movement if related to permitted stormwater diversion. The company operates four Clarke County sow units, including a facility built two years ago on the Mormon Trail that prompted a public protest. All facilities are sized at 3,800 sows and gilts. Aeration alternatives Odor control measures for the proposed operation include stationary lagoon aeration similar to waste treatment applied on two existing Clarke County Swine Graphics complexes. All operations utilize two-stage lagoons with pit recharge systems. The company will have spent $500,000 on aeration when the new operation is completed, with estimated total annual operating (electricity) expenses for treatment at $125,000, Loffredo noted. He believes fixed aeration systems have helped reduce odor concerns. Citizens fear total hog numbers will overwhelm efforts to contain odor, although the pig population is low compared to some northern Iowa counties. A looming concern involves potential for expansion on farmland the company purchased recently a few miles south of the proposed operation. Loffredo said there are no immediate plans to build barns on the property. When the new project is completed, Swine Graphics will own more than 20,000 sows, mostly in Clarke County, but attrition among the company’s leased farrowing units statewide has offset overall expansion, he said. The company feeds all of its pigs in Iowa. Leader of a concerned citizens organization Pat Anderson said slurry disposal is the real issue. Anderson, who farms with her husband a mile from the proposed complex, has told DNR the company lacks enough land for its manure. Loffredo disputed those allegations. He said the company owns 65 acres and has obtained easements for 200 acres, more than enough for slurry application. Citizens believe moving manure tankers along their roads will pose odor problems that transcend lagoons and hog barns. That concern is not unique to Clarke County. Copyright 2001, The Miller Publishing Company, a company of Rural Press Ltd. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - For SC email list T-and-C, send: GET TERMS-AND-CONDITIONS.CURRENT to [log in to unmask]