Forwarded by Jane Clark from:
David Wallinga, MD
Director, Food and Health Program
Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy

Excerpt:  "The concentration and homogenization of animal agriculture, which
ultimately depends on underpriced grain, has been a social and environmental
disaster in the Upper Midwest."

December 2, 2004
EDITORIAL
Fighting for Local Control

Given the results of the election, voters' power should be strong and
healthy in rural America. Perhaps it is when it comes to voting for
statewide and national offices, but not when it comes to local environmental
issues - especially concerning factory farms. The latest example is
Minnesota. Unlike Iowa and Wisconsin, Minnesota still retains the principle
of control at the township level. Local residents can, for instance, decide
whether they want a large-scale hog-confinement operation next door. That
has kept Minnesota relatively free of the mammoth factory farms that have
polluted Iowa.

But last year Gov. Tim Pawlenty convened a 14-member advisory group - a
virtual cross section of industrial agriculture in the state - to find ways
to increase the number of livestock in Minnesota. The task force released
its report last June. Its principal recommendation is to weaken local
control in order to remedy what the report calls "the lack of predictability
and uniformity" in the creation of factory farms.

The report also advises exploring the possibility of raising the number of
animals allowed on such farms before environmental reviews kick in and
moving the approval process to the state capital. And it attacks Minnesota's
Corporate Farm Law, which prohibits corporate farming.

The report has caused an uproar, for good reason. It's a blueprint for the
destruction of family farming in Minnesota. The way to aid animal
agriculture isn't to sell out to corporate interests or make rural residents
feel powerless. It's to increase the diversity of Minnesota farming, build
new markets and preserve rural life. Massive feedlots and hog-confinement
operations do none of that.

This report is the result of a one-sided task force, whose advice was
assembled without consulting a wide range of Minnesota farmers. It fosters
one-sided agriculture, driven only by corporate interests. The concentration
and homogenization of animal agriculture, which ultimately depends on
underpriced grain, has been a social and environmental disaster in the Upper
Midwest. The evidence isn't hard to find. All Governor Pawlenty needs to do
is take a drive through central Iowa, where corporate factory farms are a
blight on the land.

Copyright 2004 The New York Times

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