Dear Sierrans,

 

The Des Moines Register today says we need to do more to convince our
legislators.  See the article at: 

http://desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070114/OPINION03/7
01140317/1035/OPINION 

 

Here is one of many letters I have written. maybe you could send one of your
own to your favorite (or not) Legislator? ..

 

 

To Representative Donovan Olson, Chair of House Environmental Protection
Committee

December 19, 2006

 

Representative Olson,

 

Thank you for giving me the opportunity to review the documents you provided
in your previous email.  If I may take the liberty - I will respond to the
local control document in this note, and then, I will reply regarding your
other documents in my next note.

 

"Local Control"

 

To give you some background about my perception of the issue, I provide you
with a few pieces of information regarding my home county of Dickinson:  1)
In the last census, Dickinson County was the only growing rural county in
Iowa.  2) Latest data I could find on hogs and pigs sold in Dickinson (which
has a declining trend line over time) is $9,000,000 / year.  Latest data on
tourism revenues in Dickinson is $173,000,000 / year.  I.e., revenues from
hogs are equivalent to only 5% of the revenues from tourism in Dickinson
County.  And, 3) Currently, the entire agricultural industry (livestock +
crops) employs only 10.9% of those employed in the Spirit Lake laborshed
(those residences with a Spirit Lake zip code, which includes much of the
unincorporated area of Dickinson).

 

In just the last 2 Environmental Protection Commission meetings, there were
appeals to confinement construction permits from Cass, Adair, Calhoun and
Crawford Counties.  And I am presently working with folks from Dickinson,
Jefferson, Story, Cerro Gordo, Marshall and Palo Alto Counties, as well as
Iowa Farmers Unions, Iowa CCI and Sierra Club, who have members statewide.  

 

Iowa is not a one-size-fits-all state.  What might work in Sioux County is
inappropriate for Dickinson or Johnson Counties.  We trust local communities
to make land-use decisions regarding every other industry, why not
industrial agriculture?  Why does the state take such a paternalistic
attitude about confined livestock, will the state next tell counties where
to place ethanol plants or slaughter houses? And, why the encouragement of
industrial agriculture and the bio-economy anyway, why not encourage the
tourism and recreational industries, or encourage the internet generation to
live and work in rural Iowa while enjoying its "small town" character?  Why
not preserve incorporated areas and public use areas from the encroachment
of industrial agriculture?

 

Confinements are not 'benign" facilities.  Confinements generate significant
air and water pollution that affect potentially all residents of certain
counties.  They contaminate surface, ground and drinking water supplies.
Confinement operators spread hormones, antibiotics, bacteria, excess
nitrogen and excess phosphorous on lands, sometimes as close as fifty feet
from a person's doorstep.  Confinements emit over 200 chemicals into the
air, causing known health problems, especially to children and the elderly.
Industrial farming changes the social fabric of communities by creating
greater income inequality, altering population size and social composition,
which affects crime, social conflict, family stability, local class
structure, community participation, and local shopping patterns.  Industrial
farming brings on the need for greater governmental intervention to address
environmental and health problems and services for the poor.  Case studies
report the loss of local autonomy, in which communities become increasingly
subject to the influence of external business owners whose interests may not
be compatible with their own.  

 

I fully support the concept of utilizing zoning to guide decision making for
all land uses in the unincorporated areas of the county.  However, I am
aware there is also a similar but different approach being considered as
well, one that would apply to all counties while still including some
state-generated criteria for decision-making.  Rather than using "zoning",
the proposal utilizes the county "home rule" sections of the Iowa Code and
authorizes a county confinement siting ordinance based upon statutorily
defined criteria.  The criteria in the proposal attached are based on
environmental concerns.  I would ask you to consider as well economic
development criteria that would allow counties like Dickinson or Johnson to
recognize that industrial livestock makes an insignificant contribution to
county revenues, but may cause significant damage to primary revenues such
as tourism or retail sales.

 

In closing, I respectively state that in addition to this being a
"political" issue, it is indeed a "public policy" issue as well as a "social
justice" issue.  I understand that the industrial agriculture lobby is
powerful and well-funded.  That's why we worked so hard to bring Democrats
into office and obtain majorities in the Iowa House and Senate, as well as a
Democrat for Governor.  If Democrats do not stand up for the average person,
we will simply withdraw from the political scene, and Republicans will once
again take political control.  What difference would it make after all?

 

Thank you for allowing me to express my thoughts,

 

Donna Buell

2608 Manhattan Blvd

Spirit Lake, IA 51360

(712) 336-2103; (712) 339-8004 


- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
To unsubscribe from the IOWA-TOPICS list, send any message to:
[log in to unmask]

Check out our Listserv Lists support site for more information:
http://www.sierraclub.org/lists/faq.asp

Sign up to receive Sierra Club Insider, the flagship
e-newsletter. Sent out twice a month, it features the Club's
latest news and activities. Subscribe and view recent
editions at http://www.sierraclub.org/insider/