The following is from the Hawkeye Fly Fishers Association website: www.commonlink.com/hffa Posted by Tom Mathews Open Letter About French Creek Hog Confinement -Bob Wolf, neighbor My wife and I live in a farmhouse on a ridge in northeast Iowa overlooking French Creek, one of the state's premiere trout streams. The stream is used by fishermen and campers from late spring until early fall, and DNR game wardens make regular visits to the stream to ensure that everyone is fishing by the rules. Several summers ago, several wardens stationed themselves about a mile from the stream, checking every car that left, ready to tag a $15 fine for every trout above the limit. Now if the DNR is concerned about protecting trout, you'd expect them to get worked up about a hog confinement operation that could wipe out every fish in the stream. I was naive enough to think so. A half mile to our east, a neighboring farmer, Wayne Weber, has built three hog confinement barns under contract with Murphy Family Farms. This operation is on the French Creek watershed. Last week I called the DNR's deputy director, Don Paulin, who fields calls from angry Iowans. To my surprise, Paulin didn't know about the operation and doesn't even think French Creek is particularly worth saving His response was: "I would like to point out that it would be difficult for the legislature or the courts to determine what is a valuable stream or isn't a valuable stream." In other words, public opinion counts for nothing. Besides, Paulin said, "Every inch of Iowa is in the watershed of a creek." So why worry about this one, or any, right? Why worry about contamination at all? In the course of the conversation I accused Paulin, who speaks in the reasoned, measured tones of the career bureaucrat, of being a bureaucrat. He didn't like the term, and said he thought of himself as someone who enforced regulations. But does the DNR do that? Consider this. An individual or company that wants to build a confinement operation must submit its plans to the DNR. But once the plans are approved, the DNR makes no on-site inspection to assure that the operation was built according to specs! Blowing the whistle on violators, a DNR employee at the Manchester station told me, is up to local residents. The mega hog producers couldn't have gotten a sweeter deal from Iowa. The DNR pretends to be concerned, but isn't. Paulin said, "Are you aware of every statement that the DNR has made on this subject (of water contamination)?" I asked him to send me those statements. After a brief silence he said, "I don't know where to locate them." Larry Wilson, the head of Iowa DNR, is a Republican appointee. Needless to say, the Republican-dominated legislature was responsible for crafting the statute that - until recently reversed by the Iowa Supreme Court - stripped Iowans of the right to sue hog operations over nuisance - for odor, water contamination, property devaluation. Redress before the law is perhaps the most fundamental right of a U.S. citizen, and the politicians and Iowa Pork Producers took it away from us, if only for a time. Now that our right has been restored, Iowans need to fight for the right for local control over confinement operations. Remember, it is easier for the hog industry to control one set of politicians in Des Moines than to control 99 sets of county supervisors throughout the state. When I accused Paulin of being a bureaucrat solely interested in saving his job, he said, "I'm not interested in saving my job." That says it. When Governor-elect Vilsack goes in, let's hope he not only clears out Larry Wilson, but gives walking papers to the rest of DNR management. Robert Wolf, Nov. 1998 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- To get off the IOWA-TOPICS list, send email to [log in to unmask] Make the message text (not the Subject): SIGNOFF IOWA-TOPICS