UPDATE:
The judge turned down Big Ag's request:
.@MCEA1974 & the Assist Attorney General successfully defended @MnPCA’s extension of the public comment period for proposed expansion of a mega dairy in Winona County. In her decision, Judge said, “It’s better to have the right [EIS] decision than a rushed one.” #EISyes @LSPnow
— LandStewardshipProject (@LSPnow) October 31, 2018
The Minneapolis Star Tribune and Winona Daily News report on an injunction sought by ag groups that would prevent the extension of the public comment period for the expansion of the Daley Dairy in Winona County.
The move to expand comes at a time in which we read headlines like that in Bloomberg in mid-October: America Is Drowning in Milk Nobody Wants.
Apparently, 15 more days for the public to review thousands of pages of documents would cause the operation to come crashing down.
Josephine Marcotty reports in Ag industry sues state over public review of Winona County megafarm:
The full power of Minnesota’s agricultural industry will line up against state pollution regulators in a Ramsey County court on Wednesday, in an unexpectedly heated conflict over how much time the public will have to comment on a major expansion of a dairy megafarm in Winona County.
Eight of the state’s leading agricultural groups filed suit against the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA), arguing that the agency lacks authority to add two weeks to a 30-day public comment period outlined in state law.
At issue is the expansion of Daley Farms of Lewiston, from 1,728 dairy cows to 4,680, in an area of the state which is already experiencing significant drinking-water contamination from agriculture. In Utica Township, where the dairy is located, some 46 percent of private wells tested higher than the legal limit for nitrate, which primarily comes from fertilizer and manure.
The Daley proposal is just one of many new or expanding large animal operations generating conflicts in communities throughout southeast Minnesota. The MPCA is weighing whether to take the unusual step of conducting major environmental reviews on two proposed animal operations, one in Fillmore County and another in Wabasha County.
In Winona County, the Daley proposal has generated intense public interest on both sides of the question. The business is already operating above the size allowed by county regulations, but it was grandfathered in when the county changed its ordinance.
Earlier this year, it applied for a state permit to expand, and the MPCA opened a 30-day public comment period on Oct. 1. A public hearing on Oct. 16 drew a crowd that included supporters and opponents. After receiving requests from the public, the MPCA agreed to extend the comment period to Nov. 15, despite the objections of Daley Farms.
On Friday the agricultural groups, including the Minnesota Farm Bureau, the Minnesota Pork Producers and others, filed suit. Daley Farms is not one of the plaintiffs.
“The issue has nothing to do with Daley per se,” said Gene Hugoson, interim director of the Minnesota AgriGrowth Council, a major industry group. “It’s about whether or not the MPCA has the authority to arbitrarily change the law in terms of the number of days to comment.”
The MPCA said in a legal document filed Tuesday that it does have legal authority to extend the comment period, and an agency spokesman said it has done so before. In this case, the agency said, it had received more comments than usual, and that many people called asking for an extension because local farmers were too busy with the harvest. The agency also said the Daley proposal would more than double what is already the largest feedlot in the county, and it wanted to be sure that the community had the chance for meaningful engagement.
That’s exactly what the farm groups are trying to prevent, said Bobby King, policy director for the Land Stewardship Project, a conservation and family farm group that has been involved in the fight. “They don’t want more opportunity for local farmers and residents to understand what’s being proposed,” he said.
The Daley proposal includes thousands of documents and significant potential impacts around the community, King said. It calls for two new wells that would each draw 30 million gallons of water per year, bringing the total used by the farm to 92 million gallons per year. Manure would be spread in areas near municipal drinking water systems that are already high in nitrate, and where karst geology and sinkholes pull contaminants directly from surface fields into the aquifer. And there are already 13 feedlots within a 3-mile radius. . . .
Read the rest at the Strib. The Winona Daily News takes a different approach in On behalf of Daley Farms expansion, state ag groups file injunction to deny MPCA comment period extension, blending news of the request for an injunction with previously published letters for and against the dairy expansion.
We'll keep an eye out for the judge's ruling, as we do our errands and process apples we gathered from our orchards, as well as those from neighbors and friends. There's nothing like apple butter making to cheer the soul.
Photo: Old school dairy cows on pasture. That's not what you see at megadairies.
If you appreciate our posts and original analysis, you can mail contributions (payable to Sally Jo Sorensen, 600 Maple Street, Summit SD 57266) or use the paypal button in the upper right hand corner of this post. Those wishing to make a small ongoing monthly contribution should click on the paypal subscription button.
Or you can contribute via this link to paypal; use email [email protected] as recipient.
Comments