The Sterling Town Board approved the building permit for a proposed
2,400-head hog operation Monday night.
While
those seeking to build the farm, Jeff and Bonnie Parr of Ferryville,
have not yet applied for their state and federal permits to run the
operation; it appears there is little to stop it from being built. This
is despite considerable vocal opposition at public meetings where the
farm project has been discussed.
In the past week, there have
been three meetings dealing with the proposal, a meeting of the Vernon
County Land and Water Conservation Committee and two meetings of the
Sterling Town Board.
The land and water conservation committee
voted to hold off on a decision on either a new livestock siting
ordinance or a moratorium until the next land and water conservation
meeting on July 13, which should be followed by a public hearing on the
issue. From there the committee will have to forward either the
ordinance or the moratorium to the county board, which isn't scheduled
to meet until Aug. 7.
With the building permit approved, Bonnie
Parr said on Tuesday morning that the couple is "just about ready" to
submit paperwork for the only other two hurdles it must cross to run
the facility — the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) 313
standards permit and the NRCS 590 nutrient management plan regulation
permit.
"We have just a couple of things to finish up before they can be submitted," Bonnie Parr said.
The
largest crowd appeared at the town of Sterling's regular board meeting
last Thursday night. About 100 people showed up to participate despite
pouring rain and thunderstorms. Sterling Town Chairman Marvin
Christianson said it was the most people he's seen at a public meeting
in West Prairie "ever — I can assure you of that."
The crowd
heard from Jeff Parr, who owns the land near Retreat where the facility
is planned. Parr said he wanted to address the group because of what he
felt was misinformation being circulated. Parr passed out a photo of
another hog barn that is similar to the one he wants to construct.
"One
of the reasons we wanted to do this is because we were milking in a
42-cow barn and we are at the point we either have to expand the
operation or do something else," Parr said. "I know down the road
manure storage is going to be forced on everyone. Can you justify
building a pit for 42 cows? I am at the age where I can build a new
facility from scratch and do it right. I got the opportunity to do this
and do it environmentally safe, to the best we can. It is time to do
something."
Parr said the building would be 51 feet wide by 397
feet long and would be"open ventilation with side curtains." There
would also be an eight foot manure pit underneath the floor. The
facility would be able to store up to 1.2 million gallons of waste,
Parr said.
Parr said the operation would be able to raise two
groups of hogs per year from 12 pounds to 250 pounds and he estimates
they would produce about 680,000 gallons of waste per year. The extra
storage capacity would is designed in to accommodate times of the year
when the application of waste is delayed because of weather or for any
other reason, Parr said.
Parr said the building will be built to
the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) 313 standards which
covers manure storage facilities, Parr said.
"We can't just
build this thing," Parr said. "We have to submit what we want to do and
the state is going to say 'yes it will work or it won't work. So, there
are standards we have to follow.
Parr said the operation will be
regulated by the NRCS 590 nutrient management plan regulation, which
dictates how much waste can be applied per acre. Parr said according
those standards he will be able to apply 3,800 gallons of manure per
acre which means he will need 180 acres of cropland to apply the waste.
Parr said he intends to "knife" the manure into the ground and none of
it will be spread on the surface.
"The nutrient management plan,
the more I get into, the more I think it is probably a good idea for
anybody whether you are using commercial fertilizer or not," Parr said.
Parr
said he is requires to sample to the soil in five- acre grids and will
design the application of waste to fit the soil needs of those grid
samples.
"So, I am hitting the spots that need more and the
spots that need less I won't be over fertilizing," Parr said. "So,
there is a good possibility I won't be putting on as much fertilizer.
We are placing out there what we need."
Parr said he will be required to retest the soil every four years.
Parr
said rumors that he will not have enough land to spread waste are
unfounded as he will have 240 acres of land available between his land
and land his family owns. Parr also addressed the issue of a shutdown
plan and said he is required by the 313 standard to have a plan to
close the operation if he is no longer in business.
Lynn
Harrison, who is a former president of the Wisconsin Pork Association
and is vice-president of the National Pork Board, also spoke, saying he
raises 10,000 hogs a year in similar facilities within the village of
Elk Mound. Harrison said he built his first building in 1987 and has
barns located 500 feet from his house. Harrison said there is a grade
school a quarter of a mile from his barns. Harrison said he has never
had a complaint about odors from his neighbors.
When asked about
neighbors with existing health problems Harrison said his wife has had
asthma and is not affected by the hog operation, but is affected more
by household dust.
When asked about building the facility just
under the 1,000 animal unit limit that has tighter regulations, Parr
said he will have 95 percent of those regulations covered by the
records he will be required for his nutrient management plan. Harrison
said the difference is the 1,000 animal unit operation or Confined
Animal Feeding Operation (CAFO) has to submit those records to the
state instead of a local agency. Harrison said Parr will keep those
records, but will not be required to send them to the state every year.
When
asked about concerns over building on karst topography that is known
for leakage into the groundwater, Parr said he is following all state
and county regulations that control building or injecting manure near
sinkholes.
Another resident asked about rumors that Parr is
considering partnering with other producers and eventually putting up
eight additional structures like the one being proposed. Parr said, "We
don't know at this time what is going to happen for sure. It might be
that another company puts them up, too, I can't answer that."
When
asked if there have been health studies done on these types of
facilities Harrison said the Pork Council has done studies and they
have found adverse long-term health effects from confinement
operations. Sterling resident Jane Brothen asked about a John Hopkins
study that indicated that fumes from these types of facilities can be
toxic even miles away. Parr handed out his own study saying household
chemicals can produce more harmful effects than a hog facility.
"There
are all kinds of studies out there that can give you any answer you
want for whatever question you are asking," Parr said.
Brothen
asked Parr if he intends to test all the neighboring wells to make sure
there is no contamination, to which Parr responded that he will not.
Anita
Zibton asked State Senator Dan Kapanke about state regulations that
seem to prevent local units of government from controlling operations
like the one being proposed. Kapanke said the state animal siting
regulations in DATCP 51 were developed with many public hearings that
took into account many points of view.
"Everybody had a say,"
Kapanke said. "The whole idea behind the agriculture siting rule is to
grow agriculture in Wisconsin. We are an agriculture state. If someone
like Jeff wants to put in hog or dairy or chicken operation there are
rules and regulations that apply, that are very strict by the way. If
they follow the rules as stated, they can do it, and Jeff is doing
that."
"But if the local people say they don't want it, we don't have the power to enforce that," Zibton said.
Kapanke said the county needs to consider zoning to have more control over land use issues.
"If you as a group want to zone you have to step forward," Kapanke said. "That is a decision you have to make."
Crawford
County board member Phil Mueller was present at the meeting and said
Crawford County was one of the first with an animal siting ordinance
and asked if Parr would voluntarily go under the more restrictive CAFO
regulations even though they would be under 1,000 animal units. Parr
said he had "not ruled that out."
County supervisor Maynard Cox said he was upset that so many oppose a legitimate farming operation that is following the rules.
"I
am the county board supervisor for this area and I have kept an open
mind as much as I can possibly keep it," Cox said. "Right now there is
nothing the town can do and there is nothing that the county can do."
Cox
said his property value has more than tripled in 20 years because it is
in Sterling Township and the hog operation is less of an impact than
some existing farms.
"I probably won't get elected again, but I
don't care," Cox said. "Some of the questions you are putting this man
through… this is an entrepreneur.”
Brothen and William Holzi
asked the town board not make a decision on the building permit or any
other action, so they can pursue and injunction with the DNR.
LWC Meeting
The
concerns over the status of the operation and what the county can do to
ensure it is safe continued at a special land and water conservation
meeting on Monday.
The committee considered how to proceed issue
by either recommending the county board pass new county livestock
ordinance that would require a county permit and lower the CAFO
standards down to farming operations that are between 500 and 1,000
animal units, or to impose a moratorium on all construction in that
range until the county has time to consider its options.
Brent
Denzin of Midwest Environmental Advocates said it is typical in such
situations that counties use a moratorium to give then time to make
decisions on ordinances that will have a long-term impact.
Richard
Castelnuovo of the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture and Attorney
Stephanie Hopkins said using a moratorium on operations of this size
and including the Parrs could have a legal ramification. Castelnuovo
said it is common to use zoning to keep agricultural land use and
residential areas separated to minimize conflict. Castelnuovo said it
is also common to use moratoria to give public bodies time to sort out
the issue, but in this case the Parrs may be too far along in the
process and even if the county was able to implement zoning, this
operation would likely be in an agricultural zone.
Hopkins said
the county may not be able to be more restrictive than the ordinance
that is already proposed, so a moratorium may not be worth the risk.
"It
is difficult to come here and hear that one individual has more rights
than a bunch of individuals," said county resident Adrian Caldwell.
"How can we move forward when there are so many voices saying what we
need to do is to look at this?"
Caldwell asked the committee look for a "win-win" solution.
Jessica
Luhning asked the committee to consider the possibility that the Parrs
may be able to incrementally expand their operations, as has happened
in other locations around the state, and end up with a number of hog
facilities instead of just one.




