NC Senate Creates Loophole for Polluting Hog Farms
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT:
Dr. Joe Rudek, 919-881-2913
Georgette Shepherd, 919-880-8033
(Raleigh, NC - July 10, 2008) The NC Senate today passed H 822, a bill that guts 1995 set back requirements for hog houses that were adopted to protect neighbors from odor and air and water pollution. Earlier this week the bill was rushed though a Senate committee without sufficient opportunity for the public to comment. The bill now goes to the NC House. Among other measures, H 822 would bypass the requirement that hog producers must have the consent of neighboring property owners or a new permit before fundamentally changing the nature of their hog operation.
The following statement may be attributed to Joe Rudek, senior scientist with Environmental Defense Fund:
“This bill fails to respect the rights and health and well being of citizens living close to hog farms. The public should have the same opportunity as pork producers and senators to study this bill and comment on the implications for rural communities. This bill will create a loophole that will perpetuate outmoded ways of hog farming on the oldest hog farms, rather than transitioning swine production facilities to technologies more protective of public health.”
With more than 3 million members, Environmental Defense Fund creates transformational solutions to the most serious environmental problems. To do so, EDF links science, economics, law, and innovative private-sector partnerships to turn solutions into action. edf.org
Latest press releases
-
President Trump Signs Bill That Will Raise Energy Costs, Increase Pollution
July 4, 2025 -
Approval of Long-Range Transmission Projects in Illinois Will Deliver Reliable, Resilient Energy Future
July 3, 2025 -
Senate Bill Will Raise Household Energy Prices, Take Away Jobs
July 1, 2025 -
Trump EPA Proposal Appears to Attack Endangerment Finding, Limits on Pollution from Cars and Trucks
July 1, 2025 -
MethaneSAT Loses Contact with Satellite
July 1, 2025 -
Independent Analysis Shows How Legislation Prioritizing Gas Will Cost North Carolinians Billions
July 1, 2025