Farmers Stand Against Huge Feedlot Operation

FRANKLIN COUNTY, US - Third and fourth generation Franklin County farmers today filed a lawsuit to protect their water and way of life from a massive industrial feedlot.
calendar icon 1 July 2009
clock icon 2 minute read

The feedlot will pump more than a million gallons of groundwater per day total from an area otherwise closed to new groundwater withdrawals, reports Common Dreams organistaion. Five Corners Family Farmers, a group of dryland wheat farmers whose families have been farming since the 1900s, asked the Thurston County Superior Court to tell the Washington State Department of Ecology to stop an industrial feedlot -- which plans to process 30,000 head of cattle -- unless it can legitimately get a groundwater permit.

Easterday Ranches Incorporated is taking advantage of the state's new interpretation to build an industrial feedlot on traditional farming land. The state Attorney General, Rob McKenna, compelled the Washington Department of Ecology to reverse years of limiting the amount of water a feedlot could use without a permit, when he issued an opinion that feedlots could use unlimited amounts of groundwater for watering their stock with no permitting required.

The state will now allow the operation to pump up to 600,000 of its total million gallons a day in one of the driest counties of the state, without regulation and without protection for neighboring wells and springs. That is more than 1,000 times the amount of water an average eastern Washington household uses.

"After over 100 years of conservative farming on some of the driest land in Washington, our lives and livelihoods are in jeopardy from this huge industrial feedlot," said Scott Collin, a dryland wheat farmer living and farming within sight of the planned cattle operation. "The state of Washington is inclined to twist the law to allow the project to proceed, so we have no choice but to act in order to protect our families, our livelihood and our way of life."

Washington state's groundwater laws require a permit for groundwater use to protect people who already have wells and to protect streams that are connected to or replenished by groundwater. For 60 years, the Department of Ecology allowed only a limited exception to the permit requirement for certain rural homestead uses. In 2005, after the attorney general issued his opinion in response to questions from state legislators in rural Washington, the state abruptly reversed its long-standing position and now claims it is unable to regulate groundwater used for "stockwatering" no matter how large or industrialized the use is.

"The state has opened a loophole in the law that you can drive 30,000 cattle through," said Janette Brimmer, an attorney with Earthjustice who is representing the farmers in court. "Water is life in eastern Washington, and we're simply asking the court to restore fairness and reason to the law."

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