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Thousands Call To Reject Permit Requested By Industrial Hog Farm Upstream Of Buffalo National River

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The public has through April 6 to submit comments regarding the operation of a commercial hog operation six miles upstream of Buffalo National River/NPS

The state of Arkansas is accepting through April 6 public comments regarding a new permit for an industrial hog farm located upstream of Buffalo National River.

The C&H Hog Farms, Inc., operation at Mount Judea is located along Big Creek about six miles upstream of the national river. Under a contract with Cargill, Inc., an international agricultural and food conglomerate, C&H confines approximately 6,500 pigs at a time, making the operation the first of its size and scale in the Buffalo River watershed.

Though it has been operating since 2013 under a general National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System permit, the company is now seeking a change in its permit to one that presumes there will be no waste discharges from the property.

The hog farm is located in a region of karst geology, which is is composed of easily dissolved rocks, such as limestone and dolomite. Via sinkholes and underground caves in the geology, groundwater can flow miles very quickly. In the National Park System, karst geology is perhaps mostly visibly connected to Mammoth Cave National Park in Kentucky, but it can also be found along the Buffalo National River and at Ozark National Scenic Riverways in Missouri.

Keeping pollutants out of this geology is particularly important for the Buffalo National River, as its boundaries encompass just 11 percent of the Buffalo River watershed. The C&H Hog Farms' "concentrated animal feeding operation," or CAFO, generates an "estimated nitrogen output ... equivalent to a human population of 7,000, and the phosphorus output is equivalent to 23,000 humans, in a watershed with a total human population of approximately 17,000."

So far, according to the National Parks Conservation Association, more than 14,000 comments have been submitted to the Arkansas Department of Environmental Quality asking that the new permit be denied.

ADEQ’s contact person for submitting written comments, requesting information regarding the draft permit, or obtaining a copy of the permit and the Statement of Basis is Katherine McWilliams, at 5301 Northshore Drive, North Little Rock, Arkansas 72118-5317,  501-682-0650, or at [email protected].  

In 2012, the state granted C&H a permit for this facility without allowing adequate public input or consultation from the National Park Service, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, or local communities. The state permit expired on October 31, 2016. Now, Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson and the ADEQ "have an opportunity to protect America’s first national river by denying the company’s application for a permit 5264-W, which seeks to allow C&H to continue spreading hog waste in this fragile ecosystem," NPCA said.

The feedlot has generated a lot of controversy among environmental groups because of the potential threat it poses to the Buffalo National River. Last fall, water testing in Big Creek downstream of C&H by the Big Creek Research and Extension Team found higher levels of nitrate, total nitrogen, total coliform bacteria, chloride, specific conductance, alkalinity, and total dissolved solids than water samples taken upstream of the farm.

While state testing in 2014 found state limits for E. coli were exceeded both upstream and downstream of the farm, in 2015, higher levels were detected only in the upstream samples.

A lengthy report by the director of the U.S. Geological Survey's Wyoming Water Science Center on these tests and water quality impacts to the national river offered nearly a dozen recommendations, including one for dye tracing studies around the pig feedlot in a bid to determine how surface water enters the surrounding karst topography and show where it exits.

“This is our last chance to protect the Buffalo National River, our country’s first national river and a beloved national park, which belongs to all Americans. Allowing C&H to continue spreading millions of gallons of waste in the Buffalo’s watershed could do irreparable damage to the regional tourism economy and threatens local drinking water,” said Emily Jones, NPCA's senior program manager for the Southeast Region. “Along with thousands of our members and supporters in Arkansas and across the country, NPCA urges Governor Hutchinson to protect this precious resource and keep the Buffalo safe for people to swim, fish, and float.”

The Buffalo National River offers recreational opportunities along 135 miles of free-flowing river, and is a major economic driver for the region. The river welcomed more than 1.7 million visitors in 2016, pumping millions of dollars into nearby communities and supporting local jobs.

Comments

There is so much of the National Forrest in Arkansas that could be allotted to hold this farm... Why the Buffalo River? Are there other national parks that contain pig farms in the US? I dont think so......

I don't see the logic behind this move. Besides the money. We as a people of the world need to protect the naturalness of our world, yet we choose to continuously degrade it for the betterment of institutions and capital advances. We only get one world. And it is certainly not renewable.

Just go somewhere else. Simple as that. 

Money hungry pigs is all you are. Puns intended.


We need to find a way to broadcast this far and wide via all kinds of media. Encourage as much public outrage as possible and encourage people to boycott Cargill and the others. Hit them hard right in the wallet. Nothing else will work.


Gov.Hutchinson,Please DENY Regulation5 permit for the C&H Swine factory in the Buffalo River Watershed!!! This is a geological sensitive Karst enivironment. Any failure to protect this beautiful National Waterway, any degration risks 62 MILLION in the TOURIST industry...DENY this for all of us and your Great grand children.


What part of national Park National River do they not understand. Isn't that the whole purpose of creating a national park is to protect the river? This is a beautiful River that should not be harmed in any way. Please do not allow this to happen. Let them take their hog farm somewhere else where there is no water. I guarantee if they allow this to go forward they will regret it.


Governor Hutchinson & ADEQ:
Please deny the Regulation 5 permit for the C&H swine factory in the Buffalo River watershed. This industrial operation has no business in the geologically sensitive karst environment of our own national river. Any failures or long term degradation risks a $62M tourism industry in one of the poorest areas of our state. Deny it because it makes economic sense. Deny it out of respect for the Arkansans who came before you who fought to protect it.  We camp along this beautiful area and beg you to please reject this permit!

 


Please ask ADEQ to DENY the new permit.

Several comments posted herein are asking for denial, but the National Parks will not decide. This is an old problem in Arkansas, with Gov. Hutchinson choosing pigs over public health and tourism. It is hard to believe the Pig Factory got a permit to pollute the Buffalo River. Only in Arkansas!

ADEQ's contact person for submitting written comments, requesting information regarding the draft permit, or obtaining a copy of the permit and the Statement of Basis is  --- Katherine McWilliams

Please send her an email: [email protected]

 


This whole deal was underhanded and I am ashamed of my state for allowing this 


Please deny the Regulation 5 permit for the C&H swine factory in the Buffalo River watershed. This industrial operation has no business in the geologically sensitive karst environment of our own national river. Any failures or long term degradation risks a $62M tourism industry in one of the poorest areas of our state. Deny it because it makes economic sense. Deny it out of respect for the Arkansans who came before you who fought to protect it.


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