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A Trip Through CAFO Country in Western Kentucky
This was the first ever Sierra Club Tour de Stench. Sponsored by the Cumberland (Kentucky) Chapter of the
Sierra Club and Hopkins County Group Kentuckians for the Commonwealth this one day event
featured Factory Farms and the environmental and
public health damages associated with these operations in a three-county region in
Western Kentucky.
Some of the goals of the tour were:
- Raise awareness of the problems associated with large confined animal feeding operations
- Provide an opportunity for media exposure
- Provide an opportunity for victims to share their experiences
- To inform and educate
- To strengthen a working coalition between the Sierra Club, Kentuckians for the
Commonwealth, and citizens who need organization and empowerment to effectively deal with
problems of health, environment, water, and quality of life related to concentration on
poultry CAFOs.
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A sign "Welcome to Chickenshitville Follow Your Nose to Our
House" greets people as they approach Bernardine Edwards' home. The Edwards' home has
25 giant chicken houses as their neighbor. |
As the tour stops at the Edwards' home in MClean County, we can see signs
throughout the yard, one stating"It Reeks," and we even find dead (rubber)
chickens hanging from trees. The smell from the nearby chicken houses has greatly impacted
many families lives in this region of Kentucky. |
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Each participant was given a folder which contained an itinerary, description of the
Tour and its goals, some materials from the Activist Toolkit,
a test on knowledge of manure safety from Progressive Farmer, a copy of the Kentucky Section from America's Animal Factory Farms, How Livestock Antibiotics Threaten Our Health, and the CAFO Factory Farms handout and a copy of the McLean County
Citizens Against Factory Farms Good Neighbor Actions.
At least twenty people participated at each stop with a total of 35 participants
throughout the day. This included media representation from the Louisville
Courier-Journal, the Evansville (IN) Courier and Press, the Madisonville Messenger, and
Channel 25, CBS, in Henderson (which serves the Owensboro, Evansville-Henderson area and
much of western Kentucky).
Among other guests on the tour were two magistrates from Hopkins County, a County
Commissioner from Daviess County, two representatives of Kentuckians for the Commonwealth,
Hank Graddy representing the National Sierra Club CAFO Campaign and Betsy Bennett for the
Sierra Club Chapter, a representative from Valley Watch in Evansville, IN.(a watch dog
group for air and water in the Ohio River Valley), several members of McLean County
Citizens Against Factory Farms, and several volunteers and members of the Sierra Club.
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Dorothy Campbell (left) desribes to Hopkins County Magistrate Karol Welch
and KFTC member John Porter problems created by nearby chicken houses. Campbell lives in
an attractive home just outside White Plains, KY. |
| Speakers Betsy Bennett, Cumberland Chapter Conservation Chair and Hank
Graddy, CAFO Clean Water Campaign Chair speak at a stop along the tour. |
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The tour drove by the Tyson Plant's hatcherie, processing plant, rendering plant,
freezer facility, and grain storage. Stockpiles of manure were observed by sight and
smell. The participants gagged at the terrible odor. The sensory experience
certainly justified the name of the tour.
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Pictured are Tyson's brooding houses as viewed from the Salem Primitive
Baptist Church, overlooking Bernadine Edward's home in McLean County, KY. |
Pictured are two brooder houses along Fiddlebow Road in Hopkins
County. Because of a grandfather clause and because there are too few chickens in
the two houses, these brooder houses are exempt from current emergency CAFO regulations. |
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Brooder houses ship fertilized eggs to hatcheries (as this one pictured)
that dot the countryside in Western Kentucky. |
Three more stops were made in Hopkins County. One of the stops was
made at Faye Lear's home. Sediment runoff from a brooder facility built behind her
home had runoff into her lake. The lake, once 14 feet deep, is now only 4 feet deep,
due to the runoff. She says that flies, rodents and odors are so bad that she can
rarely be outside and that the odor permeates everything in her house.
There was a brief stop made near a school, where children often vomit from
odors from a complex of chicken houses near by. The children have written letters to
their magistrates and to the regional Air office pleading for help.
The last stop was made on Fiddlebow Road, where the group met with Linda
Moon and her parents, the McGregors. Each time the nearby brooder houses are
emptied, hundreds and thousands of starving mice invade homes in the area and have caused
children to become sick. Ms. Moon's five year old son has been diagnosed with
giardia from the mice. She caught 80 mice in a two day period and said that the mice
nibbled on her son's ankle, crawled over everything, climbed up her side while she sat
watching TV, and devoured all of her food. She would get up repeatedly at night to
check the children's beds for mice. Mr. McGregor, who runs a small peach and apple
orchard and gift shop said, "No one should have to live this way."
Linda Moon
describes to the tour participants the giardia diagnosis of her five year old son.
Shane, their physician prescribed Flagyl for Moon, her son, and some neighbors with
similar symptoms of giardia, after a recent mouse infestation. Thousands of mice
invaded the neighborhood when nearby chicken brooder houses were emptied.
Current emergency
regulations of Kentucky CAFOs do not address problems created by dead chicken carcasses
being spread as fertilizer across fields near neighboring homes.
Contact Us
For information about the Sierra Club and factory farms:
Ed Hopkins
Director, Environmental Quality Program
ed.hopkins@sierraclub.org
For media inquiries:
Orli Cotel
Field Media Coordinator
415-977-5627
Orli.Cotel@sierraclub.org
For more information on this tour contact aloma.dew@sierraclub.org.
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