| Blunt,
Childers and CAFOs
Ken Midkiff
A few months
ago Governor Matt Blunt and his Department of Natural Resource’s
Director – Doyle Childers – met with the editorial board
and a few reporters of the Joplin Globe.
This was quite
unusual. It is almost unheard of that a Governor visits a newspaper
and meets with the editorial staff. While there were a number of
issues on the table – educational funding, tightening Medicaid
requirements, the state budget – Governor Blunt and Director
Childers went down to Joplin to talk about…Concentrated Animal
Feeding Operations, otherwise known by the acronym CAFOs.
The position
of the Joplin Globe was most problematic for the Missouri Department
of Natural Resources (MDNR). The Globe had published several critical
articles about the proposed poultry CAFO near to Roaring River State
Park. A Globe editorial was issued in opposition to CAFOs. The Letters
to the Editor section carried numerous complaints from citizens.
The Globe’s
offices are in Joplin in the heart of Jasper County – the
most conservative area of a conservative state. Just south of Joplin,
in McDonald County, large poultry operations of Tyson’s and
Simmons have long existed. Moark, owned by Land O’ Lakes,
has massive egg-laying operations in Newton and McDonald counties
– within the Globe’s area of coverage.
Yet, the newspaper
had taken a position opposed to those very operations – and
in doing so had incurred the wrath of the Governor and the MDNR
Director. Both Blunt and Childers were avid proponents of this “modern”
style of meat, milk and egg production, and agribusiness lobbyists
had heavily courted both. It is telling that these two placed agribusiness
interests so high on their list that they traveled to Joplin from
Jefferson City (a 4 hour drive) to attempt to change the position
of the Globe.
It is not at
all unusual for a Governor or an MDNR Director to call the Kansas
City STAR or the St. Louis POST-DISPATCH about some real or perceived
slight or mis-reporting. But, it is extremely rare for the Governor
or MDNR Director to show up personally in newspaper offices. This
had never occurred at the offices of relatively small newspapers,
such as the Joplin Globe.
Blunt had declared
that no decision effecting agriculture was made without consulting
the Farm Bureau and the Farm Bureau had long been an advocate for
CAFOs. Other players had also trekked to the Governor’s Office:
Missouri Pork Producers, the Poultry Federation, American Dairy
Association and the Cattlemen’s Beef Association. Even organizations
representing non-meat producers such as the Corn Growers Association
and the Soybean Association also supported the large meat, milk
and egg industry, presumably because corn and soybeans are the primary
ingredients in the feed of cows, hogs, and chickens.
The Governor’s
visit to the offices of the Globe did not change things at all.
In the words of one reporter, “We listened respectfully, and
then went on doing things the same way.”
The editorial
staff and reporters at the Globe understand what the Governor and
the MDNR Director do not: CAFOs pollute the environment, reduce
the quality of life of long-time rural residents, destroy local
economies, disrupt communities, and run independent family farmers
off the land.
We need more
brave and intelligent editors and reporters. The Globe is to be
thanked for its stance. Governor Blunt has announced that he will
not run for re-election. Presumably, Director Childers – appointed
by Blunt – will no longer head up the agency charged with
protecting our state’s natural resources.
Maybe now the
motto of MDNR will be changed from “Protecting Polluters”
to “Pollution Prevention”.
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