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Things May Be Bigger In Texas But Not Always Better

Pilgrims Pride 1 In: Things May Be Bigger In Texas But Not Always Better | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River

Pilgrims Pride 1 In: Things May Be Bigger In Texas But Not Always Better | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River
Several OSFR members supported the lawsuit.

Pilgrims’s Pride does its damage in Florida also.  For decades it has been dumping effluent  into the Suwannee River north of Live Oak.  They were successfully sued by environmental groups and fined in 2017, but it is said they continue to dump affluent and pay routine fines to DEP as a business expense.

Read the complete article with photos here in EchoWatch.

Comments by OSFR historian Jim Tatum.
jim.tatum@oursantaferiver.org
– A river is like a life: once taken,
it cannot be brought back © Jim Tatum


Texas the Biggest Culprit in Toxic Waterway Discharge in U.S., Report Finds

A new report from nonprofit Environment America analyzed U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) data and found that Texas is the No. 1 state in the U.S. for discharging of toxic pollutants into streams, rivers and lakes.

Environment America has been producing the report since 2009. Since the first analysis of the EPA’s Toxics Release Inventory (TRI), Indiana was the top polluter in terms of toxic waterway discharge. In 2009, Texas was No. 4 on the list, which was compiled from analyzing self-reported data from industrial facilities. In the latest report, Texas reached the top of the list.

The report found an increase from 13.2 million pounds of toxic discharge released into waterways in Texas in 2007 to 16.7 million pounds in 2020. The biggest polluter in the state was a chicken supplier located in Mt. Pleasant and owned by Pilgrim’s Pride Corp. The company released 2.7 million pounds of nitrate compounds into local waterways in 2020.

“Texas has a pretty lax regulatory environment where it’s very easy to permit new polluting facilities and very difficult to get fined for violations,” said Luke Metzger, director of Environment Texas, the local affiliate of Environment America, as reported by Inside Climate News. “They know they’ll likely get away with it.”

In total, the U.S. saw 193.6 million pounds of toxic substances discharged into waterways in 2020. According to Environment America, these substances include chemicals linked to cancer, reproductive issues and developmental effects in children. The chemicals can make their way from waterways to drinking water and even into breast milk.

The largest source of toxic waterway discharge in the U.S. is nitrate compounds, typically found in fertilizers and industrial waste. The main contributors of nitrate compounds are animal processing plants and petroleum refiners, according to the report. In addition to risking human health, nitrate compounds also contribute to “dead zones” in waterways, where oxygen levels deplete and the water can no longer sustain aquatic life.

Other common toxins found released into waterways include heavy metals, ammonia, methanol, solvents and small amounts of “persistent bioaccumulative toxics” like mercury.

The report ranked Texas, Indiana, Virginia, Louisiana and Alabama as the top five polluters for toxic waterway discharge. The report also found that across the U.S., industrial and government facilities dumped waste into 844 local watersheds, with the top five receiving watersheds being Lower Ohio-Little Pigeon (of Indiana and Kentucky); Upper New (North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia); Brandywine-Christina (Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania); Lower Cape Fear (North Carolina); and Muskingum (Ohio).

The report authors are calling on the EPA and other federal officials as well as state officials to better adhere to the Clean Water Act by strengthening pollution control standards, requiring facilities to remove toxins from their wastewater, restricting use of toxic chemicals where safer alternatives are possible and strengthening review and enforcement of water pollution permits.

 

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