Kennedy, Gansler to speak at Poultry Summit
The Waterkeeper Alliance, an international environmental group based in New York, are organizing an “Eastern Shore Poultry Summit” Nov. 1 at the Wicomico Civic Center in Salisbury.
The point of the event is to raise awareness of water pollution that runs off large poultry farms, and try to find solutions, said William J. Gerlach, attorney for the eight-year-old advocacy organization.
Among the speakers at the day-long event will be Kennedy, a co-founder and chairman of the group; Maryland Attorney General Douglas Gansler; and Bill Satterfield, director of the Delmarva Poultry Institute, a farming trade organization. “We’d like to start a dialogue among everybody – so we invited the Delmarva Poultry Institute, not just environmental activists,” said Gerlach. ”Hopefully there will be good discusion and we will build from it.”
Gerlach said he hopes to encourage Maryland to issue factory-style water pollution control permits to large poultry farms, increase the enforcement of water pollution laws, and to allow public access to the nutrient management plans that farmers are supposed to follow.
The Sun reported on Oct. 14 that the poultry industry on Maryland's Eastern Shore produces about a billion pounds of manure a year, and is a significant source of pollution in the Chesapeake Bay. But Maryland has been slower than other states, including neighboring Pennsylvania, in requiring factory-style pollution control permits for large poultry businesses. The state is now considering these permits, along with inspections by the state's environmental enforcement agency and fines of up to $32,500 for allowing manure into streams. But farmers have complained that chicken houses don't pollute like factories, and that family farms shouldn't be burdened with excessive regulation.
The Poultry Summit is open to the public, and runs from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the Wicomico Civic Center. The cost is $25. The group held similar "Hog Summits" to address animal waste pollution in North Carolina, Iowa and Pennsylvania from 2002 to 2005.
Michele Merkel, Chespeake regional coordinator for the Waterkeepers Alliance, said: "The goal is to bring policy makers, scientists and members of the agricultural and environmental communities together to discuss tactics for keeping agricultural pollution from entering the bay."
Raquel Guillory, spokeswoman for Maryland's Attorney General, said Gansler was invited to attend and will likely talk about increased enforcement of existing clean water laws as a method for reducing pollution. He may also discuss the possibility of burning more poultry litter to generate electricity.

Comments
Pennsylvanias water pollution is from overfertilizing. The groundwater is loaded with commercial fertilizer that has high nitrates in the wells and health problems all around. Corn this year all over the fields meaning higher nitrogen and when the corn stocks decay look out. Kennedy should come to Brandonville Schuylkill County Pa. and see how Agriculture iis destroying America. Your bay my bay and it will go down the drain like hunting and fishing.
Posted by: Dennis | October 23, 2007 7:42 PM