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View Full Version : EPA classifies milk as oil, forcing costly rules on farmers



Dogman
2nd February 2011, 07:21 AM
Just read this in my local paper, and wow! Talk about a power grab if true. :redfc


http://www.mlive.com/news/grand-rapids/index.ssf/2010/06/epa_classifies_milk_as_oil_for.html

Update: State Senate calls for EPA to change rule classifying cow's milk as oil

GRAND RAPIDS -- Having watched the oil gushing in the Gulf of Mexico, dairy farmer Frank Konkel has a hard time seeing how spilled milk can be labeled the same kind of environmental hazard.

But the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is classifying milk as oil because it contains a percentage of animal fat, which is a non-petroleum oil.

The Hesperia farmer and others would be required to develop and implement spill prevention plans for milk storage tanks. The rules are set to take effect in November, though that date might be pushed back.

"That could get expensive quickly," Konkel said. "We have a serious problem in the Gulf. Milk is a wholesome product that does not equate to spilling oil."

But last week environmentalists disagreed at a Senate committee hearing on a resolution from Sen. Wayne Kuipers, R-Holland, calling for the EPA to rescind its ruling.

"The federal Clean Water Act requirements were meant to protect the environment from petroleum-based oils, not milk," he said. "I think it is an example of federal government gone amuck."

But Gayle Miller, legislative director of Sierra Club Michigan Chapter, said agricultural pollution probably is the nation's most severe chronic problem when it comes to water pollution.

"Milk is wholesome in a child's body. It is devastating in a waterway," Miller said. "The fact that it's biodegradable is irrelevant if people die as a result of cryptosporidium, beaches close for E. coli and fish are killed."

Miller said "big agriculture" is constantly trying to be exempted from environmental regulations at the state and federal level. She was disappointed to learn the EPA told The Press it "expects shortly to issue a notice to extend the date for milk storage tanks to comply with SPCC (Spill Prevention Control and Countermeasure) regulations."

Also, the International Dairy Foods Association said it has learned the EPA will exempt the industry from the rule.

But state lawmakers say they won't let up until that is official.

Konkel, who also spoke at the Senate hearing, co-owns Silver Sky Dairy, with his wife, Shari, and a brother-in-law and his wife. They have 300 milking cows on about 800 acres and a 5,000-gallon tank that keeps their milk cool.

The regulations apply to farms that store more than 1,320 gallons in above-ground containers or more than 42,000 gallons in buried containers.

In May, U.S. Rep. Candice Miller, R-Mount Clemens, introduced legislation, co-sponsored by Rep. Pete Hoekstra, R-Holland, that prohibits enforcement of the EPA's regulations on dairy and dairy product producers, processors, handlers and distributors.

"This is an example of where we have overreach by the department that defies common sense," said Matt Smego, legislative counsel for Michigan Farm Bureau.

Smego said its an unnecessary regulatory burden that creates additional costs. He said it could cost $2,500 for a certified engineer to safeguard milk, plus more to construct secondary containment structures.

Michigan has 2,299 dairy farms. According to the Michigan Department of Agriculture, dairy is the leading segment of Michigan's agricultural industry, providing a $5.1 billion impact on the state's economy.

This month the International Dairy Foods Association said it has learned the EPA will exempt the industry from the rule.

But state lawmakers say they won't let up until that is official.

In the meantime, Konkel and other dairy farmers are in limbo.

"The federal government has gotten out touch what's going on in rural America," said Konkel. "This is our livelihood."

E-mail Monica Scott: mscott@grpress.com

http://media.mlive.com/grpress/news_impact/photo/konkel-cowsjpg-ebb408b7d3b7c1a5_large.jpg

Frank Konkel, of Silver Sky Dairy in Hesperia, stands near part of his dairy heard. The cows get to graze in pastures during the day. Konkel wants the dairy industry to be exempt from costly EPA regulations.

JohnQPublic
2nd February 2011, 07:55 AM
Milk is oil.
CO2 is pollution.
Good is Bad.

Welcome to the EPA.

Cobalt
2nd February 2011, 08:39 AM
Why does this not surprise me.
This is the same EPA that sat back as BP dumped millions of gallons of dispersant which is a known toxin into the ocean and then when they finally spoke up it was a suggestion that they quit using it and find an alternative.

Maybe the farmers need too scrounge up a few Corexit labels and apply them to the cows, the EPA is trained to ignore anything that is produced by big oil and clearly labeled hazardous.

midnight rambler
2nd February 2011, 08:42 AM
Meanwhile not a word from the EPA regarding the massive pharmaceutical pollution of surface water and ground water in some locations. Clearly the role of big corporate government is to protect big corporations' best interests.

Spectrism
2nd February 2011, 09:07 AM
Why does this not surprise me.
This is the same EPA that sat back as BP dumped millions of gallons of dispersant which is a known toxin into the ocean and then when they finally spoke up it was a suggestion that they quit using it and find an alternative.

Maybe the farmers need too scrounge up a few Corexit labels and apply them to the cows, the EPA is trained to ignore anything that is produced by big oil and clearly labeled hazardous.



Good idea.

When EPA asks for a plan to dispose of something they want to call "toxic", just tell them that you will spray Corexit on it and it will disappear.

mick silver
2nd February 2011, 10:25 AM
time has to be near . this shit cannot keeps going on in this country . we are free men

TheNocturnalEgyptian
2nd February 2011, 03:09 PM
Why reclassify milk as something we know - and can prove - to be a lie.


If milk is so dangerous, just come out with your evidence and make the claim milk is dangerous.

Ponce
2nd February 2011, 03:51 PM
The reason for all this is that farmers foune out that spreading their extra milk around the farm land will make things grow faster and healtier.