Big problems coming for the Ozarks if we let Big Meat continue to have its way

The annual Earth Day cleanup at Lake Springfield/James River will be on Wednesday.
The annual Earth Day cleanup at Lake Springfield/James River will be on Wednesday.

While you were busy, our legislature and governor have unleashed laws to spread toxic animal waste in virtually every county, every watershed, every river, every lake and every parcel of ground in Missouri. They did this on behalf of “Big Meat”: a bloody clump of four giant international companies that produce meat and butcher animals in rural factories for foreign buyers.

What Big Meat wants, they got: access to clean water from our aquifers, minimal oversight and most important: the right to dump oceans of toxic waste in our state with no limits whatsoever. To repeat: there are no limits on the amount of waste they’re allowed to dump in Missouri and no private land is safe.

Recently, a Texas-owned slaughter plant near Pleasant Hope decided to dump 350,000 gallons of toxic waste EVERY DAY into the Pomme De Terre River where it would also ruin our beautiful Pomme de Terre Lake. This is perfectly legal in Missouri; all you need is a pen swipe from a bureaucrat in Jefferson City. Outraged neighbors have forced a delay, but you could be next.

This part of the Pomme de Terre River, seen pictured here on Oct. 6, 2023 is located less than a mile north of the Missouri Prime Beef Packers plant in Pleasant Hope, which is seeking a permit to dump its treated wastewater in the waterway.
This part of the Pomme de Terre River, seen pictured here on Oct. 6, 2023 is located less than a mile north of the Missouri Prime Beef Packers plant in Pleasant Hope, which is seeking a permit to dump its treated wastewater in the waterway.

Missouri law allows unlimited numbers of four-acre lagoons filled with toxic waste from meat factories, industry and cities. These new lagoons near Joplin hold waste from Arkansas and the ones planned near St. Louis solicited poison from five states with plans to spread this nasty, stinky stuff on private land nearby.

Missouri law allows the unlimited spread of waste from concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs), toxic waste lagoons, nasty feedlots and slaughter plants. These intruders will be the death of tourism, clean water, fishing, boating, floating and property values. And yet, in the last few years, Big Meat got every bill they wanted. Their plan: mutate our state from a mixed economy with an abundance of fresh water, tourism, commerce and small farms into an Iowa water-wasteland where most of their rivers are dead, most of their lakes are dead and thousands of private water wells are poisoned.

Missouri mayors and county commissioners have been stripped of their jobs to oversee stinking meat factories. These polluters can appear almost any place without public notice, discussion or appeal.

As you may suspect, this crisis is all about money. Big Meat could process their waste like they do in Europe: convert toxins into benign, high value fertilizer. But no, that costs money and it’s a lot cheaper to dump waste on private property and in our rivers. Big Meat is less than 1% of our state economy but they threaten 100% of us.

Right now, meat factories dump toxic waste in the watershed for Stockton Lake which provides clean water to Springfield and soon will also supply water to a million people in Joplin and most of Southwest Missouri. Aquifers are disappearing around the world while we poison ours along with our children’s future.

Volunteers in canoes paddle the James River as park of an Earth Day river cleanup on Friday, April 22, 2022. Nearly 100 volunteers took part in the cleanup put on by James River Basin Partnership, that included volunteers on foot picking up trash along Lake Springfield.
Volunteers in canoes paddle the James River as park of an Earth Day river cleanup on Friday, April 22, 2022. Nearly 100 volunteers took part in the cleanup put on by James River Basin Partnership, that included volunteers on foot picking up trash along Lake Springfield.

This is madness and a case of mass suicide. Our legislature can keep their manure-flavored Kool-Aid to themselves.

That’s why we formed Missouri Guardrails: a project to sound the alarm. We stand for property values and clean water. (www.missouriguardrails.org).

We also stand for catfish from a farm pond. For the family float trip. For rope swings in the Current. For lake cabins. For small farms. For pure drinking water. For our way of life.

Several years ago, Big Meat paid to cram “The Right to Farm” down our throats as an amendment to our Constitution. What we need right now is “Our Right to Clean Water.” Stand up for your land and your water or you will lose both.

Dan Chiles is a former member of Springfield City Council and former chairman of the board for the Watershed Committee of the Ozarks. He serves on the board of the James River Basin Partnership and is the board president of Renew Missouri.

This article originally appeared on Springfield News-Leader: Big problems coming for the Ozarks if no one stands up to Big Meat