DCEC Position Statement on CAFO Expansion

The phosphorus pollution of northeastern Wisconsin’s ground and surface waters is a serious and undeniable problem. All the facts and science behind this water contamination are not currently known. However, what is known is that there are multiple sources of this phosphorus pollution including lawn fertilizers and failing septic systems. There also is, we believe, no question that one of the main causes of water contamination is poor manure management by Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs) engaged in milk production. A cow produces approximately 18 times the waste of one human being. This means a CAFO, with 2,500 cows, produces the waste equivalent to a city of 45,000 people.

Unfortunately, the big difference is that existing CAFOs do not have waste treatment systems for their animal waste like cities do. The animal waste from these operations―in a liquefied format―is simply being spread on the ground. Currently, there are 21 existing CAFOs in Door and Kewaunee Counties. These facilities produce tens of millions of gallons of animal waste annually. The manure produced is poured onto the soil. While this practice may not be a problem in some parts of the state that have very deep, well-drained soil, unfortunately, in Door County we were not blessed with deep soil. In fact, Door County’s thin soil, porous karst rock, and the fact that it is surrounded by water, makes it an extremely poor location for CAFOs. Some experts believe Door County to be the worst location in the entire state for a CAFO operation. Our thin soil and fractured underlining rock structure allow liquefied manure to quickly permeate and impair both surface and ground water.

In neighboring Kewaunee County, with similar geology and many more CAFOs, one third of the wells that have been tested, reveal water that is unsafe for human consumption. Manure has been declared a pollutant by Wisconsin courts when it reaches the aquifer. It is not manure per se, that is the problem. Farmers have been effectively utilizing animal manure as a fertilizer for thousands of years. The problem now, in northeastern Wisconsin, is the sheer quantity of manure being introduced to limited acreage with very poor filtration capabilities. Our soil is simply being overwhelmed by the vast quantity of manure being applied to it. Curiously, in the U.S. we currently have a huge oversupply of milk and cheese with correspondingly low milk prices.

It is the position of the Door County Environmental Council that the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, the Door County Board of Supervisors, and the Town of Sevastopol Board of Supervisors oppose CAFO expansion. Phosphorus or other pollutants should not be allowed to escape the CAFO site in either ground or surface water. The ultimate solution to the phosphorus contamination in northeastern Wisconsin will be complicated, expensive, and time consuming. As stakeholders, we all need to cooperate in finding an effective solution. In the short run, we must not allow expansion and an increase of this serious phosphorous water contamination problem.

The Door County Environmental Council Board of Directors