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Fallon calls for moratorium on construction of corporate confinements
Monday, May 19, 2008(Radio Iowa)
Monday, May 19, 2008, 3:30
PM
By O.Kay Henderson
Democratic congressional
candidate Ed Fallon says it's time to enact a
national moratorium that would forbid
corporations from building new livestock
confinements. "I don't want to get in the way
of a small farmer putting up a building with
300 hogs. That's not my issue," Fallon says.
"My issue is with the consolidation in the
industry that has allowed these large entities
-- hey, look at Iowa. Most of the large
confinement operators in Iowa don't live in
Iowa. Even Iowa Select, which is again
primarily operating in north central Iowa,
their president lives in West Des Moines.
That's what I want to come after."
Fallon says small towns in Iowa are
declining because of a decline in the number of
active farmers. "A big part of that problem is
hog confinements, specifically the corporate
confinements that have been enabled by
legislation passed back in the mid-90s and you
know the Iowa legislature is failing to address
that issue," Fallon says. "And at this point
unless the Iowa legislature and our governor
decide that they really want to tackle they
problem -- and they don't seem to be willing to
do that -- I'm ready to begin looking at
federal action."
Repeated attempts in
congress to ban corporate ownership of
livestock have failed and U.S. Justice
Department has given all sorts of agribusiness
mergers the go-ahead despite concerns about a
lack of competition. Fallon says there's no
"free market" system in the livestock industry
today. "I want to get back to having one, but
right now the laws have been so skewed in favor
of the big, corporate confinement operators
that small farmers don't have a chance," Fallon
says. "...It's the big, primarily national
corporate operators that I'm coming after."
Fallon contends a nationwide moratorium
on construction of large, corporate-owned
livestock confinements will create a sense of
urgency. "That urgency will bring everybody to
the table that will be more fair, more balanced
that will give local communities more
opportunities to weigh in on what comes into
their community, what comes into their area,"
Fallon says.
Fallon plans to makes
stops in a dozen Iowa cities tomorrow to
discuss corporate ownership of livestock.
Fallon is seeking to defeat Congressman Leonard
Boswell in the June primary and win the
Democratic Party's third district congressional
nomination. Both Fallon and Boswell are from
Des Moines.
