January 7th, 2010 By Paula Crossfield
What happens in Iowa doesn’t stay in Iowa. This is the lesson illuminated in Curt Ellis and Ian Cheney’s latest film, Big River, a companion to their successful film King Corn (made with director Aaron Wolff). In King Corn, Ellis and Cheney grew an acre of corn and followed it to the plate by way of the processing that brings us most of our packaged food and the confined animal feeding operations (CAFOs) that bring us 99% of our meat. This time around, they follow the top soil, fertilizer runoff, and pesticide residues from the acre they planted into the local water system and further to the Gulf of Mexico’s dead zone. Read More
Tags: agricultural runoff, Big River, cancer, dead zone, fertilizer, King Corn, movie review, nitrates, rural issues
August 20th, 2009 By Paula Crossfield
It’s not often that I get to write about a positive food policy story coming out of my home state, but it turns out that Oklahoma Attorney General (and Democratic candidate for governor in 2010) Drew Edmondson is suing the more lenient Arkansas poultry industry for its waste, which is polluting the Illinois River on the states’ shared border. This case brings the spotlight to a huge, oft-ignored issue that many legislators in other states should take note of, too: agricultural pollution. Read More
Tags: agricultural runoff, algae, antibiotic resistance, Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs), dead zones, Drew Edmondson, fertilizer, manure, Oklahoma, pollution