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Better Farming Ontario Featured Articles

Better Farming Ontario magazine is published 11 times per year. After each edition is published, we share featured articles online.


It wasn't the chickens that did it

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

A Maryland farm family and the contract company for which it grew chicken were vindicated of charges that they polluted a tributary of a river flowing into nearby Chesapeake Bay.

On Dec. 20, a U.S. District Court judge ruled that a New York-based environmental group had not proven that chicken manure from 80,000-bird barns owned by Alan and Kristin Hudson ran into a drainage ditch and polluted the Pocomoke River. According to the Baltimore Sun, the judge ruled it was far more likely that the manure came from 42 cows that roamed on the 300-acre farm. The charges were brought by a local Waterkeeper Alliance affiliate, which asserted that manure was blown into the ditch by the barns' ventilation fans.

Chicken industry groups were worried that a guilty verdict might set precedents across the nation with regard to shared responsibilities between contracting companies and their growers. Nearly $500,000 was raised in a defense fund.

According to a press release from the National Chicken Council: "The violation was based on a pile of material on the property that was erroneously assumed to be chicken manure, but was instead municipal sewage sludge from Ocean City, Maryland, that was used to fertilize crops.  The Maryland Department of the Environment inspected the farm, confirmed the pile was biosolids, asked the Hudsons to move the pile, and the Hudsons complied." The complaint that chickens were to blame came after that. BF

Current Issue

September 2025

Better Farming Magazine

Farms.com Breaking News

First Northern Cohort Joins Ontario Vet Program

Thursday, September 4, 2025

This September, the Ontario Veterinary College (OVC) at the University of Guelph welcomed its inaugural Northern Cohort of 20 students through the Collaborative Doctor of Veterinary Medicine Program (CDVMP). This initiative, created in partnership with Lakehead University, marks a milestone... Read this article online

Canadian Farmers Face Weaker Soybean Yields Ahead

Tuesday, September 2, 2025

Statistics Canada forecasts that Canadian soybean production will decline in 2025, reflecting weaker yields across major producing provinces. Nationally, output is projected to fall by 7.3% year over year to 7.0 million tonnes. The decline is linked to a drop in yields, which are expected... Read this article online

Canadian Corn Outlook Shows Mixed Regional Trends

Tuesday, September 2, 2025

Statistics Canada projects Canadian corn-for-grain production to grow slightly in 2025, despite drier-than-normal weather and high temperatures that have pressured yields. National production is forecast to rise 1.4% year over year to 15.6 million tonnes. This gain comes from higher... Read this article online

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