January 16, 2025

6 thoughts on “KEN DUFTY: Accomack Board thumb their noses at Citizens Poultry Concerns

  1. NIMBY – Not in my back yard. That is the stance everyone takes when it happens to them or comes to their backdoor. HITS – Heads in the Sand…when it is someone else’s problem. Well, it seems there are a hell of a lot of HITS on the Eastern Shore. By the looks of this empty comment column and response to Ken Duffy’s well written and well researched piece on industrialized farming or the future coming of CAFO’s, poisons, compromised water aquifer, etc., HITS would basically describe perhaps 99% of the Shore population. If I were you folks, I would seriously consider Mr. Duffy’s warnings and perhaps the written warnings from multiple folks in Somerset County, Maryland. Seems that their problems today, will be your problems tomorrow. So, in essence, you HITS of today, will be the screaming NIMBY’s of tomorrow. But, realize something today, tomorrow…it will be too late. And all this time, I seriously thought you folks cared about the pristine beauty of your beloved Eastern Shore. Guess, I must have had my head in the sand….

    1. How can the citizens of the eastern shore eat chicken 4 or 5 times a week and not support the industry that provides the chicken? That shows supreme insanity. Take a look at modern lawn care. One will cut the grass, trim/edge and then blow the dirt/clippings in the street or just broadcast it….anywhere but the yard it came from. Who’s back yard would you prefer these chickens be raised???

      1. It is not a matter of all or none . As in North Carolina , the problem is too much chicken business in one place .

        How about Virginia Beach taking some chicken business . They eat chicken across the Bay .

  2. With the passing of Bob Dylan we were reminded again that ” Times are a changin .”

    Look at the putrid disaster in the flood plains of our neighbors to the south in North Carolina from hurricane Matthew .

    They are swimming in hog urine , hog feces and chicken waste .

    Most people enjoy bacon and eggs as well as fried chicken but some uncommon sense must apply to the placement of the farms and the concentration of the farms .

    Concentrating chicken houses on the Eastern Shore is a horrible idea . We rely on a sole source aquifer for our fresh water and we are surrounded by oyster and clam farms in our rivers and tributaries .

    The contamination of our water supply or the ruination of our shellfish industry by chicken farms would insane .

    We do not want ANYMORE chicken farms . Enough is enough .

    1. As a “come-here” from 40 miles north in Somerset County, Md, I write to express my complete support of Messrs.’ Dufty’s and Corcoran’s statements. It is incredible, given the nearness of the low land of Accomack County to the Atlantic and to thee Bay, that the granting of any more CAFO building permits would be allowed.

      In addition to the certain increased fouling of ditches, streams, and creeks, Accomack’s schools, clinics, emergency rooms, and hospitals will be strained by the influx of yet more low-skilled persons demanding the services of these facilities. Tyson, Perdue, and non-resident owners of the CAFOs will benefit at the expense of the County’s taxpayers.

      “For Sale” signs are everywhere in Accomac and Onancock; the decline of Parksley appears irreversible. What talented business creators–the only kind of persons who can enrich an area– would want to move here, given the developments so well described by Messrs. Dufty and Corcoran?

      The County Supervisors would do well to recount the actions of Boston patriots in December 1773 when they saw themselves faced with an intolerable lack of proper representation: they seized British private property–an entire shipment of East India Company tea worth many thousands of dollars–and threw it into Boston Harbor. At their wits’ end, they rightly viewed the destruction of private property as their only recourse, and they started the American Revolution.

      The County will inevitably experience future tropical storms. Our County Supervisors should not assume, when Accomack’s residents see their properties devalued by floating dead chickens and the film of animal sewage on flooded roads and in ditches, that these property owners will react passively; rather, they may well resort to the kind of actions that our forefathers took almost 2 1/2 centuries ago in Boston.

      I write as a person who owns two farms in Somerset County, and I grew up raising chickens for my father 50 years ago. It is a business completely inappropriate to the lower Peninsula.

  3. Mr. Bell seems to think (or at least, to imply) that the chickens raised in these CAFO will be consumed by residents of the Eastern Shore. The output of viable product will be shipped elsewhere. We will be left with the manure. The owners of the chicken houses are based in Texas. That would seem to be a State large enough to absorb the operations of the CAFO. Alternatively, the owners are Asian and reports are that they plan to export the viable product to Asia. How much more efficient to place the chickens in the area where they will be consumed (as per Mr. Bell’s suggestion.)

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