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pearl
Posted: Wed Jan 07, 2004 4:51 pm
Guest
Poultry Industry Blamed For Illness
By Christopher Leonard
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
1-7-4

"...litter produced from a typical chicken house puts 8.8 short
tons of arsenic into the surrounding environment each year."

Prairie Grove Suit Focuses On Poultry Feed-Additive

It was a gut-wrenching sight, watching a group of Prairie Grove
residents take the stage and reveal the most painful experiences
of their lives. They spoke of dead children, rare cancers and
devastated families.

Lawyers Hunter Lundy and Clayton Davis helped orchestrate
the Dec. 16 news conference in Fayetteville, hoping to drive
home the point that the poultry industry is to blame for much
of the illness in Prairie Grove. The same day, they filed a lawsuit
on behalf of 12 Prairie Grove residents against poultry companies
in Northwest Arkansas.

The lawsuit will pivot on an obscure chemical called Roxarsone,
a feed-additive for chickens. Lawyers and their experts say
Roxarsone is causing cancer cases in Prairie Grove, including
those of defendants in the case.

If the allegations are affirmed, they could have a far-ranging
impact on the poultry industry, which commonly uses Roxarsone.
John Baker, a Fayetteville lawyer working on the lawsuit, said
other communities are experiencing the same problems as Prairie
Grove, but haven't filed lawsuits.

Rod O'Connor, a former chemistry professor at Texas A&M
University who was hired by Lundy and Davis, said Roxarsone
is the crucial link between cancer cases in Prairie Grove and
chicken litter spread around the town of 2,540 people. "Now
we've actually got the scientific proof," O'Connor said. He tested
dozens of homes in Prairie Grove and found traces of Roxarsone
in more than 95 percent of them, he said. That Roxarsone
degrades into arsenic, he alleges, and causes cancer. His testing
found elevated levels of arsenic in the homes as well, he said.

The suit names as defendants: Alpharma Inc., the maker of
Roxarsone; Cal-Maine Foods; Cargill Inc.; George's Inc.;
Peterson Farms Inc.; Simmons Foods Inc.; and Tyson Foods Inc.
It seeks damages for the plaintiffs' illnesses, emotional distress,
medical expenses and lost wages and punitive damages.

Spokesmen for Alpharma, Simmons Foods, Cargill, Peterson Farms
and Tyson Foods said the companies wouldn't comment on the case
or did not return calls last week.

The Lundy & Davis law firm, based in Lake Charles, La., filed a
similar lawsuit in Jackson, Miss., that was thrown out of court last
year when the judge ruled it was filed in an inconvenient forum for
the defendants in Arkansas.

Ruth Ann Wisener, Tyson's assistant vice president and senior
litigation counsel, said the company filed the motion to dismiss
the Mississippi case. She said Tyson hasn't been served on the
new case and could not comment on it.

Roxarsone is a growth additive that's widely used by poultry
growers, said H. David Chapman, a professor at the department
of poultry science at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville.

Chapman specializes in parasites that sicken chickens. He said
Roxarsone has been used since the 1950s to combat parasites
and increase growth in young chicks.

Roxarsone helps control a parasite-related disease among
chickens called coccidiosis, Chapman said. "In the old days,"
he said, "they could hardly ever raise chickens without big
problems from coccidiosis. Without controlling this disease,
it would not be possible to raise chickens how we do today."

Chicken houses like the ones around Prairie Grove typically
house 20,000 birds at a time. When they first arrive as chicks,
their feed contains trace amounts of Roxarsone, Chapman
said. As the birds mature, their feed is changed and no longer
contains the additive, he said.

Roxarsone alone doesn't stop coccidiosis, but works in
partnership with a group of drugs called ionophores,
Chapman said. Roxarsone is widely used because it makes
chicks grow faster, though nobody knows exactly how that
happens, he said.

The additive contains the element arsenic, which is a known
carcinogen and poison. But Chapman said the form of arsenic
is one that isn't toxic to humans.

Chemist O'Connor agreed with that. But he says health hazards
arise when Roxarsone is passed into chicken litter. When the
litter is spread on fields, the additive breaks down into toxic
arsenic-containing chemicals, he said.

A study conducted this year for the U.S. Geological Survey
in Denver supports that theory.

John Garbarino, a co-author of the study, said Roxarsone
passes through chickens largely unchanged and remains in their
litter. Each chicken excretes 150 milligrams of Roxarsone in its
lifetime, according to the study.

Roxarsone in the litter becomes toxic when it is spread on fields
and exposed to water, Garbarino said. It most commonly breaks
down into arsenate, which is poisonous, though not the most toxic
form of arsenic, he said.

Garbarino's study found that litter produced from a typical
chicken house puts 8.8 short tons of arsenic into the surrounding
environment each year, he said.

O'Connor said the arsenic is getting into houses in Prairie Grove,
where it is sickening residents. He said tests of dust samples from
30 homes there found high levels of arsenic in 28 of them. Further
tests found traces of Roxarsone itself, linking the dust to poultry
litter, he said. "That is the absolute fingerprint because there is no
Roxarsone in rat poison or weed sprays or anything else" that
could raise arsenic levels in the homes, he said.

http://www.nwanews.com/adg/story_businessmatters.php?storyid=52161
DWW
Posted: Thu Jan 08, 2004 4:47 pm
Guest
20,000 chickens * 150 mg Roxarsone/chicken * 8 batches per year = 24,000,000
mg = 24,000 grams / 454 grams / lb = 52.86 lbs Roxarsone per year/house

Yep, 52.86 lbs is pretty close to 8.8 short tons


"pearl" <tea@signguestbook.ie> wrote in message
news:bthv2l$j9c$1@kermit.esat.net...
Quote:
Poultry Industry Blamed For Illness
By Christopher Leonard
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
1-7-4

"...litter produced from a typical chicken house puts 8.8 short
tons of arsenic into the surrounding environment each year."

Prairie Grove Suit Focuses On Poultry Feed-Additive

It was a gut-wrenching sight, watching a group of Prairie Grove
residents take the stage and reveal the most painful experiences
of their lives. They spoke of dead children, rare cancers and
devastated families.

Lawyers Hunter Lundy and Clayton Davis helped orchestrate
the Dec. 16 news conference in Fayetteville, hoping to drive
home the point that the poultry industry is to blame for much
of the illness in Prairie Grove. The same day, they filed a lawsuit
on behalf of 12 Prairie Grove residents against poultry companies
in Northwest Arkansas.

The lawsuit will pivot on an obscure chemical called Roxarsone,
a feed-additive for chickens. Lawyers and their experts say
Roxarsone is causing cancer cases in Prairie Grove, including
those of defendants in the case.

If the allegations are affirmed, they could have a far-ranging
impact on the poultry industry, which commonly uses Roxarsone.
John Baker, a Fayetteville lawyer working on the lawsuit, said
other communities are experiencing the same problems as Prairie
Grove, but haven't filed lawsuits.

Rod O'Connor, a former chemistry professor at Texas A&M
University who was hired by Lundy and Davis, said Roxarsone
is the crucial link between cancer cases in Prairie Grove and
chicken litter spread around the town of 2,540 people. "Now
we've actually got the scientific proof," O'Connor said. He tested
dozens of homes in Prairie Grove and found traces of Roxarsone
in more than 95 percent of them, he said. That Roxarsone
degrades into arsenic, he alleges, and causes cancer. His testing
found elevated levels of arsenic in the homes as well, he said.

The suit names as defendants: Alpharma Inc., the maker of
Roxarsone; Cal-Maine Foods; Cargill Inc.; George's Inc.;
Peterson Farms Inc.; Simmons Foods Inc.; and Tyson Foods Inc.
It seeks damages for the plaintiffs' illnesses, emotional distress,
medical expenses and lost wages and punitive damages.

Spokesmen for Alpharma, Simmons Foods, Cargill, Peterson Farms
and Tyson Foods said the companies wouldn't comment on the case
or did not return calls last week.

The Lundy & Davis law firm, based in Lake Charles, La., filed a
similar lawsuit in Jackson, Miss., that was thrown out of court last
year when the judge ruled it was filed in an inconvenient forum for
the defendants in Arkansas.

Ruth Ann Wisener, Tyson's assistant vice president and senior
litigation counsel, said the company filed the motion to dismiss
the Mississippi case. She said Tyson hasn't been served on the
new case and could not comment on it.

Roxarsone is a growth additive that's widely used by poultry
growers, said H. David Chapman, a professor at the department
of poultry science at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville.

Chapman specializes in parasites that sicken chickens. He said
Roxarsone has been used since the 1950s to combat parasites
and increase growth in young chicks.

Roxarsone helps control a parasite-related disease among
chickens called coccidiosis, Chapman said. "In the old days,"
he said, "they could hardly ever raise chickens without big
problems from coccidiosis. Without controlling this disease,
it would not be possible to raise chickens how we do today."

Chicken houses like the ones around Prairie Grove typically
house 20,000 birds at a time. When they first arrive as chicks,
their feed contains trace amounts of Roxarsone, Chapman
said. As the birds mature, their feed is changed and no longer
contains the additive, he said.

Roxarsone alone doesn't stop coccidiosis, but works in
partnership with a group of drugs called ionophores,
Chapman said. Roxarsone is widely used because it makes
chicks grow faster, though nobody knows exactly how that
happens, he said.

The additive contains the element arsenic, which is a known
carcinogen and poison. But Chapman said the form of arsenic
is one that isn't toxic to humans.

Chemist O'Connor agreed with that. But he says health hazards
arise when Roxarsone is passed into chicken litter. When the
litter is spread on fields, the additive breaks down into toxic
arsenic-containing chemicals, he said.

A study conducted this year for the U.S. Geological Survey
in Denver supports that theory.

John Garbarino, a co-author of the study, said Roxarsone
passes through chickens largely unchanged and remains in their
litter. Each chicken excretes 150 milligrams of Roxarsone in its
lifetime, according to the study.

Roxarsone in the litter becomes toxic when it is spread on fields
and exposed to water, Garbarino said. It most commonly breaks
down into arsenate, which is poisonous, though not the most toxic
form of arsenic, he said.

Garbarino's study found that litter produced from a typical
chicken house puts 8.8 short tons of arsenic into the surrounding
environment each year, he said.

O'Connor said the arsenic is getting into houses in Prairie Grove,
where it is sickening residents. He said tests of dust samples from
30 homes there found high levels of arsenic in 28 of them. Further
tests found traces of Roxarsone itself, linking the dust to poultry
litter, he said. "That is the absolute fingerprint because there is no
Roxarsone in rat poison or weed sprays or anything else" that
could raise arsenic levels in the homes, he said.

http://www.nwanews.com/adg/story_businessmatters.php?storyid=52161

drdoody
Posted: Thu Jan 08, 2004 5:20 pm
Guest
"DWW" <bdmode@att.net> wrote in message
news:d5kLb.642$Nz2.12033@news.itd.umich.edu...
Quote:
20,000 chickens * 150 mg Roxarsone/chicken * 8 batches per year =
24,000,000
mg = 24,000 grams / 454 grams / lb = 52.86 lbs Roxarsone per year/house

Yep, 52.86 lbs is pretty close to 8.8 short tons

BWAHAHA!!

That's funny.

Doc
pearl
Posted: Thu Jan 08, 2004 6:52 pm
Guest
"DWW" <bdmode@att.net> wrote in message news:d5kLb.642$Nz2.12033@news.itd.umich.edu...
Quote:
20,000 chickens * 150 mg Roxarsone/chicken * 8 batches per year = 24,000,000
mg = 24,000 grams / 454 grams / lb = 52.86 lbs Roxarsone per year/house

Yep, 52.86 lbs is pretty close to 8.8 short tons

Errors in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette report, it would seem.

From; http://eces.org/articles/000712.php :

'On the Delaware-Maryland-Virginia (Delmarva) peninsula, poultry
factory farms raise more than 500 million birds annually, producing
vast amounts of litter that is then spread on farmland as manure. In
Maryland alone, 338,679 tons of chicken litter is produced annually,
258,081 of which comes from the four Lower Shore counties,
according to the Maryland Department of Agriculture.

According to researchers with the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS),
one chicken excretes about 150 milligrams of roxarsone in a 42-day
growth period. Litter collected during that period contains between
30 to 50 milligrams of arsenic per kilogram, according to a USGS
report. On the Delmarva Peninsula, that means between 20 and 50
metric tons of arsenic are introduced to the environment annually by
chicken factory farms. '

Quote:
Poultry Industry Blamed For Illness
By Christopher Leonard
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
1-7-4
..
O'Connor said the arsenic is getting into houses in Prairie Grove,
where it is sickening residents. He said tests of dust samples from
30 homes there found high levels of arsenic in 28 of them. Further
tests found traces of Roxarsone itself, linking the dust to poultry
litter, he said. "That is the absolute fingerprint because there is no
Roxarsone in rat poison or weed sprays or anything else" that
could raise arsenic levels in the homes, he said.

http://www.nwanews.com/adg/story_businessmatters.php?storyid=52161
Russ Thompson
Posted: Thu Jan 08, 2004 7:17 pm
Guest
Quote:
'On the Delaware-Maryland-Virginia (Delmarva) peninsula, poultry
factory farms raise more than 500 million birds annually, producing
vast amounts of litter that is then spread on farmland as manure.

*** That's good. It's the cycle of life. I bet the organic farms are using
that manure

Litter collected during that period contains between
Quote:
30 to 50 milligrams of arsenic per kilogram, according to a USGS
report. On the Delmarva Peninsula, that means between 20 and 50
metric tons of arsenic are introduced to the environment annually by
chicken factory farms. '

*** It's not a problem. When exposed to the air, sun, and micro organisms in
the soil it is broken down and made harmless.

Kala




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pearl
Posted: Thu Jan 08, 2004 8:10 pm
Guest
"Russ Thompson" <pmfb@mwt.net> wrote in message news:3ffdf301_4@corp.newsgroups.com...
Quote:
'On the Delaware-Maryland-Virginia (Delmarva) peninsula, poultry
factory farms raise more than 500 million birds annually, producing
vast amounts of litter that is then spread on farmland as manure.

*** That's good. It's the cycle of life. I bet the organic farms are using
that manure

Aren't organic farms obliged to use manure from organic operations? If
not, organic farms are being contaminated with ag'chem's, which isn't right.

Quote:
Litter collected during that period contains between
30 to 50 milligrams of arsenic per kilogram, according to a USGS
report. On the Delmarva Peninsula, that means between 20 and 50
metric tons of arsenic are introduced to the environment annually by
chicken factory farms. '

*** It's not a problem. When exposed to the air, sun, and micro organisms in
the soil it is broken down and made harmless.

'The arsenic levels observed at each of the monitoring points were
higher than background levels. Additionally, the USGS investigators
found mostly the more toxic inorganic forms of arsenic - As(V) and
As(III) - rather than roxarsone. ....'
http://eces.org/articles/000712.php
Jim Webster
Posted: Fri Jan 09, 2004 1:58 am
Guest
"pearl" <tea@signguestbook.ie> wrote in message
news:btkv4k$qb6$1@kermit.esat.net...
Quote:
"Russ Thompson" <pmfb@mwt.net> wrote in message
news:3ffdf301_4@corp.newsgroups.com...
'On the Delaware-Maryland-Virginia (Delmarva) peninsula, poultry
factory farms raise more than 500 million birds annually, producing
vast amounts of litter that is then spread on farmland as manure.

*** That's good. It's the cycle of life. I bet the organic farms are
using
that manure

Aren't organic farms obliged to use manure from organic operations? If
not, organic farms are being contaminated with ag'chem's, which isn't
right.


depends entirely which organic certifying authority of which most countries
have several. Remember organic is normally an ideological system therefore
the various certifying bodies often have different rules

Jim Webster
Russ Thompson
Posted: Fri Jan 09, 2004 9:19 am
Guest
Quote:
Aren't organic farms obliged to use manure from organic operations? If
not, organic farms are being contaminated with ag'chem's, which isn't
right.


LOL! I wish. Organic rules in the USA are set by fedral law under the NOP
(National Organic Practice). Used to be that different certifiing group had
different rules. Now they are the same all over the USA.
Organic farms can use manure from anywhere. Since we discontinued
sustainable farming and went organic we have ben getting hog manure from a
large total confinment hog farm near here to fertilize the grain crops.

Kala Thompson
Farmer
Richland Center, WI




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http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World!
-----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =-----
Roy. Just Roy.
Posted: Fri Jan 09, 2004 1:42 pm
Guest
"Russ Thompson" <pmfb@mwt.net> put his foot squarely between his lips
in message news:<3ffdf301_4@corp.newsgroups.com>...
Quote:
On the Delmarva Peninsula, that means between 20 and 50
metric tons of arsenic are introduced to the environment annually by
chicken factory farms. '

*** It's not a problem. When exposed to the air, sun, and micro organisms in
the soil it is broken down and made harmless.

Arsenic is an element. Atomic number 33, atomic weight 74.92. Nothing
short of a fission-fusion-fission nuclear bomb will "break down" an
element.

Thank you, drive through.
Roy. Just Roy.
Posted: Fri Jan 09, 2004 2:06 pm
Guest
"pearl" <tea@signguestbook.ie> wrote in message news:<bthv2l$j9c$1@kermit.esat.net>...

Quote:
"...litter produced from a typical chicken house puts 8.8 short
tons of arsenic into the surrounding environment each year."

The issue here is not whether the poultry industry deposits arsenic,
but whether it is responsible for MORE arsenic than the
vegetable-producing industry.

Going vegan to avoid high levels of arsenic does no good IF plant
pesticides deposit twice as much arsenic as do pesticides designed for
animal use. In fact, IF the above holds true, by going vegan you are
only making the problem worse.

I would challenge you to do a Google search on arsenic levels in plant
pesticides and those which are produced by the lumber industry (The
production of paper requires arsenic in the process). You might be
surprised by what PETA isn't telling you.
Oz
Posted: Fri Jan 09, 2004 7:11 pm
Guest
Roy. Just Roy. <soylent_purple@hotmail.com> writes
Quote:
I would challenge you to do a Google search on arsenic levels in plant
pesticides and those which are produced by the lumber industry (The
production of paper requires arsenic in the process).

I don't know of any plant pesticides (UK) approved in the UK.

It's possible there are some old ones with derogations for organic
crops.

--
Oz
This post is worth absolutely nothing and is probably fallacious.
DEMON address no longer in use.
Russ Thompson
Posted: Fri Jan 09, 2004 7:58 pm
Guest
Quote:
Arsenic is an element. Atomic number 33, atomic weight 74.92. Nothing
short of a fission-fusion-fission nuclear bomb will "break down" an
element.

*** Yes you are correct. My bad.

Kala Thompson
Farmer
Richland Center, WI USA




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http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World!
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