U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, Region 7
901 N. Fifth
St., Kansas City, KS 66101
Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, and Nine Tribal
Nations
Beef Feedlot Near Broken Bow, Neb., Agrees to
Pay $145,000 Civil Penalty for Illegal Discharges into Mud
Creek
Contact Information: Ben Washburn, 913-551-7364, washburn.ben@epa.gov
Environmental News
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
(Kansas City, Kan., July
10, 2012) - Adams Land and Cattle Company, a beef feedlot near Broken Bow, Neb.,
has agreed to pay a $145,000 civil penalty to the United States Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) for violating the federal Clean Water Act and its
National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit related to
discharges of pollutants into Mud Creek.
In December 2010, EPA
Region 7 inspected Adams’ facility, located just south of Broken Bow. The
facility confined approximately 83,000 cattle at the time of the inspection.
Inspectors reviewed facility operations, required record-keeping and waste
management practices, and also visually inspected the facility. EPA inspectors
documented that Adams had allowed its waste storage basins to overfill with
manure solids and sediment to the point they could no longer store runoff from
large rain events. A follow-up inspection was performed in December
2011.
Through these
inspections and a review of records provided by Adams, EPA concluded that the
facility discharged process wastewater to an unnamed tributary of Mud Creek, a
water of the United States, on 13 occasions between April 2007 and October 2010.
The discharges were a result of inadequate storage capacity in holding basins,
lack of controls necessary to prevent the Mud Creek tributary from flooding the
holding ponds, and/or failure of piping associated with land application
practices. Adams estimated that approximately 140 million gallons of process
wastewater was released during these discharges, impacting Mud Creek and its
tributary.
“The Clean
Water Act requires feedlots properly maintain adequate storage capacity in their
storage basins to prevent unauthorized wastewater discharges,” EPA Region 7
Administrator Karl Brooks said. “Unpermitted discharges from improperly
maintained storage basins can cause serious impacts to the water quality of
nearby rivers and streams.”
On August 10, 2011, the
Nebraska Department of Environmental Quality (NDEQ) filed a penalty action
against Adams that addressed one of the discharges. The action required Adams
pay a $5,800 penalty along with a $5,800 payment to the Broken Bow, Neb.,
Chapter of Pheasants Forever. EPA’s penalty action announced today penalizes
Adams for the other 12 discharge events and related permit
violations.
EPA and NDEQ share legal authority and
responsibility for protecting water quality in Nebraska. Given the recurrent nature of the violations,
EPA made the decision to exercise the enforcement authority that it shares with
the State of Nebraska to resolve the issue.
By agreeing to the settlement,
Adams Land and Cattle Company has certified that it is in compliance with the
Clean Water Act. The settlement is
subject to a 30-day public comment period before it becomes final.
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