Industrial scale farming costs a lot. You can measure the costs in the health of animals and humans both, the health of the rivers and streams that run by the farms, by the air quality near farms ... and, you can measure it in the misspending of taxpayer dollars.
That's according to a new report by the Union of Concerned Scientists, which argues that the current state of agriculture in America is a product of neither farming innovation nor market forces, but – quite simply – bad federal policy.
Here's an example. Lawmakers took $35 billion from taxpayers (about three months' worth of Iraq war spending, or $115 for every man, woman and child in the United States) and gave it to farmers to pay for feed. But it only allowed those with confined animal feeding operations, not those who put cattle out to pasture, to benefit from our generosity. Would you pay $115 a year for that?
Once taxpayers have subsidized the gathering together of thousands of animals in small spaces, which causes massive pollution from stockpiled manure, we help pay farmers to clean up the pollution – to the tune of more than $100 million annually. A relative bargain next to the grain subsidy, it costs each of us (even the newborn) about 33 cents per year.
That type of manure pollution, incidentally, has been implicated in the bacteria contamination of spinach that sickened 200 and killed three in 2006.
http://www.thedailygreen.com/environmental-news/latest/factory-farm-subsidies-47042504