Report: Chicken plant’s chronic violations, lax state enforcement led to water contamination
A report issued Monday by the Delaware Center for the Inland Bays claims those violations were part of a chronic problem at the plant that has resulted in “significant pollution” of waters that are granted “the state’s highest level of protection.” “It’s not just disheartening and frustrating for us, but for really all of the organizations and businesses that have done the right thing, that have stepped up and met regulations and requirements and have sacrificed to do that,” said Chris Bason, executive director of the Center for the Inland Bays.
The 24-year-old nonprofit center was created to help restore and preserve the waterways that are considered jewels of coastal Sussex County.
The report says failures of Mountaire’s wastewater treatment facility resulted in the chicken processor exceeding legal limits for pollutants in water that is sprayed on fields in southern Delaware.
Higher-than-allowed levels of fecal coliform, chlorine, and nitrates were found on multiple occasions from April through September of 2017, according to a violation notice filed last year by the Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control.
By August 2017, DNREC reported that Mountaire had already exceeded the total amount of nitrogen it was allowed to apply to its farm fields for the whole year.
“August’s report alone showed six fields were loaded in excess of the [annual] permit limit just in the month of August.” Following the notice of violations from DNREC in November, Mountaire fired workers at its Millsboro wastewater treatment.
At the time, Mountaire said the company had hired new wastewater employees and was working with DNREC to resolve the high levels of nitrates in water that was sprayed on nearby fields.
“The average total nitrogen concentration here is over twice the healthy limit for the river,” the report reads.
The center is hosting a river rally in Millsboro next month to celebrate the importance of water and to highlight the work the group is doing to bring attention to ways residents can help protect water from pollution.
Mountaire officials did not return WHYY’s requests for comment Monday.