Advertisement
YOU ARE HERE: LAT HomeCollectionsCalifornia

State Loans to Dairies to Be Halted

Pollution Control Financing Authority imposes a 90-day moratorium after justification for past awards is rejected.

Region & State

October 27, 2004|Mark Arax, Times Staff Writer

Citing harmful effects on air and water, a state agency voted Tuesday to impose a 90-day moratorium on awarding low-interest loans to California dairies.

State Treasurer Phil Angelides, who heads the Pollution Control Financing Authority, said his agency erred in loaning nearly $66 million in anti-pollution bond money to a score of giant dairies that have helped turn the San Joaquin Valley into the nation's most polluted air basin.


Advertisement

He emphasized that future dairies seeking the tax-exempt financing would be turned down unless they came up with "innovative and advanced" technology to reduce pollutants from cows.

"I recognize the importance of the dairy and agriculture industry to California, but at the end of the day, we must do our utmost to protect our environment," he said. "The Pollution Control Financing Authority needs to be financing projects that clean up our air and clean up our water."

The three-member pollution control board -- which includes state Controller Steve Westly and the governor's finance director -- decided to adopt new rules after a recent Times article revealed that the board had used false information to justify loans to 18 giant dairies at interest rates as low as 1%.

In every instance, state records showed, the board decided that the new dairies deserved the pollution-control loans because they were diverting thousands of tons of cow waste from landfills.

But dairies, by long-standing practice, do not send their waste to landfills. Instead, cow waste is shunted into large, open-air lagoons that endanger the groundwater and emit millions of pounds of smog-forming gases each year, according to regional air and water quality regulators.

"The information to justify the loans was wrong," Angelides said at a news conference following the moratorium vote. "These were not the right facilities to finance."

Environmentalists who first complained about the funding applauded the moratorium while dairy farmers said they still deserved the loans.

"We support the Pollution Control Financing Authority in its efforts to make the program as effective as it can be," said Michael Marsh of the Western United Dairymen, which represents 1,100 dairy farmers statewide. "At the same time, we know that dairies were already undertaking serious pollution-control measures."

Los Angeles Times Articles
|