Mission Creep: Proposed EPA rule shuts down small meat producers

by Robert W. Malone, MD, MS
American’s Will Lose the Choice to Buy Local Meats
On January 23, 2024, under Biden Administration guidance, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) proposed a new rule that will bring 3,879 meat and poultry products (MPP) processing facilities under their jurisdiction. This was swiftly followed by an abbreviated comment period which closed on March 25, 2024, and then immediate implementation of the rule change. All justified by wastewater levels of Nitrogen and Phosphorus coming from animal meat processing, mirroring the WEF agenda to minimize Nitrogen runoff from European farms which has sparked the widespread farmer protests throughout the European Union.
The new rule involves a major shift in the technology-based effluent limitations guidelines and standards (ELGs) for the meat and poultry industry, threatening their livelihoods by forcing them to add water filtration systems to their facilities.
What does this mean to small meat processing facilities? It’s been reported that the initial cost to install a water filtration system bringing them into compliance be $300,000-400,000 with a minimum of $100,000 annual maintenance. This would force many small meat processing facilities to shutter their doors.
It is also a direct attack on the buy local foods movement. If local meat producers no longer have a nearby facility to process the meat, they will no longer be able to provide their product direct to the customer at food markets or online.
The EPA initially promulgated the MPP ELGs in 1974 and amended them in 2004. Currently, they only apply to approximately 150 of the 5,055 MPP facilities in the industry. But, in the EPA’s Benefit Cost Analysis, they state that “EPA estimates the regulatory options potentially affect 3,879 MPP facilities.”
Accordingly, the history of EPA’s regulation of MPP effluent guidelines and standards has never extended beyond direct discharge facilities and this rule significantly expands their regulatory overreach.
The Kansas Natural Resource Coalition (KNRC) filed comments opposing the proposed rule and was joined by other county coalitions and American Stewards of Liberty. KNRC, an organization of 30 Kansas counties, states these proposed rules will “regulate indirect discharge facilities” that “departs from constitutional and statutory authority” significantly altering the balance between state and federal powers.
They also state that the proposal “gives priority to environmental justice goals and emphasizes ecological benefits, but the EPA jurisdiction under the Clean Water Act is not based on ecological importance or environmental justice.”
Demonstrating that the “comment period” was mere window dressing to meet formal federal comment requirements, immediately on March 25, 2024 the EPA jammed through a finalized version of its devastating new interpretation of the Clean Water Act, which it has titled “Effluent Limitations Guidelines and Standards for the Meat and Poultry Products Point Source Category.” Clearly this is another case of aggressive, arbitrary and capricious EPA regulatory overreach, directly analogous to the recent Supreme Court case West Virginia v. Environmental Protection Agency, 597 U.S. 697 (2022), a landmark decision of the U.S. Supreme Court relating to the Clean Air Act, and the extent to which the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) can regulate carbon dioxide emissions related to climate change.
According to the EPA, after months of study and testing to look for bacteria, viruses etc, what they actually found in the wastewater of processing facilities was Nitrogen and Phosphorus. Two of the fundamental elements which all living things are composed of (Carbon, Hydrogen, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Phosphorus).
As a result, The EPA has decided that the entire meat industry – from slaughtering beef to poultry, marinas to packaging – must now retrofit current facilities with lagoons and biomass dissipates to turn “nutrients” into C02 and methane in order to prevent these “pollutants” from entering local water supplies.
The EPA anticipates these new rules will, at least, result in the closure of 16 processing facilities across the country at a time when our country’s meat producers are already struggling to survive due to bottlenecks in USDA certified facilities. However, on the high side EPA estimates include an impact range of up to 845 processing facilities.
The EPA acknowledges (via the Federal Register) that this rule change will have far-reaching impacts up and down the supply chain from consumer prices to producer losses.
A press release was just put out by a consortium of protein producers who have said this will cost “millions more than the EPA’s highest estimates and result in the loss of tens of thousands of jobs.”
It gets worse;
Facilities can bypass these new regulations by drastically reducing their weekly/annual pounds processed. However, the US population continues to grow (largely due to immigration) at a rate that we’re currently incapable of feeding with record low volumes of meet production. Reducing pounds processed will have sizable impacts upon food security, as will further closures, and supply chain disruptions. These issues have now risen to the point of being a national security threat.
Problems in the rule change;
– The rule change fails to provide clarity or funding to local water treatment facilities for testing or range of acceptable levels of runoff, and in my opinion over-steps federal authority (WOTUS jurisdiction) by dictating local water rights. Especially as the EPA acknowledges most water used in processing is from a well source, or privately owned water source.
– The rules fail to account for foreign inputs, and actually incentivize domestic closures, prioritizing imported meat products in a manner conducive to the monopolistic multinational conglomerate beef producers who are not US based. This, at a time when the US has gradually become a net importer yet facing critical infrastructure collapses, such as Key Bridge.
– The rules specify 17 species of endangered animals that may become affected by the salt residues (a byproduct of the process they want used to turn biomass into gas), as these salts flow “downstream” from processing facilities. This is bogus language to attempt to establish jurisdictional standing, as the rules do not differentiate between facilities that are near navigable waters vs facilities that have private water rights.
However, for those who do comply, as opposed to reducing production, they’ll be left open and vulnerable to future lawsuits from environmental activists over endangered species. These lawsuits have historically become costly, with states eventually caving to the demands made, as evidenced by the Oregon Dept of Forestry v Cascadia in filing after filing – Spotted Owl to CoHo Salmon – resulting in the drastic reduction of privately owned timber lands and logging contracts.
– The rules currently allow for the off-gassing of the biomass as it becomes C02 and methane, but say nothing about future carbon taxes, or financial burdens that may be incurred due to the additional carbon outputs via the new carbon credit/taxes the Biden Administration created via the Commodities Credit Corporation. Oregon, California and Washington have already instituted state versions of Cap and Trade legislation e.g. requiring companies to purchase these carbon credits in order to remain in business.
Aside from the massive overreach in relation to non-navigable waters of the US, typically locally regulated, or an authority reserved to the states to regulate, these new rule changes have the potential to negatively impact our food supply for years to come.
Congressmen Estes and Burlison have proposed H.R 7079, the “BEEF ACT” (formally known as H.R.7079 – Banning EPA’s Encroachment on Facilities Act), as a means of prohibiting the EPA from using its deferential authority (Chevron doctrine) to interpret the Clean Water Act. However, this legislation currently has a 1% chance of being enacted, and only a 4% chance of passing out of the House Committee on Transportation.
In parallel to direct legislative action, there is clearly a need to mount a legal challenge to this action, one which can build upon the precedent established by West Virginia v. Environmental Protection Agency, which should benefit from the anticipated Supreme Court action to overturn the Chevron Deference legal precedent which currently enables this type of regulatory overreach. Further information concerning the Chevron Deference can be found in this substack essay, and SCOTUS Blog has covered the current status of the Supreme Court case in an article titled “Supreme Court likely to discard Chevron”.
This substack essay includes analysis and text from both Breeauna Sagdal, Senior Writer and Research Fellow at The Beef Initiative Foundation as well as from American Stewards of Liberty.
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Categories: Agriculture, Commentary, Environment, National News












You scream– I scream — We all scream for Soylent Green! /s
Exactly what I was thinking… Soylent Green & /or Bugs for Dinner … Or, worse; it’s Deep State’s plan to depopulate by starvation & force us into their 15 minute cities where gas vehicles will be prohibited (if the UN’s Agenda 2030 & WEF have their way) ~ the 1%-ers favorite weapon of war is to destroy the food supply.
As Henry Kissinger advised his fascist admirers: “Control oil and you control nations; control food and you control the people.”
Wow! Thanks for this article-I guess- I have not been aware of all of the details. As a farm owner where beef are raised I am concerned due to a possible lack of processing plants. I’m trying to preserve my farm (land), but with ALL of the EPA regulations I have to sell to a developer, OMG “those folks” will SCREAM!
Where was Balint, Sanders and Welch when this was going through. Looks like they represent the WEF and not Vermonters interests.
Well, Balint represents only a very small group of people who identify with letters of the alphabet. Sanders is a dyed in the wool follower of socialism (the polite word for communist).
And Welch–he’s a Berkley trained ambulance chaser. We need more representation by this career field like Custer needed more Native Americans…
The EPA agent will be your neighbor, make sure your friends take the job positions, then just ignore it and carry on with business as usual, and make sure all your other cow farmer friends do the same. Also “no trespassing” – You want to see my water filter? Get a warrant!
The above statement is not legal advice and is for entertainment purposes only – always consult your attorney.
This is not mission creep, it’s a well laid out plan to control all food production and control.
In Cuba, they have public water and public electricity that is “rationed” under the guise that there are too many leaks in the water system and not enough electricity. It’s a “coincidence” that is an easy way to control the population.
So that would be more difficult in the US, but if they can control the farming through regulation……it’ makes life real easy, for those who want more power and control
We should have food sovereignty, whereby anyone can produce and sell food of any type, more so if it’s organic. vs. Monsanto, seed oil garbage we are being fed.
We need to be passing legislation as such, an easy grab for the hearts of people if the VTGOP weren’t a minion for the United Nations…..
Right you are.
Protocols of the Elders
Our power is in the chronic shortness of food and physical weakness of the worker because by all that this implies he is made the slave of our will, and he will not find in his own authorities either strength or energy to set against our will. Hunger creates the right of capital to rule the worker more surely than it was given to the aristocracy by the legal authority of kings.
This EPA action is another law fare attack from the forces seeking the end of our freedom, our culture and our country. Watch as our legislators reveal to us the puppets and accomplices they truly are.
Where did you get the number 3,879 for MPP affected? EPA estimated 850?
Sounds to me like we need way more actually small processors, as in literally a LOCAL butcher. Every town should have at least one butcher, one bakery and one brewery. Real food comes from home or very close to it.
Power grab from states, by a power crazed centralized federal monster, that must be stopped and stopped now.
VOTE TEAM TRUMP in November and vote every leftist, regressive progressive, and democrat, out of office, not only statewide, but nationwide, and fire any government worker that puts out proposed laws for comment, when that duty is tasked to elected lawmakers, and not embedded, non elected, government workers, riding the taxpayers back, by forgiven student loans, and lastly, impeach treasonous Sec.of States, who want to implement rank choice voting, which is another word for fixing the elections…It is all treason, every bit of it.
Charge them with treason and remove from office as unfit to serve the voting public…enough!
If convicted send them to prison to do hard time.
Time for action is now!
We must fight! Fight! Fight!
If we don’t, then our country is lost, to leftist forces, that do not have our country and states, best interests in mind.
I just spent an hour (+) in writing a response … my xfinity all of a sudden popped into a new email login — erasing my comment (it just disappeared into cyberspace – not the 1st time Comcast did this when commenting). Not giving up that easily.