
This Week
• Shore farmers may see more hurdles with appeal (Top Story)
• USDA’s appeals division has option to grant ‘equitable relief’
• Community reacts to idea for mobile meat facility
• Hotchkiss, Scuse honored for helping to boost Delaware ag
• Stablers are welcomed into Md. Ag Hall of Fame
• DPI establishes ‘Chicken Day’ for state legislators
• DCFB meets with Chamber of Commerce
• EPA has become a loose cannon (Editorial)
Dismissal motion denied in runoff suit, but Coastkeeper, Phillips stopped as plaintiffs
BERLIN, Md. (AP) — A federal judge in Baltimore has refused to dismiss a runoff suit against Perdue Farms and an Eastern Shore chicken grower.
The defendants claimed the suit filed by the Waterkeepers Alliance, the Assateague Coastkeeper and others contains allegations not included in their original notice of intent to sue.
Perdue also claimed it couldn’t be sued because the farm held the operating permit.
Perdue and the Hudson Farm, a contract grower in Berlin, were sued in March over claims runoff from manure was polluting a nearby waterway.
Judge William M. Nickerson refused to dismiss the suit.
However, he ruled on July 20 that the Assateague Coastkeeper and the head of the group, Kathy Phillips, could not be permitted to continue as plaintiffs because they had improperly filed the notice to sue.