You know, “manure” doesn’t rhyme with “writ” so I was tempted to use a different word. For some reason, I found this entry from the Indiana Lawyer Daily to be interesting:
The Indiana Supreme Court has granted an emergency writ filed by a rural Huntington County dairy farm accused of contaminating local waterways with manure from 1,400 cows.
An order issued Wednesday afternoon bars Huntington Circuit Judge Thomas Hakes from deciding on a preliminary injunction stopping the dairy owner, Johannes DeGroot, from spreading cow manure on nearby fields, until the state’s high court can rule on a request for permanent writ of mandamus and prohibition. However, any previous orders issued by the judge remain in effect and he continues to have jurisdiction in the proceedings.
Additional briefing is needed in the case, according to the Supreme Court order. Any supplemental documents must be filed by Wednesday and, once that happens, the court will take the matter under advisement.During arguments Wednesday in Huntington County, the state said the manure in the water was the latest in a string of 13 violations discovered by the Indiana Department of Environmental Management – which has separately revoked the permit for DeGroot Dairy because of the violations spanning from September 2005 to April 11, 2007.
The Indy Star has an article about DeGroot from last week discussing revocation of DeGroot’s dairy permit for the 13 violations.
In April, IDEM officials responded to reports of manure contamination from the dairy in a tributary of the Salamonie Reservoir, and field tests showed elevated levels of ammonia nitrogen and E. coli bacteria. Other violations cited for the revoked permit include constructing a new silage pad and dry cow barn without a permit and not managing an Oct. 11 manure spill.
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