Water Pollution Lawsuit Settled in Florida
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) — A major chicken processing plant that has been cited for polluting the Suwannee River settled a lawsuit on Wednesday that was brought by environmental groups in Florida.
Pilgrim’s Pride Corp. settled the suit with Environment Florida and the Sierra Club, agreeing to pay $1.4 million and to upgrade equipment to help reduce the plant’s waste.
The settlement still requires approval from a federal judge.
The plant, which cuts up and packages chickens for retail sale, is in the north Florida town of Live Oak.
Pilgrim’s Pride is the second largest chicken producer in the world, and supplies chicken to fast-food restaurants and supermarkets.
The company was cited multiple times by Florida’s Department of Environmental Protection for violating limits on the amount of wastewater it was legally permitted to discharge into the river. The most recent violation was in June of this year, for failing to meet deadline required by a 2015 violations.
It was a pollution pattern that the environmental groups claimed was not being stopped by Florida’s enforcement.
So the groups filed suit in federal court last year, claiming the plant was still illegally polluting the Suwannee.
“Pilgrim’s Pride wasn’t complying with their permits, and the (state) wasn’t holding the company accountable, so Environment Florida and citizen members stepped in to get them to clean up their act” said Jennifer Rubiello, state director of the group.
Under the settlement agreement, Pilgrim’s Pride will make equipment upgrades, including to its wastewater treatment plant, study how to eliminate wastewater discharges into the river and create a sustainable farming fund.
The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Related News
From Archive
- OSHA issues 16 citations following fatal sewer confined space incident
- 27 pipeline safety violations tied to deadly Pa. chocolate factory explosion
- Contractor gas line strike triggers home explosion in Missouri
- LA recovery reports call for $650 million power line burial, major utility upgrades in Pacific Palisades
- Comprehensive microtrenching FAQ: Key insights on the Vermeer MTR516 microtrencher
- T-Mobile to expand fiber broadband infrastructure footprint with $4.9 billion Metronet acquisition
- First tunnel boring machines complete testing for Hudson Tunnel Project
- NWPX grows water infrastructure portfolio with Colorado precast facility
- Cityside launches $100 million fiber build in Corona, Calif.
- FiberLight to build 1,400-mile West Texas dark fiber network in $350 million expansion

Comments