North Carolina officials are resolving a formal complaint of environmental racism by promising tougher oversight of industrial swine operations blamed for polluting the air and water.
The state Department of Environmental Quality and a coalition of environmental groups said Thursday they’ve resolved a four-year-old complaint about health problems affecting minority communities near large-scale hog operations.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency last year told the state agency it was concerned that minorities might have suffered outsized effects as concentrated animal feeding operations multiplied near their eastern North Carolina homes.
State environmental officials say they’ll now launch an air quality study in Duplin County and expand existing water monitoring efforts in Sampson and Duplin counties.
The agreement ends civil rights complaints filed against the state environmental agency in 2014 and 2016.
Related Stories
‹

Pollution Fears: Swollen Rivers Swamp Ash Dumps, Hog FarmsFlooded rivers from Florence’s drenching rains have swamped coal ash dumps and low-lying hog farms, raising pollution concerns as the swollen waterways approach their crests Monday. North Carolina environmental regulators say several open-air manure pits at hog farms have failed, spilling pollution. State officials also were monitoring the breach of a Duke Energy coal ash […]

RNC Chairman Michael Whatley Plans To Run for Senate in North Carolina, With Trump’s BackingMichael Whatley, chairman of the national Republican Party, plans to run for an open Senate seat in North Carolina in 2026, with the blessing of President Donald Trump.

Prodded by Lawsuits, North Carolina Seeks To Tighten Voter ID Records for Roughly 200,000 PeopleNorth Carolina election officials on Thursday launched an online database of voter registration records for 103,000 people being asked to add their driver’s license numbers or partial Social Security numbers to the state's records

North Carolina Governor Vetoes Another Set of Bills, Including One on Guns in Private SchoolsGov. Josh Stein cleared his desk Wednesday of bills passed to him from the North Carolina General Assembly last month, vetoing three.

North Carolina Governor Vetoes Anti-DEI and Transgender Rights Bills, Calling Them ‘Mean-Spirited'North Carolina Democratic Gov. Josh Stein vetoed on Thursday three anti-DEI bills and another measure that in part would target transgender rights.

North Carolina Gov. Stein Vetoes Bill Repealing Interim Greenhouse Gas Reduction MandateNorth Carolina Gov. Josh Stein vetoed legislation Wednesday that in part would repeal an interim greenhouse gas reduction mandate set for Duke Energy's power generation.

A Former Governor, a Trump and Many Others: Tillis Retirement Sets off NC Senate Seat SpeculationNorth Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis' retirement announcement set off a scramble of successor speculation as it opens a seat in 2026's midterms.

North Carolina To Send Mailers to About 200,000 Voters Asking for Missing Registration InfoNorth Carolina election officials will send mailers to about 200,000 voters asking them to provide information missing from their state registration records.

North Carolina Legislature Leaves After Passing Helene Aid Package, But Still No BudgetThe North Carolina legislature wrapped up the chief portion of its annual session Thursday, passing another Hurricane Helene aid package this week after Republican majorities pushed through divisive bills.

In Line With Trump, North Carolina Legislature Takes Aim at Transgender RightsLegislation much in line with President Donald Trump's political agenda on transgender rights squeezed through the North Carolina Senate this week.
›
Comments on Chapelboro are moderated according to our Community Guidelines