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Raising a stink: Spaniards sue state over pig farm pollution

Raising a stink: Spaniards sue state over pig farm pollution

Yahoo26-03-2025
MADRID (Reuters) - Environmental groups and residents are suing the Spanish state and the region of Galicia in a landmark case over alleged decades-long mismanagement of pollution caused by intensive pig farming, activist charity ClientEarth said on Wednesday.
The case, which argues that the authorities' inaction in Europe's largest pork producing country breached national and European law, was filed with the High Court of Justice of the northwestern region - home to about a third of Spain's pig farms.
ClientEarth, which is supporting the case alongside Friends of the Earth Spain, said in a statement it was the first time a court in Europe will hear a case on the impact of intensive livestock operations on water sources and, consequently, on residents' human rights.
There are about nine plaintiffs involved, including residents and associations.
People in northwestern Galicia's A Limia area say life has become "unfeasible" due to hundreds of intensive pig and poultry farms, which they say are putting the health of their community at risk.
The stench, which prevents residents from opening the windows at home, is only part of the problem, they say.
Chemicals such as nitrates are also widely used in industrial farming and often end up in groundwater and water reservoirs.
About 20,000 people live in the affected area.
The case says an "extremely high level of nitrates", which pose the risk of a number of cancers and other diseases, has been recorded at the local reservoir, where studies have also found antibiotic-resistant bacteria and an extremely toxic substance known as hepatotoxin.
"We are so concerned about the pollution that even the idea of walking near the reservoir has become unfeasible," Pablo Alvarez Veloso, president of the local neighbourhood association, was quoted as saying in the statement.
The local authority did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The claimants, including Spain's consumer organisation CECU, decided to bring the case to court after officials continued to rubber-stamp new farms despite residents' repeated attempts to get them to address the agricultural pollution.
"Both the Spanish constitution and European law could not be clearer: public authorities have a legal obligation to protect people from harm – and even from exposure to harmful pollution," ClientEarth lawyer Nieves Noval said.
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Evanston center named for pioneering Latino couple is dedicated
Evanston center named for pioneering Latino couple is dedicated

Chicago Tribune

timean hour ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Evanston center named for pioneering Latino couple is dedicated

Donna Johnson grew up on the same Evanston block as the nine children of Dr. Jorge and Luz Maria Prieto, who were honored in Evanston Saturday as a community center was named for them. 'The Prieto family home was the gathering place where everyone was welcome,' said Johnson, a longtime former Evanston resident who is now the mayor of Libertyville. 'The Prietos provided a clear example of the kinds of things we need to admire in this country and practice in our value system – inclusion, service, family and prayer.' Johnson was among a half-dozen speakers who celebrated the Prietos as Evanston marked the official naming of the Dr. Jorge and Luz Maria Prieto Community Center, 430 Asbury Ave., on July 19. 'This is not just the dedication of a name on a building,' she said. 'It is far more important than that. It is the continuation of a legacy of two wonderful people whose lives not only impacted the lives of their nine children and grandchildren, but my life and that of so many in this community, Chicago and Mexico.' Dr. Jorge Prieto, who served as president of the Chicago Board of Health in the 1980s and also as a Cook County Hospital department head, was celebrated as a generous physician who treated members of the community regardless of income, opened health clinics in Chicago and traveled to California to treat migrant workers. 'He was a quiet, unassuming man who nonetheless found himself at the forefront of medical, immigrant and workers' rights causes,' said his 2001 Chicago Tribune obituary. 'He became an icon for a generation of Mexican-Americans living in Chicago, a city that at the time barely recognized their existence, let alone provided for it.' On Saturday, Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss called the naming of the community center a 'joyous occasion.' 'This is a wonderful moment to celebrate a family that did so much for the health and welfare of the community and did so much for the integration of Evanston,' Biss said. 'They paved the way for Latino families to come to Evanston.' Biss said the 14,500-square-foot community center, which will provide recreation such as pickleball courts and drop-in play areas, is a much-needed facility where youth and the rest of the Evanston community can gather. 'This sense of community is what makes Evanston so great,' he said. 'I'm excited about what the facility is going to be and remain for the citizens of Evanston.' Jeanne Fox, former head of the Evanston Mental Health Board, said Luz Maria Prieto served as the petite but powerful leader of the city's efforts to diversify its staff to begin to accommodate the needs of Latino residents. 'She was an eloquent, passionate speaker,' Fox said. 'She spoke about the needs of Latino residents. In 1975, Evanston had no one in city services who spoke Spanish.' After appealing to the City Council at three consecutive meetings, Evanston found the funding to hire a Latino outreach coordinator, she said. 'I was assigned to help her accomplish her goals,' Fox said. 'There were many challenges to overcome, but there were many successes, too. Today, many of the services that were achieved are part of regular city services.' Two of the Prietos' children thanked Evanston for the dedication. One of the couple's sons, Dr. Jorge Prieto, Jr. agreed with other speakers that his parents did not choose their actions for their own benefit, but rather to improve the lives of others. 'They would never have sought this honor themselves, for their goals were never personal rewards or wealth,' Prieto said. 'They abhorred those who would benefit from the suffering of others. They sought to eliminate the inequities that led to that suffering.' His parents were exiled from Mexico by a 'corrupt' president, Prieto said. His father grew up in Texas and California during the Depression, he said. 'He experienced life firsthand as an impoverished immigrant,' Prieto said. 'When my parents first moved to Chicago in the middle of the last century, this young Mexican couple experienced the discrimination that was so prevalent then and unfortunately still exists. They moved to Evanston because they sought better opportunities for their growing family.' Daughter Luz Maria Prieto shared a story of her father providing medical treatment to a man who could not afford to go to a doctor. 'For our family, this story captures how my family worked as a team and my father practiced medicine,' Prieto said. 'He believed everyone deserved medical care regardless of their income.'

As Trump's raids ramp up, a Texas region's residents stay inside — even when they need medical care
As Trump's raids ramp up, a Texas region's residents stay inside — even when they need medical care

Los Angeles Times

time2 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

As Trump's raids ramp up, a Texas region's residents stay inside — even when they need medical care

WESLACO, Texas — These days, Juanita says a prayer every time she steps off the driveway of her modest rural home. The 41-year-old mother, who crossed into the United States from Mexico more than two decades ago and married an American carpenter, fears federal agents may be on the hunt for her. As she was about to leave for the pharmacy late last month, her husband called with a frantic warning: Immigration enforcement officers were swarming the store's parking lot. Juanita, who is prediabetic, skipped filling medications that treat her nutrient deficiencies. She also couldn't risk being detained because she has to care for her 17-year-old daughter, who has Down syndrome. 'If I am caught, who's going to help my daughter?' Juanita asks in Spanish, through an interpreter. Some people quoted in this story insisted that the Associated Press publish only their first names because of concerns over their immigration status. As the Trump administration intensifies deportation activity around the country, some immigrants — including many who have lived in Texas's southern tip for decades — are unwilling to leave their homes, even for necessary medical care. Tucked behind the freeway strip malls, roadside taquerias and vast citrus groves that span this 160-mile stretch of the Rio Grande Valley are people like Juanita, who need critical medical care in one of the nation's poorest and unhealthiest regions. For generations, Mexican families have harmoniously settled — some legally, some not — in this predominately Latino community where immigration status was once hardly top of mind. White House officials have directed federal agents to leave no location unchecked, including hospitals and churches, in their drive to remove 1 million immigrants by year's end. Those agents are even combing through the federal government's largest medical record databases to search for immigrants who may be in the United States illegally. Deportations and tougher restrictions will come with consequences, says Mark Krikorian, the director of the Center for Immigration Studies, a think tank that favors restrictive immigration policies. 'We shouldn't have let it get out of hand the way we did,' Krikorian says of the previous administration's immigration policies. 'Some businesses are going to have difficulties. Some communities are going to face difficulties.' Federal agents' raids began reaching deeper into everyday life across the Rio Grande Valley in June, just as the area's 1.4 million residents began their summer ritual of enduring the suffocating heat. This working-class stretch of Texas solidly backed Trump in the 2024 election, despite campaign promises to ruthlessly pursue mass deportations. People here, who once moved regularly from the U.S. to Mexico to visit relatives or get cheap dental care, say they didn't realize his deportation campaign would focus on their neighbors. But in recent weeks, restaurant workers have been escorted out mid-shift and farmers have suddenly lost field workers. Schoolchildren talk openly about friends who lost a parent in raids. More than a dozen were arrested last month at local flea markets, according to local news reports and Border Patrol officials. Immigrants are staying shut inside their mobiles homes and shacks that make up the 'colonias,' zoning-free neighborhoods that sometimes don't have access to running water or electricity, says Sandra de la Cruz-Yarrison, who runs the Holy Family Services, Inc. clinic in Weslaco, Texas. 'People are not going to risk it,' de la Cruz-Yarrison says. 'People are being stripped from their families.' Yet people here are among the most medically needy in the country. Nearly half the population is obese. Women are more likely to be diagnosed with cervical cancer and elderly people are more likely to develop dementia. Bladder cancers can be more aggressive. One out of every four people lives with diabetes. As much as a third of the population doesn't have health insurance to cover those ailments. And a quarter of people live in poverty, more than double the national average. Now, many in this region are on a path to develop worse health outcomes as they skip doctor appointments out of fear, says Dr. Stanley Fisch, a pediatrician who helped open Driscoll Children's Hospital in the region last year. 'We've always had, unfortunately, people who have gone with untreated diabetes for a long time and now it's compounded with these other issues at the moment,' Fisch says. 'This is a very dangerous situation for people. The population is suffering accordingly.' Elvia was the unlucky — and unsuspecting — patient who sat down for the finger prick the clinic offers everyone during its monthly educational meeting for community members. As blood oozed out of her finger, the monitor registered a 194 glucose level, indicating she is prediabetic. She balked at the idea of writing down her address for regular care at Holy Family Services' clinic. Nor did she want to enroll in Medicaid, the federal and state funded program that provides health care coverage to the poorest Americans. Although she is a legal resident, some people living in her house do not have legal status. Fewer people have come to Holy Family Services' clinic with coverage in recent months, says billing coordinator Elizabeth Reta. Over decades, the clinic's midwifery staff has helped birth thousands of babies in bathtubs or on cozy beds in birthing houses situated throughout the campus. But now, Reta says, some parents are too scared to sign those children up for health insurance because they do not want to share too much information with the government. 'Even people I personally know that used to have Medicaid for their children that were born here — that are legally here, but the parents are not — they stopped requesting Medicaid,' Reta says. Their worry is well-founded. An Associated Press investigation last week revealed that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials have gained access to personal health data — including addresses — of the nation's 79 million Medicaid and Children's Health Insurance Program enrollees. The disclosure will allow ICE officials to receive 'identity and location information of aliens,' documents obtained by the AP say. In Texas, the governor started requiring emergency room staff to ask patients about their legal status, a move that doctors have argued will dissuade immigrants from seeking needed care. State officials have said the data will show how much money is spent on care for immigrants who may not be here legally. Federal law requires emergency rooms to treat any patients who come to the doors. Visits to Holy Family Services' mobile clinic have stopped altogether since Trump took office. The van, which once offered checkups at the doorsteps in the colonias, now sits running on idle. Its constant hum is heard throughout the clinic's campus, to keep medical supplies fresh in the 100-degree temperatures. 'These were hard-hit communities that really needed the services,' de la Cruz-Yarrison says. 'People were just not coming after the administration changed.' Immigrants were less likely to seek medical care during Trump's first term, multiple studies concluded. A 2023 study of well-child visits in Boston, Minneapolis and Little Rock, Arkansas, noted a 5% drop for children who were born to immigrant mothers after Trump was elected in 2016. The study also noted declines in visits when news about Trump's plans to tighten immigration rules broke throughout his first term. 'It's a really high-anxiety environment where they're afraid to talk to the pediatrician, go to school or bring their kids to child care,' says Stephanie Ettinger de Cuba, a Boston University researcher who oversaw the study. A delayed trip to the doctor almost cost 82-year-old Maria Isabel de Perez her son this spring. He refused to seek help for his intense and constant stomach pains for weeks, instead popping Tylenol daily so he could still labor in the farm fields of Arkansas, she says. He put off going to the hospital as rumors swirled that immigration enforcement officials were outside of the hospital. 'He waited and waited because he felt the pain but was too scared to go to the hospital,' she explains in Spanish through an interpreter. 'He couldn't go until the appendix exploded.' Her son is still recovering after surgery and has not been able to return to work, she says. Perez is a permanent resident who has lived in the United States for 40 years. But all of her children were born in Mexico, and, because she is a green card holder, she cannot sponsor them for citizenship. Maria, meanwhile, only leaves her house to volunteer at a local food bank. She's skipped work on nearby farms. And after last month's arrests, she won't sell clothes for money at the flea market anymore. So she stuffs cardboard boxes with loaves of bread, potatoes, peppers and beans that will be handed out to the hungry. Before the raids began, about 130 people would drive up to collect a box of food from Maria. But on this sweltering June day, only 68 people show up for food. She brings home a box weekly to her children, ages 16, 11 and 4, who are spending the summer shut inside. Her 16-year-old daughter has skipped the checkup she needs to refill her depression medication. The teenager, who checks in on friends whose parents have been arrested in immigration raids through a text group chat, insists she is 'doing OK.' Maria left Mexico years ago because dangerous gangs rule her hometown, she explains. She's married now to an American truck driver. 'We're not bad people,' Maria says from her dining room table, where her 4-year-old son happily eats a lime green popsicle. 'We just want to have a better future for our children.' Juanita, the prediabetic mother who hasn't filled her prescriptions out of fear, was not sure when she would brave the pharmacy again. But with a cross hanging around her neck, the devout Catholic says she will say three invocations before she does. Explains her 15-year-old son, Jose: 'We always pray before we leave.' Seitz and Martin write for the Associated Press.

We're making a batch of trades — trimming 3 stocks and buying 2 others
We're making a batch of trades — trimming 3 stocks and buying 2 others

CNBC

time3 hours ago

  • CNBC

We're making a batch of trades — trimming 3 stocks and buying 2 others

We are making a handful of trades on Monday: We are selling 100 shares of Abbott Laboratories at roughly $125.51. Following the trade, Jim Cramer's Charitable Trust will own 400 shares of ABT, decreasing its weighting to about 1.35% from 1.70% We are selling 100 shares of Danaher at roughly $188.79. Following the trade, the Trust will own 450 shares of DHR, decreasing its weighting to about 2.35% from 2.85%. We are selling 15 shares of Eaton at roughly $376.69. Following the trade, the Trust will own 310 shares of ETN, decreasing its weighting to about 3.20% from 3.35%. We are buying 250 shares of Cisco Systems at roughly $68.24. Following the trade, the Trust will own 800 shares of CSCO, increasing its weighting to about 1.50% from about 1%. We are buying 50 shares of TJX Companies at roughly $124.11. Following the trade, the Trust will own 800 shares of TJX, increasing its weighting to about 2.70% from about 2.50%. Abbott Labs shares have made a nice comeback over the past two sessions, recovering about half of last Thursday's sell-off in reaction to a disappointing cut to its full-year sales growth outlook . The main issue dragging the outlook was in its diagnostics business, which struggled due to the longer-than-expected "volume-based procurement" program in China, which is part of the government's national strategy to control health-care costs. It's a transitory issue, but the company said this program is going to take a couple extra quarters to work through. Given that the issue is likely to persist for several quarters, we're taking a more downbeat view on the stock and using the recent strength to trim the position. This brings us to Danaher. The company also has a big diagnostics business in China. When the company reports before the opening bell Tuesday, we expect it to acknowledge a similar headwind. An analyst at Jefferies wrote late Friday that they think the ongoing VBP program in China could negatively impact the company's full-year outlook by an incremental $30 to $40 million, on top of the $150 million hit that is currently baked into guidance. The bar into earnings for Danaher should be much easier than Abbott, since the stock of the former has been horrible this year while Abbott having a solid year into the print. However, we are trimming the position and downgrading our rating to a 2 to protect against the same problem hurting us twice. From these sales, we'll realize a solid gain of about 10% on Abbott stock purchased in March 2024, but we'll register a very disappointing loss of about 25% on Danaher stock bought in January 2022. As for Eaton, we are making a small sale to be consistent with what we said Thursday during the Morning Meeting. The stock popped about 5% that day and hit a new record high in reaction to strong earnings from its European peers in the power and electrical equipment space. The news is a positive sign for Eaton's upcoming earnings report on Aug. 5. That said, we're taking profits into the recent strength to guard against the possibility that this record rally has already priced in much of the upside. From this sale, we will realize a great gain of about 67% on stock purchased in November 2023. We're taking some of these cash proceeds to scale deeper into our newest position, Cisco Systems. We called up this networking equipment company from the Bullpen last Thursday to increase the portfolio's exposure to the technology side of the AI infrastructure buildout (Eaton, GE Vernova and to a lesser extent Dover give us exposure on the industrial side). When Cisco last reported earnings in May, it said it reached its goal of $1 billion in AI infrastructure orders from large tech customers one quarter early. Beyond AI, Cisco's shift toward subscription-based software is still underappreciated, helping lift gross margins and justifying a higher price-to-earnings valuation. Lastly, we are adding to our position in the off-price retailer TJX, the parent company of TJ Maxx, Marshalls and Home Goods. The stock has dopped about 4.5% since we sold 50 shares in April and about 6% since the company reported better-than-expected first-quarter earnings in May. We like this pullback as an opportunity to pick up more shares. Although the stock's recent performance has been lackluster, the fundamental story remains strong, with TJX catering to the value-seeking consumer and gaining share from the store closures and struggles at other department stores. (Jim Cramer's Charitable Trust is long ABT, DHR, CSCO, TJX, ETN, GEV and DOV. See here for a full list of the stocks.) As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust's portfolio. If Jim has talked about a stock on CNBC TV, he waits 72 hours after issuing the trade alert before executing the trade. THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY , TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER . NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB. NO SPECIFIC OUTCOME OR PROFIT IS GUARANTEED.

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