• Home
  • About
  • The Facts
  • Blog
  • Stand Up
  • Donate
  • FAQ
  • Connect
Menu

NC FARM FAMILIES

  • Home
  • About
  • The Facts
  • Blog
  • Stand Up
  • Donate
  • FAQ
  • Connect
blog-1.jpg

Farmkeepers Blog

The Farmkeepers is the official blog of NC Farm Families. It is here that words will flow, our voice will be heard, a stand will be made, and the farm families of North Carolina will be protected. In these posts, we'll set the record straight. You'll see the faces of the families who feed us. Here, you'll receive all the updates and news. It is here that we will fight for farmers and be the keepers of the farm in NC. We hope you'll join us. Follow along on social media and by joining our email list.  


Featured posts:

Featured
When science picks sides: How agenda-driven research targets NC farmers
Jun 12, 2025
When science picks sides: How agenda-driven research targets NC farmers
Jun 12, 2025
Jun 12, 2025
Fueling Bacon: Meet Mrs. Nancy, a Feedtruck Driver
May 9, 2025
Fueling Bacon: Meet Mrs. Nancy, a Feedtruck Driver
May 9, 2025
May 9, 2025
Support Family Farmers with Your Vote
Oct 22, 2024
Support Family Farmers with Your Vote
Oct 22, 2024
Oct 22, 2024
Ripe for attack: When it comes to hog farms, nothing can appease an activist on a mission.
Jul 10, 2024
Ripe for attack: When it comes to hog farms, nothing can appease an activist on a mission.
Jul 10, 2024
Jul 10, 2024
Waterkeepers say hog farms not the problem in recent survey
Apr 3, 2024
Waterkeepers say hog farms not the problem in recent survey
Apr 3, 2024
Apr 3, 2024

Our Sponsors

cv.jpg
hogslat.png
Maxwell-Foods-Logo-LLC-GR.png
mfv-logo-transparent.png
NC-Associations-Logo-Color.png
NCPC_Logo_White_Outline.png
prestage.png
riverlanding.png
smithfield.png
snipes.png

When science picks sides: How agenda-driven research targets NC farmers

June 12, 2025 in The Truth About Farmers

A familiar pattern is repeating itself: another round of misleading attacks on North Carolina hog farmers is making headlines. An article recently published by Sentient Media — and republished by NC Health News — repeats a litany of claims that unfairly target family farmers who raise pork for millions of American families.

 At the center of these stories is an air quality study by Johns Hopkins professor Christopher Heaney, a protégé of the late UNC activist Steve Wing. As you may recall, Wing was an avowed and proudly “committed activist” — co-founder of the NC Environmental Justice Network — who acknowledged that he was engaged in political science as much as research.

 Wing focused on environmental justice, working closely with community activists to craft studies that supported his agenda. Despite flaws with his methodology and conclusions, his work continues to influence the media — as well as researchers like Heaney who studied under Wing.

 Heaney is following in Wing’s footsteps, establishing close ties with the Rural Empowerment Association for Community Help (REACH) in Duplin County and the NC Environmental Justice Network. Devon Hall, the executive director of REACH, has even been listed as a co-author on studies conducted by Heaney.

 At Johns Hopkins, Heaney leads an initiative explicitly built to “support movements for environmental justice” through community-driven research around hog farms and other large animal production facilities. The initiative is part of the Center for a Livable Future, an academic organization with fellowship programs named for both Wing and Elsie Herring, a North Carolina resident whose allegations have been well chronicled here.

 All of this is to say that studies like this are purposefully designed from the start to produce an intended outcome. The goal is clear — to portray hog farmers in the worst possible light and generate attention-grabbing headlines that can potentially be used to influence lawmakers or juries.

 What a state air quality study shows

If you want to truly understand air quality around North Carolina hog farms, look at the study conducted by the NC Department of Environmental Quality’s Division of Air Quality. It conducted 15 months of ambient air monitoring in Duplin County, the nation’s largest hog producing county, in 2018 and 2019. The study used a series of monitors — located within 0.5 miles to 2.5 miles of one or more hog farms — to collect data on three substances of concern: hydrogen sulfide, ammonia and particulate matter

 And what did it show?

 The study found no concern or exceedance related to hog farms, including in the measure of particulate matter. For hydrogen sulfide, the data showed that 24-hour average concentrations were consistently, throughout the study, 10 times lower than the acceptable “ambient” level. For ammonia, the acceptable level was never exceeded. And there were very few events with even measurable concentrations — the largest being attributed to smoke from open burning unrelated to farms.

 The Division of Air Quality concluded that the results “do not constitute a significant air quality issue in the study area.”

 The results were so clear cut that the department determined no additional testing was needed.

 “The results of this ambient air quality study,” the NC Farm Bureau said, “provide a valuable counter-point to the narrative from (other groups) that swine farms are contributing to poor air quality…”

 So, while some groups continue to chase headlines, North Carolina farmers will keep doing what we’ve always done: raising healthy animals, feeding families, and protecting the land we live on. That’s the real story.

Tags: Steve Wing, Heaney research, agenda-driven research, NC farm families
Fueling Bacon: Meet Mrs. Nancy, a Feedtruck Driver →
Back to Top

Web Design by M. See Creative

Copyright © 2025 NC Farm Families. All Rights Reserved.