Nicholas Meat can weather a pandemic, but the actual weather is a different story.
The central Pennsylvania meat processing plant temporarily ceased operations at its Loganton plant Feb. 23 following a Department of Environmental Protection compliance order prohibiting the company from applying processing waste to snow-covered fields.
The plant processes about 600 dairy cull cows and bulls each day. Brian Miller, director of sustainability at Nicholas Meat, said DEP has permitted the facility to apply the residual waste, which is mostly wash water, on snowy fields for the last 10 years. But this weekâs order brought the practice to an abrupt halt.
Nicholas Meat can weather a pandemic, but the actual weather is a different story.
The central Pennsylvania meat processing plant temporarily ceased operations at its Loganton plant Feb. 23 following a Department of Environmental Protection compliance order prohibiting the company from applying processing waste to snow-covered fields.
The plant processes about 600 dairy cull cows and bulls each day. Brian Miller, director of sustainability at Nicholas Meat, said DEP has permitted the facility to apply the residual waste, which is mostly wash water, on snowy fields for the last 10 years. But this weekâs order brought the practice to an abrupt halt.
Clinton County beef processing company with 350 employees says DEP order has forced it to close pennlive.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pennlive.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Nicholas Meat halted business after food processing waste on the snow-covered ground in Clinton County. Author: Peggy Lee Updated: 9:52 PM EST February 23, 2021
LOGANTON, Pa. As employees at the Nicholas Meat packing plant left their jobs at the end of the day, they re also leaving the company for the foreseeable future.
Nicholas Meat says it s shuttering operation for the time being after it was found in violation of a State Department of Environmental Protection regulation by putting food processing waste on the snow-covered ground.
Brian Miller is the Director of Sustainability for Nicholas Meat. The DEP allowed us to do that for 10 years up until the day before in early February and then the very following day they issued a notice of violation,” said Miller.
LAURA JAMESON ljameson@lockhaven.com
LOGANTON Nicholas Meat has temporarily closed its plant operations in Loganton due to a Department of Environmental Protection order.
On Feb. 9, DEP ordered the plant stop land application of food processing residual (FPR) to snow-covered fields.
“The Department’s action is driven by the increased potential for runoff due to the uncertain field conditions underneath the snow and the potential for increased runoff primarily due to melt,” DEP stated in a release on Tuesday.
In a statement released earlier this week Nicholas Meat said the order was issued with “little warning and no explanation.” It further says DEP “permitted this practice for more than a decade.”