Hw. Fraser, Agricultural odours: 25 years of reducing complaints about barns and manure storages using the minimum distance separation formulae, WATER SCI T, 44(9), 2001, pp. 211-217
Ontario In Canada has a diverse livestock and poultry industry. Two million
of Ontario's eleven million residents live in rural areas, but only 5% liv
e on livestock and poultry farms, being outnumbered by their rural, non-liv
estock neighbours by 20:1. The increasing size, complexity, specialisation
and concentration of livestock and poultry farms coupled with rural neighbo
urs who have little or no family or business connection to them has resulte
d in an escalation in the number of odour complaints about barn and manure
storage locations. Ontario-developed Minimum Distance Separation I and II f
ormulae have helped site over 100,000 non-compatible uses, such as severed
lots, away from livestock and poultry facilities, and similarly sited over
20,000 barns. However, they are under review because of the need to reflect
the current and anticipated state of the livestock and poultry industry, t
he changing needs of the rural community, and to make it easier to apply fo
r the growing number of municipal staff with little knowledge of the agricu
ltural industry.