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PAGES 20-24
The Great Southern
Star
INSIDE
TUESDAY, AUGUST 11, 2009
Loch in art
Page 8
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PUBLISHED TUESDAY 60 PAGES
Riley’s rally Back Page
Piggery on the nose
Animal cruelty reports being investigated A SOUTH Gippsland pig farmer is being investigated by local and State Government authorities for a host of serious alleged breaches.
Snake’s alive... just THIS copperhead snake might have made a seasonal error, when it was spotted on a farm in Nerrena last Thursday. Glenys Shandley noticed the three-foot snake on the side of her driveway in the warm sun, which was a rare sight for the time of the year. “I could not believe it. It was so unusual. You just don’t see a copperhead at this time of the year,” Mrs Shandley said. “They usually come out at the end of September or in October.” But the weather turned overnight and by Friday the snake remained stiff and cold in the same spot, obviously comatose. “I thought he would have gone, but he was still there. He looks frozen solid, but he might still be alive. They shut down until there’s a bit of warmth to revive them,” Mrs Shandley said. She picked the snake up with a stick and put it on a clump of hay near the shed in the hope it would get some sun and crawl into the shed to recover.
They include operating without a permit as well as animal deaths and cruelty to livestock and environmental impact concerns, such as soil degradation. The land owners and operator of the piggery in Woorarra West, near Foster North, have been pursued by South Gippsland Shire Council for permit breaches as well as by the Department of Primary Industries and the RSPCA in Victoria. DPI is believed to be investigating the alleged deaths of up to 40 pigs and the RSPCA is believed to be investigating the deaths of five or seven dogs. The RSPCA refused to comment. Its spokesperson Tim Pilgrim said the investigation was “ongoing with DPI” and any information therefore was “confidential”. Mr Pilgrim would not confirm reports from nearby residents that dead dogs had been found on the farm. A spokesperson for DPI, Sue Kiernan, also refused to provide any details of the department’s actions. Ms Kiernan said DPI had begun its investigation in July and “they are still ongoing. “It is a co-ordinated response by DPI, the RSPCA and South Gippsland shire,” Ms Kiernan said. “But this has become a legal
Poor conditions: authorities are investigating the state of a pig farm near Foster North. matter and we are unable to give community feedback until the investigation is finished.” Council’s interim chief executive Dirk Holwerda said that council had been pursuing the operator through the courts for some time, starting with the Welshpool piggery in 2007. The court case concerning the latest breach in Woorarra West was “ongoing”. He said while council was dealing with the planning breach, DPI was dealing with the livestock issue and the RSPCA with animal cruelty. “Animal cruelty cannot be condoned under any circumstances,”
Mr Holwerda said. The farm operator Con Dimopoulos has appeared at four Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal hearings between October 2008 and June 2009, regarding his piggery on Boolarra-Foster Rd. Another hearing is to be scheduled soon, as legal proceedings are continuing. Residents of neighbouring properties have complained that pigs were seen on the main road, sows were seen giving birth on the roadside and pigs that have escaped the farm are roaming in the thick vegetation. Residents fear they will become a feral pest for years to come. Other complaints included serious land degradation, odour and “impacts on local water quality resulting from the unlawful activity. “Moreover, the breach was essentially conceded by Con Dimopoulos as the main operator of the piggery and the person therefore primarily responsible for the unlawful use,” it was stated in the tribunal report. Mr Dimopoulos also appeared before the tribunal in 2007 for breaches concerning a piggery in Welshpool. His piggery was declared to be illegal because he was in breach of the South Gippsland planning scheme. The tribunal ordered him to remove all pigs from the land as well as remains of any dead animals, feedstock, animal waste and feedstock containers. Continued on page 4.