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The Sonoma Ballot Measure That Could Change the Farm Industry

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A large number of chickens are packed into an indoor egg-laying facility.
Thousands of chickens gather and lay eggs in an organic hen house at Sunrise Farms in Petaluma on Aug. 25, 2010. (Paul Chinn/San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images)

A controversial ballot measure in Sonoma County could reshape agriculture in the region and beyond. Measure J would ban so-called “concentrated animal feeding operations” — essentially a prohibition on large farms, which proponents of the measure derisively call factory farms. It has split the historic agricultural community, pitting, as Politico put it, “people who shop at farmers markets against those who supply them.” Marisa and Guy talk with The Press Democrat’s Phil Barber and University of Iowa professor Silvia Secchi about how Measure J could affect farming far beyond California’s borders.

Learn more about Measure J and everything else on your ballot with the KQED Voter Guide.

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