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Farmers Near East Palestine Gradually Getting Customers Back After Derailment

Farmers Near East Palestine Gradually Getting Customers Back After Derailment


Lamppost Farm Owner Steve Montgomery said his products are safe to eat. He said it's because his animals are healthy, but he said some customers still need more convincing since the train derailment in East Palestine caused officials to release toxic chemicals into the air.

“Probably the biggest testimony is I’m eating it," Montgomery said. "I’m feeding it to my kids. My wife, my kids, our community that lives together at the farm, we’re eating everything we produce.”

The air and water have been tested and deemed safe by officials.

The Ohio Department of Agriculture partnered with Ohio State to conduct plant tissue sampling on farms in the area and didn’t find any contamination connected to the derailment.

Montgomery’s farm didn’t have any tissue sampling done, but the Director of the Agriculture Department Brian Baldridge said the plant tissue testing should still give farmers and their customers peace of mind. “This was the last step to say everything that’s going into the livestock is safe," Baldridge said. "And the product going out is strongly safe."

Montgomery said his sales dipped by about 50% for the first two weeks after the derailment.

“All the questions came fast," Montgomery said. "I think people just hit the brakes on buying from around here.”

 

Source: spectrumnews1.com

Photo Credit: gettyimages-ianchrisgraham

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