Dear Editor:
The LA Times Editorial Board is mistaken in thinking the new California egg law is good for chickens as well as Californians (December 26th editorial “California’s egg-laying hens to get their breathing room”). Speaking on behalf of the National Association of Egg Farmers and farmers outside of California providing the majority of the eggs consumed in California, the “wake-up call” for consumers on January 1st will leave them and you scrambling for explanations. Egg prices nationwide have risen 35% in anticipation of the law being enacted. More so in California. This will continue as it did in Europe when they enacted their new law January 1, 2012. Where the LA Times Editorial Board is mistaken, is thinking this will lead to better welfare for the hens. The incidence of bones broken in the colony cages have been noted by scientists when compared to conventional systems. This is because of the larger running areas coupled with the additional features in the cages (nest boxes, scratch pads, perches) where chickens can be injured when frightened. Added to this is the increased incidence of pecking that will take place when more chickens are in larger groupings. Hardly welfare enhancements when bones are broken or chickens pecked. The food safety component is also a mistaken thought. The colony cages have been shown to have higher levels of pathogens including total aerobes and coliforms when compared to conventional systems due to fecal contamination of the shells. Those nest boxes and scratch pads provide additional areas for manure to collect and thus contaminate. So before you start “crowing” over your vision of being “more humane” and showing the rest of the nation how you should be emulated, consider there are reasons for the production methods in egg production today and those have led to the conventional systems available in the other states.
California’s egg-laying hens to get their breathing room
By THE LA TIMES EDITORIAL BOARD
In January, California’s egg-laying hens must be freed from cramped battery cages many egg farms use. Next month, all of California’s 15 million egg-laying hens must be freed from the cramped, restrictive battery cages that have long been used on most egg farms. In the future, they will have enough space to stand up, lie down, turn around, and spread their wings without touching another bird. Though they are no doubt unaware of it, they have waited more than six years and four lawsuits for the extra space. Proposition 2, which passed in 2008 by a landslide 63.5% of the vote, also covers gestating pigs and veal calves, but there are few pig and veal operations in the state, so the law’s biggest effect is on the hens. A separate law requires all out-of-state egg producers that sell to California (which gets about a third of its eggs from farmers outside the state) to comply with the same housing standards for hens. Not surprisingly, egg producers have sued, variously arguing that Proposition 2 is vaguely worded or that the companion law unconstitutionally interferes with interstate commerce. All the suits have been dismissed. Two — including one brought by a group of state attorneys general led by Chris Koster of Missouri — are under appeal. Despite the backlash from egg producers and their allies, it is clear that these measures reflect a growing concern on the part of consumers about the welfare of farm animals. Just because they are certain to end up on a dinner plate or in a barn producing eggs or milk doesn’t obviate the need to treat them humanely during their short lives.
It would be prudent for egg producers to end their legal challenges and start retrofitting their barns. They’ve had years to figure out how to create housing that meets the requirements of the law. The typical minuscule wire-mesh battery cages, offering 67 square inches of space per hen, won’t do any longer. Many farmers are converting to bigger, taller colony cages that offer about 116 square inches of space and allow birds to move around in accordance with the law. Some producers are modifying existing battery cages to make one enclosure out of two or more.
Some producers are going even further than required, setting up completely cage-free barns for birds, allowing them to move around and even fly to different-level perches. And some major food companies are requiring that their egg suppliers go cage-free. The food services company Aramark uses only cage-free eggs in its California operations and has announced that all of the 30 million eggs it buys annually in the U.S. will come from cage-free hens by the end of this year. Unilever is well into the process of converting to cage-free eggs. Burger King has committed to having all of its eggs come from cage-free animals by 2017.
California voters, to their credit, were ahead of the game in voting to better the welfare of California’s hens. Over time, that will lead to improvements for all 300 million egg-laying hens in the country.