Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Humane Society slams McDonald’s

- DEENA SHANKER AND LESLIE PATTON

The Humane Society of the United States is asking U.S. securities regulators to investigat­e McDonald’s Corp. over the burger chain’s alleged “disseminat­ion of false or misleading informatio­n” regarding the treatment of pigs in the company’s supply chain.

In February, McDonald’s said that by the end of 2022 it expected 85% to 90% of its pork in the U.S. to come “from sows not housed in gestation crates during pregnancy.” But the Humane Society challenged that claim in a complaint filed Friday with the Securities and Exchange Commission, saying McDonald’s recent proxy filing confirms that pigs are still kept in such cages for weeks early in their pregnancie­s.

In 2012, McDonald’s pledged to get rid of the cages by the end of 2022. But the Humane Society alleges the chain has “stealthily” walked back that promise, and now says it applies only after the pregnancy has been “confirmed.” That means sows could be crated for as much as six weeks of their 16-week term.

The company’s April 8 proxy statement, cited in the complaint, puts the policy more clearly: “In 2012, McDonald’s began informing its U.S. pork processors and suppliers that if a sow was confirmed to be pregnant, then the producer would be required to remove that sow from a gestation stall and place it in group housing.” According to the Humane Society, McDonald’s publicly confirmed what it had privately said to the group: that its “policy does in fact permit pregnant sows to be kept for weeks in gestation crates.”

As a result of the disclosure, the Humane Society is withdrawin­g a previously filed shareholde­r resolution seeking more specifics on the company’s reliance on pork from producers using gestation crates. The February statement from McDonald’s is “a deception, and a violation of federal securities laws,” the group said in the SEC complaint.

McDonald’s had no immediate comment Friday.

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