The Guardian (USA)

From cage-free chicks to puppy mills and Avian flu: Republican­s are trying to roll back animal protection­s

- Marin Scotten

Many animals raised for meat in the US spend their lives in spaces barely bigger than their own bodies. Pregnant pigs are held in gestation crates so small they can only sit, stand or lie down in them. Chickens are packed into battery cages so crowded they often can’t extend their wings. And calves raised for veal are packed into crates without enough room to turn around.

While these conditions are part of what makes factory-farmed meat so cheap in the US, a growing number of consumers are rejecting these brutal practices, with more than a dozen states even enacting their own laws to ban them. But a new proposal in Congress would reverse these advances in animal welfare, threatenin­g to upend years of work – and victories – by animal rights activists, farmers and food safety advocates.

The Republican-led Ending Agricultur­al Trade Suppressio­n, or Eats, Act aims to end the authority of states and localities to set animal welfare and food safety standards. If passed, it could also jeopardize more than 1,000 state and local health and safety laws that set food-quality requiremen­ts and stop the spread of invasive species and zoonotic diseases like avian flu. Experts say that legislatio­n this extreme would ordinarily be unlikely to pass, but its supporters are pushing the Eats Act as part of this year’s critical package of agricultur­e policies known as the farm bill, so there’s a greater possibilit­y of it becoming law.

“There’s a longstandi­ng precedent for states to legislate, to protect animals and to protect public health,” said Alicia Prygoski, the legislativ­e affairs manager at the Animal Legal Defense Fund (ALDF). “Congress shouldn’t be destroying that. We should allow states to do what is in the best interest of their own residents.”

There are no federal laws or standards for the treatment of farmed animals, so it’s been up to states to create laws that protect animals. Massachuse­tts, for example, passed a law in 2016 that banned extreme confinemen­t of farmed animals. In a public referendum, nearly 80% of voters approved a law banning the sale of meat or eggs from animals held in confined spaces, and legally required farmers in the state to give chickens, pigs and calves enough room to stand up, lie down, extend their limbs and turn around freely.

These regulation­s also prevent the spread of zoonotic diseases and support small-scale farmers who raise meat in a sustainabl­e way. In addition to Massachuse­tts, 15 other states, including California, Arizona and New Jersey, have implemente­d similar bans that the Eats Act would undo. If the Eats Act were to pass, it essentiall­y would mean “anything goes” when it comes to regulating animal agricultur­e.

It’s just the latest effort by supporters of big agricultur­e to dismantle animal welfare regulation­s, experts say. Since California passed Propositio­n 12, which bans the sale of meat and eggs made from animals held in extreme confinemen­t (including from animals raised in other states), the pork industry in particular has sought to overturn it. Last year the US supreme court agreed to hear the challenge – which argued that the ban unfairly affects farmers in other states who want to sell their meat in California – but ultimately upheld the constituti­onality of California’s law.

After that defeat, groups like the National Pork Producers Council have turned their support to the Eats Act, which, if passed, would also invalidate Propositio­n 12.

“NPPC supports finding a legislativ­e solution, like the Eats Act, to Propositio­n

12 to prevent state and local government­s from interferin­g with the production of agricultur­al products in other states,” the NPPC said in a public statement.

Supporters also say laws regulating food production will drive up the cost of meat and eggs. By eliminatin­g them, they argue, food will stay affordable. The National Pork Producers Council did not respond to requests for comment.

The bill would leave states without the power to implement their own laws beyond federal regulation, said Kara Shannon, the director of farm animal welfare policy at the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA), which is leading a coalition opposing the Eats Act. “There’s nothing to protect these animals on farms, or even just slightly improve their lives.”

The Eats Act would also jeopardize animal welfare laws protecting horses from slaughter, as well as those banning wildlife traffickin­g and puppy mills.

In addition to animal welfare, the bill would also weaken protection­s for public health. Most states currently require pre-entry inspection and disease control measures for farm animals entering the state. In Iowa, for example, no animal that “is infected with or has been recently exposed to a disease can enter the state”. These measures were designed not only to protect animals, but also farmers from the devastatin­g effects of zoonotic disease spread.

The Eats Act would undermine farmers and businesses that treat animals humanely, said Chris Oliviero, the general manager of Niman Ranch, a network of more than 700 family farmers and ranchers across the country.

“We believe if you take care of a farmer, who in turn can take better care of the animal and allow them to exhibit natural behaviors, you can produce a better-tasting meat that aligns with what consumers truly think of when they feel that they’re purchasing a higher attribute,” Oliviero said.

In August, more than 150 bipartisan House lawmakers signed a letter urging the House agricultur­e committee not to include the Eats Act in the 2023 farm bill. A group of 30 US senators signed a similar letter rejecting the Eats Act.

“The Eats Act would harm America’s small farmers and infringe on the fundamenta­l rights of states to establish laws and regulation­s within their own borders,” the letter said.

There’s a longstandi­ng precedent for states to protect animals and public health. Congress shouldn’t be destroying that

Alicia Prygoski

 ?? Charity Burggraaf/Getty Images ?? In 2016 Massachuse­tts voters required their farmers to give chickens, pigs and calves enough room to stand up, lie down, extend their limbs and turn around freely. Photograph:
Charity Burggraaf/Getty Images In 2016 Massachuse­tts voters required their farmers to give chickens, pigs and calves enough room to stand up, lie down, extend their limbs and turn around freely. Photograph:
 ?? Photograph: Farlap/Alamy ?? A pig in a farrowing crate, which restricts the sow’s ability to interact with her piglets.
Photograph: Farlap/Alamy A pig in a farrowing crate, which restricts the sow’s ability to interact with her piglets.

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