National Post

SEC forces Wendy’s to hold proxy vote

Shareholde­r proposal on treatment of pigs

- Deena Shanker

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission directed

Wendy’s Co. to include a shareholde­r proposal in its proxy materials that could force the firm to disclose the use of gestation crates in its pork supply chain.

If passed, the proposal, from the Humane Society of the U.S., would require the burger chain to disclose whether its supply chain uses the stalls to house pregnant sows. The Dublin, Ohiobased company objected to including the proposal.

But in a letter to both parties dated March 16, the SEC sided with the animal-welfare group. “We are unable to concur in your view that the company may exclude the proposal,” the regulator said.

The SEC’S move to let the proposal be considered comes amid a high-profile proxy fight on the same issue between Mcdonald’s Corp. and activist investor Carl Icahn. Icahn has teamed up with the Humane Society to propose new board members for Mcdonald’s, escalating his demands that the company force its pork suppliers to stop using gestation crates.

Wendy’s has “followed the guidance for sow housing systems from the state of Ohio and that guidance was supported by HSUS based on public announceme­nts,” company spokespers­on Heidi Schauer said. “Animal health and well-being is important to us.” Under Ohio law, gestation crates can be used in existing facilities through 2025. After that, the stalls can only be used to “maximize embryonic welfare” and allow confirmati­on of pregnancy.

The Humane Society disputed Wendy’s characteri­zation of the group’s support.

Wendy’s didn’t comment on the shareholde­r proposal or the SEC decision, referring to the company’s website for its policies. The agency declined to comment.

The pork industry has used gestation stalls to help ensure that sows have been successful­ly inseminate­d, keeping them in narrow, individual stalls without enough space to turn around.

Industry representa­tives say the practice is in the animals’ best interest because it allows for easier health monitoring. But critics including animal-welfare activists and animal-health experts say the crates are cruel and cause mental and physical anguish.

In 2012, the Humane Society applauded Wendy’s promise to eliminate the crates; in its 2020 corporate responsibi­lity report, the firm reiterated this promise.

But rather than eliminatin­g the stalls, Wendy’s has only reduced the amount of time the pigs spend in them to six weeks from 16 weeks, the society says. The group’s proposal would require Wendy’s to share the percentage of pork that is gestation-crate-free, as well as the risks the firm faces for continuing to use them in its supply chain despite public statements saying otherwise.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada