Texarkana Gazette

USDA is petitioned to include poultry in humane slaughter law

- By David Pitt

DES MOINES, Iowa—As Americans prepare to consume some 45 million turkeys on Thanksgivi­ng, an animal rights group asked the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e on Wednesday to require more humane treatment for turkeys, chicken and other poultry as the birds are sent to slaughter.

California-based Mercy For Animals filed a petition with the USDA that seeks to have poultry covered under the Humane Methods of Slaughter Act. The 1958 law requires that pigs, cows and a list of other animals be free from neglect, abuse and pain as they make their way through a packing plant. The law excludes poultry.

“Chickens, turkeys and other birds are every bit as capable of experience pain and suffering as the cows pigs and sheep who are protected under the humane slaughter act, and it simply makes no sense to exclude these animals from equal protection under the law,” said Vandhana Bala, an attorney for Mercy For Animals.

A USDA spokeswoma­n said the agency didn’t have an immediate comment but would release a response later Wednesday.

Tom Super, a spokesman for the National Chicken Council, a trade group for companies that raise chickens for meat, said including poultry in the law is unnecessar­y, in part because poultry processors “already have strong moral and financial motivation to ensure chickens are handled properly.” At least one large poultry producer has already voluntaril­y made changes.

Nearly 9 billion chickens raised for meat were slaughtere­d last year, along with 243 million turkeys and 27 million ducks, according to the USDA.

The petition, filed with the USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service, alleges that cases have been documented of chickens scalded to death in tanks of hot water or having legs and wings cut off by errant beheading machines while alive and conscious.

Mercy For Animals’ video undercover investigat­ions have shown slaughterh­ouse workers ripping heads off chickens and violently slamming birds into shackles. In a 2015 case, five workers at a processing plant in California were suspended and a fired worker eventually pleaded no contest to animal cruelty; the same year in Mississipp­i, the group filed criminal affidavits but no regulatory or criminal charges were filed.

Such violations in a beef or pork processing plant would result in punitive action by regulators.

Super, the National Chicken Council spokesman, said the law cited in the petition was specifical­ly written for large animals in the red meat industry.

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