"Free Range" Is Still
Factory Farming
Animal Protection Institute
Animal Issues, Volume 32 Number
4, Winter 2001
www.api4animals.org/articles?p=377&more=1
Every year billions of animals are raised
and killed for human consumption. On today's high-production farms,
animals are crammed into tiny cages or crowded pens, unable to
express natural behaviors, see sunlight, or even breathe fresh
air. Farm animals undergo painful mutilations and surgical procedures
performed without anesthetic that would be illegal if performed
on cats or dogs. In fact, 30 U.S. states have enacted laws that
specifically exempt farm animals from certain parts of their anti-cruelty
statutes. Thereby certain acts, no matter how cruel, are outside
the realm of legal protection as long as the acts are deemed accepted,
common, customary, or normal farming practices.
Happy Farm Animals
Responding to growing concerns over farm
animal treatment, some meat, egg, and milk producers have introduced
products that claim their animals are treated humanely. However,
consumers purchasing such products may not be getting what they
think they are paying for. While terms such as humanely raised,
free range, or cage free conjure up images of happy
farm animals frolicking in open pastures and sunshine, gleefully
offering their bodies for human use, the reality is less than
idyllic.
"Free-range" cows and sheep
must be "grass fed and live on a range," and birds must
have some form of access to the outdoors, but no other criteria
- such as the size of the "range," the amount of space
individual animals must have, or animal care and handling - are
required. The Washington Post Magazine reported that, especially
in the case of birds, the term free-range "doesn't really
tell you anything about the [animal's] quality of life, nor does
it even assure that the animal actually goes outdoors." Moreover,
the accuracy of these claims is rarely if ever verified because
the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), which defines free-range
and free-roaming for labeling purposes, relies "upon producer
testimonials to support the accuracy of these claims."
Karen Davis, president of United Poultry
Concerns, visited Happy Hen Organic Fertile Brown Eggs, a "free-range"
egg farm in Pennsylvania. According to flyers for Happy Hen eggs,
the hens run free "in a natural setting" and are "humanely
housed in healthy, open-sided housing, for daily sunning - something
Happy Hens really enjoy." Davis's observations stood in stark
contrast to the farm's claims. "Inside, the birds were wall
to wall. They were severely debeaked and their feathers were in
bad condition - straggly, drab, and worn off." More than
7,000 birds were housed in each Happy Hen barn, and individual
hens had no more than 1_ square feet of space, not room enough
even to spread their wings. Happy Hens were also occasionally
force-molted (denied food for several days to shock the hens into
losing their feathers and prematurely starting a new laying cycle).
Recently, the American Humane Association
(AHA) introduced its own "Free Farmed" labeling program.
Unlike other labels that rely solely on producer's claims, the
"Free Farmed" label uses an independent third party
verification system to ensure that producers, processors, and
haulers meet the Animal Welfare Standards set forth by the AHA.
AHA standards require that livestock have access to clean and
"sufficient" food and water, protection from weather
elements, space, and other features to ensure the safety, health,
and comfort of the animal. In addition, the standards require
that managers and stock keepers be thoroughly trained, skilled,
and competent in animal husbandry and welfare.
Inherent Cruelties
Animals raised to produce "free-farmed"
and other such labeled products may be given a little more space,
spared certain cruel procedures, and afforded a bit more consideration
than their factory-farmed counterparts, yet meat, milk, and eggs
can never be considered truly humane products.
Even the best labeling programs fail to
address some cruelties inherent in animal agriculture. For example,
like other chickens, "free-range" meat-type chickens
have been genetically altered to grow abnormally large and as
a result their bones are often unable to support the weight of
their muscle tissue, causing them to hobble in pain or become
totally crippled prior to slaughter.
The parents of these birds suffer as well.
According to Ian J. H. Duncan, Ph.D. and Professor of Poultry
Ethology at the University of Guelph, Ontario, Canada, meat-type
chickens used for breeding are "obviously suffering,"
as a result of only being allowed 40-50% of food they would normally
eat to satisfy their hunger. This state of constant starvation
is considered necessary to keep the birds' weight down and avoid
the crippling that plagues their offspring. Turkeys are so genetically
altered that they can not even breed naturally, so all turkeys
are forcefully inseminated by artificial means.
Producers who allow their cows to graze
in pasture and claim to treat animals humanely offer no explanation
for the fate of the calves produced on their dairies. To continue
to produce milk a cow must have a calf each year. Calves normally
stay with their mothers for a year or more. However, on the dairy
farm, calves are immediately removed from their mothers so that
the milk can be sold for human consumption. The female calves
are usually used to replace worn-out dairy cows. Many of the male
calves are confined and chained in small wooden crates to produce
"white" veal.
Like their feedlot and factory farmed
counterparts, "free-range" cattle, sheep, and pigs are
castrated without anesthesia, and, when large enough, they too
are crammed into metal trucks and taken to slaughter. On the way
to the slaughterhouse livestock may travel for hours in freezing
or sweltering temperatures with no access to food or water. Worn-out
"free-range" dairy cows are often literally dragged
to slaughter; 91% of "downers" (animals to sick or injured
to walk) at slaughterhouses and auctions are dairy cows.
Slaughterhouse Cruelty
Another aspect of meat production that
"free-farmed" and other labeling schemes are incapable
of addressing is the actual slaughter of the animals. Through
the Freedom of Information Act, The Washington Post obtained
enforcement documents from 28 slaughter plants and exposed horrific
acts of cruelty that occur on a daily basis in slaughterhouses
throughout the United States. The Post also interviewed
dozens of current and former federal meat inspectors and slaughterhouse
workers who admitted to routinely witnessing the strangling, beating,
scalding, skinning, and butchering of live, fully conscious animals.
According to The Washington Post, "Enforcement records,
interviews, videos and worker affidavits describe repeated violations
of the Humane Slaughter Act at dozens of slaughterhouses ranging
from the smallest, custom butcheries to modern, automated establishments."
While the Humane Slaughter Act regulates
the transport, handling, stunning, and slaughter of farm animals
at federally inspected slaughterhouses and is supposed to be enforced
by USDA inspectors stationed inside the slaughter facilities,
abuse is commonplace. In recent years, the large number of animals
produced on factory farms has greatly increased the number of
animals slaughtered and processed. In the biggest operations,
one animal is killed every three seconds. This mass killing of
farm animals for profit makes federal inspectors hesitant to stop
the production line when they see a violation. "In plants
all over the United States, this happens on a daily basis,"
says Lester Friedlander, a veterinarian and formerly chief government
inspector at a Pennsylvania hamburger plant. "I've seen it
happen. And I've talked to other veterinarians. They feel it's
out of control."
Even if labeling schemes could eliminate
all cruelties associated with the rearing, transport, and slaughter
of farm animals, for many there is an obvious conflict between
caring for animals and supporting their deliberate and unnecessary
killing. Those who cannot reconcile this conflict attempt to avoid
animal products altogether. But even for the most adamant animal
lovers, dietary habits can be hard to break. For some, "humane"
meat, milk, and eggs offer a way to reduce animal suffering while
working toward eliminating animal products from their lives. Moreover,
helping farm animals does not have to be an all or nothing proposition.
Animal advocates can support "improved" conditions for
farmed animals even if the larger goal is to eliminate their exploitation
entirely. Working to improve conditions for farm animals may not
match our ideals but it does make a difference to the animals
who as a result of incremental changes may be spared some suffering
in their short lives.
Confinement
While "free range" suggests
that the animals live in conditions close to their "natural"
state, the reality is probably closer to "confinement"
or "factory" farming. The extremes of natural and confined
conditions are contrasted below.
Pigs
Natural: Pigs are intelligent, sensitive,
and clean animals. When provided with ample space they establish
a well-defined social order and allot separate areas for resting
and defecating. Pigs are very active: they enjoy running, digging
in the dirt (rooting) and splashing in puddles, and playing with
other pigs. At term a pregnant sow will isolate herself from the
herd and build a nest out of leaves, branches, grass, or straw
in which to give birth to her piglets. She will then wait several
days after birth before leading her piglets out to meet the herd.
Before nursing her piglets, the careful mother sweeps the nest
or the ground with her snout, pushing piglets out of the way,
then drops to her front knees and slowly lies down to allow her
piglets suck.
Confinement: More than 80% of all pigs
raised in the U.S. are raised on farms which keep more than 1,000
animals. The pigs are crammed into indoor, near-dark, windowless
confinement sheds, where the air is filled with eye- and lung-burning
ammonia created from the waste that collects below the floors.
Young pigs destined for slaughter are raised in crowded pens while
their mothers spend most their lives in metal crates so small
that they cannot even turn around. Some farms also use a "tether
system" in which sows are tied by a neck collar and chain
or girth strap inside an open backed crate - such crates are sometimes
referred to as "rape racks" because sows can not escape
the advances of the breeding boar. Denied adequate space and freedom
of movement, crated sows often develop stereotypic behavior. Stereotypic
behavior consists of repetitive movements that serve no practical
purpose, such as head bobbing, jaw smacking, and rail biting.
While farmers claim that such crates are necessary to prevent
sows from crushing their piglets and to make breeding easier,
pigs have survived in the wild and on farms for centuries without
the "benefit" of confinement crates.
Chickens
Natural: Chickens are highly social animals
with a hierarchy commonly known as a "pecking order."
Chickens can maintain a stable pecking order in a flock up to
90 birds with each bird knowing every other bird''s individual
place in the flock. Chickens spend most of their day foraging
for food, grooming, nesting, dust bathing, and sunning. Mother
hens spend most of their time nurturing their chicks by diligently
searching for and offering various food items, covering chicks
for naps, and fiercely defending them even against terrible odds
and predators much larger than themselves.
Confinement: More than 99% of egg-laying
hens in the U.S. are kept in "battery cages" in which
the average space for each hen is 48-54 square inches - little
bigger than a half-sheet of notebook paper. Studies of chicken
behavior have determined that the absolute minimum area required
for a hen to stand comfortably is 72 square inches. Battery cages
do not allow hens to express any normal behaviors such as dust
bathing, nesting, or foraging (60% of an unconfined hen's day
consists of foraging). Without the outlets for these instinctive
behaviors hens become stressed, lose much of their feathers, and
begin to peck each other excessively. Rather than provide more
space for the hens to prevent pecking, farmers cut off the sensitive
upper portion of the beak with a hot blade.
Dairy Calves
Natural: A calf is nurtured and nursed
by its mother for up to eight months. He or she receives all the
necessary immunities and nutrients from milk, and strength and
coordination by romping with other calves in an open pasture.
So strong is the bond between cow and calf that if separated they
may bellow and pace for hours in an attempt to find one another.
Confinement: On the dairy farm calves
are taken away at 24-48 hours after birth, so humans can drink
the milk. A calf separated from his or her mother at an early
age does not receive all the necessary immunities through the
milk, and is therefore vulnerable to disease. A 10% mortality
rate is common._Calves destined for veal production are often
confined to small crates typically no larger than 22" wide
and 58" long, making it difficult for them achieve normal
posture for comfort. They are fed an all-liquid diet of milk powder
mixed with water, which lacks adequate iron. This diet deliberately
causes anemia to keep the flesh pale. The absence of fiber in
the diet also leads to chronic indigestion and diarrhea. So deprived
are these calves that they will constantly lick at the crates
and their own hair in an effort to obtain the roughage they need.
This isolation, confinement, and nutritional deprivation lasts
four to six months. Scientific research indicates that calves
confined in crates experience "chronic stress" and exhibit
abnormal coping behaviors associated with frustration, and suffer
from leg and joint disorders.
What's in a Name?
Free Range or Cage Free: No government laws or standards regulate the
use of terms such as "free-range" and "free-roaming"
on egg cartons. For eggs, these or similar labels generally mean
that hens are uncaged yet confined indoors in crowded sheds. For
animals raised for meat, the U.S. Department of Agriculture stipulates
that free-range chickens must have "access to the outdoors"
and free-range cows and sheep must be "grass fed and live
on a range." No other criteria - such as the size of the
"range," the amount of space individual animals must
have, or animal care and handling - are required.
Natural:
"Natural" foods "contain no artificial ingredients
and are only minimally processed." Animals raised for natural
meats are given no hormones or antibiotics, although they may
be fed corn and other grain grown with pesticides. No animal care,
treatment, or housing standards are required.
Organic:
For dairy or meat products to be certified organic, farmland must
be free of synthetic pesticides, herbicides, and fungicides for
at least three years. After this transition period, the farmland
may be used to grow organic crops that are used for pasture or
feed for farm animals. Animals are not treated with antibiotics
or growth hormones and must be fed only 100% certified organic
feed. All organically raised animals must have "access to
the outdoors"; this includes access to pasture for cows,
sheep, and goats. Some organic certification agencies require
that laying hens be provided food and water during their molting
period. Confinement, mutilation, transportation, and other animal
welfare issues are not addressed.
Kosher or Ritual Slaughter: Ritual slaughter is performed according to the
religious requirements of the Jewish or Muslim religious faiths.
The animal is slaughtered without being stunned, with a sharp
knife. The animal is fully conscious as its throat is slit and
the blood drains out of its body. A major concern with kosher/ritual
slaughter is the stressful and cruel methods of restraint that
are used by some plants in which the animals are shackled by one
or both hind legs and are hung upside down prior to slaughter.
This method can result in torn flesh and ligaments, ruptured joints,
and bone fractures. Some plants have installed modern restraining
equipment that holds animals in a more comfortable upright position.
Pre-slaughter animal husbandry issues such as confinement, mutilation,
and transport are not addressed.
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