If you had ever the chance to visit a factory farm, you would not forget this experience. Animals use to live in catastrophic conditions such as veal crates for baby calves, gestation crates for mother pigs and battery cages for egg-laying hens. Considering that nearly nine billions animals are killed for food in the United States each year there has been only one federal law up to now that rules how animals should be treated. However, this law governs only the treatment of animals when they are slaughtered. It doesn’t govern the way how animals should be treated before this day. Against this background, the law that had been passed by Massachusetts voters is going to bring a dramatic change regarding the way animals are treated during their entire lifetime and not only on the day of slaughtering. Read on to learn why this law is going to spare millions of animals from suffering.
“Massachusetts voters on Tuesday passed a landmark law to protect farm animals from intensive confinement.
The initiative will eventually prohibit farming methods that keep animals severely constrained for virtually their entire lives, including the use of veal crates for baby calves, gestation crates for mother pigs and battery cages for egg-laying hens.
Eleven states have passed bans on one or more of those practices. The Massachusetts measure will outlaw all three, and then go further. It will also bar the sale of meat and eggs produced using those methods, even from animals that were farmed outside the state.
Public polls consistently showed the measure receiving strong support, and while several agribusiness groups opposed the initiative, they spent little to campaign against it.
Farms and businesses have until 2022 to comply with the new requirements.
California is the only state that currently bans the sale of food products over animal cruelty concerns, and its law applies only to eggs from caged hens.
The Massachusetts law, which includes veal and pork, is the broadest of its kind in the U.S. and probably the world, according to Paul Shapiro, head of the farm animal welfare campaign at the Humane Society of the United States, which spearheaded the ballot drive.
Roughly 9 billion animals are killed for food in the United States each year, and just one decades-old federal law governs their humane treatment.
That law applies exclusively to the moment when livestock are slaughtered; it says nothing about how farm animals should be treated during the rest of their lives, from birth onward. It also completely exempts chickens and other animals that make up well over 90 percent of the animals slaughtered.
Thus, it is perfectly legal for female pigs, among the most cognitively complex and socially sophisticated animals, to be repeatedly impregnated and held in small crates for months on end, unable to respond to their most basic instincts.
Likewise, each year, hundreds of millions of egg-laying hens spend their lives inside wire cages so small they cannot flap their wings. Peter Singer, a professor of bioethics at Princeton University, refers to caged hens as “the most closely confined, overcrowded and generally miserable animals in America.”
The past decade has seen a wave of reforms to improve some conditions for these animals. America’s largest veal and pork producers have agreed to phase out intensive confinement, and in the last two years every major grocery and fast-food chain in the country has pledged to use only cage-free eggs.
But these corporate reforms are entirely voluntary. Measures like the one in Massachusetts are needed to cement those changes, Shapiro said.”
Source: huffingtonpost.com!
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Catherine Harker
Wow – wish the UK would do this, especially not allowing imports of things which are illegal here.
I know, i thought it was a fairly quick time frame too.