Egg hatchery investigation

jlsahli

Cathlete
This article came out today - I don't eat meat but I do (did) eat eggs, however, I didn't know this. I am shocked (don't know why, I should know better), just passing this along as an FYI.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090901/ap_on_go_ot/us_egg_hatchery_investigation

DES MOINES, Iowa – An animal rights group publicized a video Tuesday showing unwanted chicks being tossed alive into a grinder at an Iowa plant and accused egg hatcheries of being "perhaps the cruelest industry" in the world.

The undercover video was shot by Chicago-based Mercy for Animals at a hatchery in Spencer, Iowa, over a two-week period in May and June. The video was first obtained Monday by The Associated Press.

"We have to ask ourselves if these were puppies and kittens being dropped into grinders, would we find that acceptable?" asked Nathan Runkle, the group's executive director, at a news conference in Des Moines. "I don't think that most people would."

The group said that tossing male chicks, which have little value because they can't lay eggs or be raised quickly enough to be raised profitably for meat, into grinders is common industry practice. United Egg Producers, a trade group for U.S. egg farmers, confirmed that.

The hatchery is owned by West Des Moines-based Hy-Line North America and is one of many operations in Iowa, the nation's leading egg producer.

The video, shot with a hidden camera and microphone by a Mercy for Animals employee who got a job at the plant, shows a Hy-Line worker sorting through a conveyor belt of chirping chicks, flipping some of them into a chute like a poker dealer flips cards.

These chicks, which a narrator says are males, are then shown being dropped alive into a grinding machine.

In other parts of the video, a chick is shown dying on the factory floor amid a heap of egg shells after falling through a sorting machine. Another chick, also still alive, is seen lying on the floor after getting scalded by a wash cycle, according to the video narrator.

Hy-Line said the video "appears to show an inappropriate action and violation of our animal welfare policies," referring to chicks on the factory floor.

But the company also noted that "instantaneous euthanasia" — a reference to killing of male chicks by the grinder — is a standard practice supported by the animal veterinary and scientific community.

Company spokesman Tom Jorgensen said Tuesday an investigation was continuing, and once it's completed the company would release more information.

Runkle acknowledged that his group's ultimate goal was to get people to stop eating eggs. He said he believe many would refuse to eat eggs if they knew what happened to male chicks.

"The egg industry is perhaps the cruelest industry on the face of the planet," Runkle said.

Mercy for Animals also sent letters to the nation's 50 largest grocery store chains, including Walmart, Whole Foods, Safeway, Harris Teeter and Trader Joe's, asking them to include a label on egg cartons that says, "Warning: Male chicks are ground-up alive by the egg industry."

A spokesman for United Egg Producers called the proposal "almost a joke." Spokesman Mitch Head said Mercy for Animals had no credible authority, as well as questionable motives. "This is a group which espouses no egg consumption by anyone — so that is clearly their motive."

Mercy for Animals estimated 200 million male chicks are killed a year, which the United Egg Producers also confirmed.

"There is, unfortunately, no way to breed eggs that only produce female hens," Head said. "If someone has a need for 200 million male chicks, we're happy to provide them to anyone who wants them. But we can find no market, no need."

Using a grinder, Head said, "is the most instantaneous way to euthanize chicks."

There is no federal law that ensures the humane euthanasia of animals on farms or hatcheries, according to Jonathan Lovvorn, vice president and chief counsel of the Humane Society of the United States.

The Humane Society also says that virtually all egg farms, even those that sell cage-free eggs, get their hens from hatcheries that kill their male chicks.

Hy-Line says on its Web site that its Iowa facility produces 33.4 million chicks. Based on that figure, Mercy for Animals estimates a similar number of male chicks are killed at the facility each year. Hy-Line did not comment on that estimate.

Runkle, of Mercy for Animals, said most people would be shocked to learn that 200 million chicks are killed a year.

"Is this justifiable just for cheap eggs?" he said.

As to more humane alternatives to disposing of male chicks, Runkle said the whole system is inherently flawed.

"The entire industrial hatchery system subjects these birds to stress, fear and pain from the first day," he said.

___

On the Web:

Mercy for Animals video: http://www.mercyforanimals.org/hatchery
 
I was just about to post this. I am absolutely disgusted. I love eggs but will never eat another from a grocery store.
 
DES MOINES, Iowa – An animal rights group publicized a video Tuesday showing unwanted chicks being tossed alive into a grinder at an Iowa plant and accused egg hatcheries of being "perhaps the cruelest industry" in the world.
It's not just that hatchery. Tossing unwanted male chicks alive into a grinder is actually pretty standard practice in the egg industry. I've just got to wonder about people who can do that. Or what that does to people who are forced to do it (because they need the job and that's what available, or that's all they are qualified for).


"There is, unfortunately, no way to breed eggs that only produce female hens," Head said. "If someone has a need for 200 million male chicks, we're happy to provide them to anyone who wants them. But we can find no market, no need."

There's something just so wrong about that, IMO. Male chicks (or any living being) seen as an unwanted 'byproduct" that have to be "disposed of" because there is "no need" for them.
 
There's something just so wrong about that, IMO. Male chicks (or any living being) seen as an unwanted 'byproduct" that have to be "disposed of" because there is "no need" for them.

Kathryn,
You are so right!! I am a vegetarian but after this I think I'm going to be vegan. You are vegan, correct? I know this has been discussed before but do you have any book recommendations or personal recipe collections that you'd be willing to share.
 
I've just got to wonder about people who can do that. Or what that does to people who are forced to do it (because they need the job and that's what available, or that's all they are qualified for).

I agree, Kathryn. That video was about the most horrifying thing I've seen...I couldn't even finish watching. This has really opened my eyes. I'm just so appalled, I can't even think straight.
 
Ugh. Male chicks being ground up or suffocated is just the beginning. :( Once you start reading about how factory farms operate, your idea of "food" really changes.

Jlsahli, Kathryn is the right person to ask. :) She helped me tremendously when I made the transition to vegan 4 months ago. Let me know if I can help too!
 
The disrespect for life makes me sick. Yeah, how dare the chicks have the nerve to be born male, thereby inconveniencing the human population. Grrr....

If anyone is concerned about the treatment of factory farm animals or wants to know more, check out the book Farm Sanctuary or farmsanctuary.org.
 
Ever since I read the Omnivore's Dilema, I started to get my eggs from a local egg farmer. His daughter works at my office and I inquired as to how he treats his hens. My co-worker said "he treats them better than he treated his kids." The're a bit more expensive but they are tasty and I feel better about the hens.
 
I'm reading Farm Sanctuary now. :)

Oh cool! :) DH and I are hoping to visit the New York farm some time in the near future. I just wish they would stop letting me know about the animals up for adoption (email and newsletter). It took all my resistance to not rush up there and adopt a mini goat.
 
I buy my eggs from my neighbors who let their chickens cruise the hood and listen to Phish all day.
 
Oooooooooohhh - it makes me SO MAD!! :mad:

I was trying to resist this thread because I didn't want to go all "crazy vegan" again. But dang it, I AM a crazy vegan -- and when I got this e-mail from MFA, I was mad, mad mad! :mad:

That's all - just needed to vent a little, I guess. Whew. Glad I got that out of my system. Off to blog about the evils of the egg industry...
 
It's not just that hatchery. Tossing unwanted male chicks alive into a grinder is actually pretty standard practice in the egg industry. I've just got to wonder about people who can do that. Or what that does to people who are forced to do it (because they need the job and that's what available, or that's all they are qualified for).


"There is, unfortunately, no way to breed eggs that only produce female hens," Head said. "If someone has a need for 200 million male chicks, we're happy to provide them to anyone who wants them. But we can find no market, no need."

There's something just so wrong about that, IMO. Male chicks (or any living being) seen as an unwanted 'byproduct" that have to be "disposed of" because there is "no need" for them.

MAD...and sad.:(
 
I am glad you posted this. I am trying to be vegan and I have been slipping more and more into just vegetarianism, and each day I wonder why I even bother. Well, this has reminded me why I bother.
 
Kathryn,
You are so right!! I am a vegetarian but after this I think I'm going to be vegan. You are vegan, correct? I know this has been discussed before but do you have any book recommendations or personal recipe collections that you'd be willing to share.

"Becoming Vegan" by Brenda Davis and Vesanto Melina is a good general resource. They are two registered dieticians, and give good, scientifically based recommendations for healthy vegan living, as well as information on other resources.

"Vegan Planet" is a cookbook that quite a few people seem to like (even though I have MANY, MANY cookbooks, I don't use them much. And now that I'm eating mostly raw, I don't use my "cook" books at all.)

I have a couple of recipes in my blog (one for a tempeh "mock chicken ofr the egg" salad--very a propos for this thread!).
 
Ladies I was just reading this earlier. I live in Des Moines. I actually decided to go veg-no eggs after driving by the Hy Line hatchery that is about 30 min outside of Des Moines every day for a week when I was working in a city that was past it on the interstate. There are huge buildings with these exhaust fans attached and what looks like grain belts going into them. The yard around them is so pretty green and pristine and they are all painted a pretty pale yellow but I knew inside was pure evil. I thought about those chickens everyday for a week (and after) and I just decided that was it. I never ate an egg or chicken again. And I ate eggs everyday before that.

You have to make choices and I say don't eat comercially produced eggs or meat. I myself am vegan. It makes me sick to think of such suffering just 30 min up the road from me :(
 
Sparrow, I'm considering doing a Farm Sanctuary vacation with the kids sometime in the future. They are totally up for it. DH, on the other hand, isn't too thrilled about doing farm chores on his week off. :D

Workoutaholic, I think being vegetarian is very cool too. :) So is making the effort to buy animal products from small farms where the animals are treated well, like some have mentioned in this thread. And speaking up for the ethical treatment of animals, regardless of one's diet. Every little bit helps.

Kathryn, I have Vegan Freak in my sites ~ I just haven't broken down and ordered it yet. Though after yesterday's conversation with my dear MIL, where she asked that I bring the hamburgers for our weekend BBQ :eek: , I inched a little closer to hitting that "Buy" button.
 
I became a vegetarian 32 years ago when I read (among other things) that chickens were killed by hanging them upside down by their feet along a conveyor belt before their heads were chopped off :( I kept thinking of how scared they must all be....

I'm lacto-ovo, but that "ovo" is probably equated to 2 eggs a year. Now it will likely be "zero".

For those that only eat local eggs, what do you do about buying things that contain eggs already, like baked goods? Or even Oreos?? They're cookies, they must contain eggs. And, what do local farmers do with the male chicks? They are probably "disposed" of too...does anyone know how?
 
I became a vegetarian 32 years ago when I read (among other things) that chickens were killed by hanging them upside down by their feet along a conveyor belt before their heads were chopped off :( I kept thinking of how scared they must all be....

I'm lacto-ovo, but that "ovo" is probably equated to 2 eggs a year. Now it will likely be "zero".

For those that only eat local eggs, what do you do about buying things that contain eggs already, like baked goods? Or even Oreos?? They're cookies, they must contain eggs. And, what do local farmers do with the male chicks? They are probably "disposed" of too...does anyone know how?

I don't really buy baked goods - I make that stuff at home - so that's not really an issue for me. As for local roosters, I can't say for sure but I'd bet that the local smaller farmers do what people did for years: keep some roosters for fertilization, give some away, or butcher them for meat. Again I don't really know since my eggs are closer to home. :D
 

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