Advertisement

USDA sued over farm animal rights ballot measure

Share via

This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts.

Backers of a farm animal rights measure on California’s November ballot have sued agriculture officials, saying they illegally approved $3 million in spending by an egg board to defeat the measure.

The federal lawsuit, filed Wednesday by Californians for Humane Farms, says the U.S. Department of Agriculture approved the $3 million in spending by the federally supervised American Egg Board, an egg producers’ trade group, despite a law prohibiting the board from using funds to influence government policy.

Advertisement

The measure, Proposition 2 on the Nov. 4 ballot, takes aim at so-called ‘factory farms’ and would be the most comprehensive farm animal rights law in the country, its supporters say. The law would ban cramped metal cages for egg-laying hens, metal gestation crates for pregnant sows and veal crates for lambs — industry standards that confine animals so that they can barely move.

But a recent UC Davis study said that if the measure passes, the state’s $330-million egg industry will be so heavily restricted it would face ‘almost complete annihilation.’

-- Tony Barboza

Advertisement