A n i m a l   W r i t e s © sm
                                  
The official ANIMAL RIGHTS ONLINE newsletter

Publisher   ~ EnglandGal@aol.com                                   Issue # 04/07/02
     Editor    ~ JJswans@aol.com
Journalists ~ Park StRanger@aol.com
                  ~ MichelleRivera1@aol.com
                  ~
sbest1@elp.rr.com


THE SIX ARTICLES IN THIS ISSUE ARE:

1  ~ Setting The (Humane) Standard  by Gene Bauston
2  ~
Puppymill Protection Act
3  ~
Good News Advisory
4  ~
Animal Experimentation - The Facts You Need To Know
5  ~
A Look From The Other Side
6  ~
Memorable Quote
 

    *´`³¤³´`*:»§«:*´`³¤³´`*:»«:*´`*´`³¤³´`*:»«:*´³¤³´`*:»³¤³´`*:»§«:*´`´`*:»«:*³¤³´`³¤³´`³¤³´`*:»³¤³´`
~1~
Setting The (Humane) Standard
by Gene Bauston, Gene@farmsanctuary.org - Farm Sanctuary
From The Animals' Agenda - March/April 2002

New Jersey is the only state in America with a law requiring the development of standards for the humane treatment of farmed animals, and this provides an unparalleled opportunity to prohibit inhumane factory-farming practices in the United States.  Specifically, New Jersey's law, passed in 1995, requires the state Department of Agriculture to produce "standards for humane raising, keeping, care, treatment, marketing, and sale of domestic livestock."  Certain practices commonly employed on farms are clearly not humane, and therefore cannot be allowed under meaningful humane standards.  Among the cruel systems being banned across Europe -- and which should be banned in New Jersey -- are battery cages, gestation crates, and veal crates.

On industrialized farms, cows, pigs, chickens, and other animals are treated like inanimate commodities rather than as sentient, feeling animals.  Farmed animals are specifically excluded from the federal Animal Welfare Act and from most state anti-cruelty laws; as a result, agribusiness systematically subjects animals to intolerable mistreatment with impunity.

During a Farm Sanctuary investigation in early 2000 of ISE egg factory in Broadway, New Jersey, two live hens were found dumped in a trash can full of dead birds.  After much effort, ISE was charged with cruelty to animals and taken to court, but shockingly, the judge ruled that the company was not guilty of animal cruelty.  Even worse, ISE's lawyer asserted that it was legally acceptable to discard live birds in the garbage and to treat them as if they were manure.  When the judge asked, "Isn't there a big distinction between manure and live animals?" ISE's lawyer responded, "No, your honor."

ISE and other egg producers commonly subject egg-laying hens to blatant cruelty and neglect.  Most laying hens are confined in battery cages, barren wire enclosures that are lined up in rows, stacked in tiers in huge factory warehouses.  The birds are each given just a half square foot of space and packed so tightly that they cannot even stretch their wings.  Constantly rubbing against the wires, the birds experience severe feather loss, and their bodies are covered with bruises and abrasions.  Every natural chicken behavior is thwarted, and the frustrated birds are driven to excessive pecking and fighting.  To reduce the injuries caused by this aberrant behavior, part of the birds' beaks are cut off in a painful procedure called debeaking.

Modern breeding pigs fare not better than egg-laying hens and live a continuous cycle of impregnation, birth, and re-impregnation.  They spend most of their lives confined in narrow metal gestation crates where they cannot turn around.  These imprisoned animals experience a wide range of physical and psychological disorders.  The hard, slatted floors and lack of exercise cause crippling foot, leg, and joint disorders, while constantly rubbing against the bars of t heir crates causes o pen sores.  Unable to fulfill their most basic behavioral needs, the highly intelligent pigs suffer from depression and frustration, leading to neurotic coping behaviors such as head-waving, bar-biting, and chewing the air.

Calves raised for veal are confined just as severely, spending their short lives chained by the neck in crates measuring just two feet wide.  They are unable to stretch their limbs, turn around, or even lie down comfortably.  This confinement prevents exercise and limits muscle development, which keeps the calves' meat tender.  Veal producers also restrict the animals' diet, feeding them an all-liquid milk substitute that is purposely deficient in iron and fiber in order to produce borderline anemia and the pale-colored flesh fancied by "gourmets."  Calves fed this inadequate diet would not survive to adulthood, and they are typically slaughtered at just 16 to 20 weeks of age.

New Jersey's humane standards were supposed to have been completed in 1996, but the state Department of Agriculture has yet to fulfill it's statutory responsibility, thereby severely hindering proper enforcement of the cruelty laws as they pertain to farmed animals.  Indeed, factory farmers as well as livestock transporters have recently argued that the lack of standards has made the New Jersey animal cruelty law unenforceable since the agency has failed to put farmers on notice as to which practices are permissible and which are not.  Furthermore, given the fact that the legislature has directed the department to promulgate humane standards, judges hearing cases involving cruelty to farmed animals may be reluctant to substitute their judgment for that of the Department of Agriculture. 

A campaign is now under way to compel the Department of Agriculture to take action.  So far, the state has received tens of thousands of letters, including several from legislators, urging that it draft meaningful humane standards that outlaw battery cages, gestation crates, veal crates and other cruel farming practices.  State Assemblyman Christopher "Kip" Bateman (16th District) summed up the situation well in his letter to the Department: "New Jersey is in a position to play a key role in improving farm animal welfare....I believe we have an opportunity to prohibit inhumane practices that are already outlawed in other countries and should be banned here in the United States."

Gene Bauston is co-founder and Director of Farm Sanctuary, and has a master's degree in agricultural economics from Cornell University.

Your Agenda: Pressure the state agriculture department to comply with the law and draft humane standards that prohibit such cruel farming practices as veal crates, gestation crates, and battery cages.  Certain farming methods are clearly inhumane, and therefore cannot be allowed.  Contact: Dr. Ernest Zirkle, Director, Division of Animal Health, State of New Jersey - Department of Agriculture, John Fitch Plaza, P.O. Box 330, Trenton, NJ 08625; fax 609.292.3978; ernest.zirkle@ag.state.nj.us

"Reprinted with permission from The Animals' Agenda, P.O. Box 25881, Baltimore, MD 21224; 410.675.4566; www.animalsagenda.org."
Email: office@animalsagenda.org


[Editor's Note: Though the author of this article concentrated on New Jersey, it's important that you contact your own state representatives to encourage them to work on humane standards for farm animals.  For those outside of the U.S. contact your own officials to find out your country's policies and encourage more humane treatment for animals.]

*´`³¤³´`*:»§«:*´`³¤³´`*:»«:*´`*´`³¤³´`*:»«:*´`³¤³´`*:»³¤³´`*:»§«:*´`´`*:»«:*³¤³´`³¤³´`
~2~
Puppymill Protection Act
From SMatGMAD@aol.com   

Hello All,
This came from the Humane Society of the United States, if you have time please help out.

As reported in the New York Times on Sunday (3/24), the American Kennel Club is waging a fierce campaign against the Puppy Protection amendment to the Farm Bill.  It's ironic that the AKC would strenuously lobby to block these modest - and long-overdue - improvements to current federal law governing commercial dog breeders.  Even more ironic is the fact that, according to AKC's own figures, almost 97% of its registrants are not even affected by the federal law - which exempts those having less than four breeding females - yet the AKC has disingenuously urged these "hobby breeders" to fight the puppy amendment.  AKC also fails to mention that it actually registers puppy mills and profits from this relationship. We can't let their disinformation attacks prevail.

WHAT YOU CAN DO:
Contact the following two key members of the Farm Bill conference committee and tell them you hope they'll agree to the Senate's Puppy Protection amendment without any weakening changes.  Let them know that hobby breeders are exempt from the law, and that the amendment's modest provisions dealing with socialization, over-breeding, and license revocation for chronic violators are all urgently needed.
1. Representative Larry Combest (R-TX) - ph: 202/225-2171 /
fax: 202/225-0917
2. Representative Charles Stenholm (R-TX) - ph: 202/225-0317 /
fax: 202/225-8510

*´`³¤³´`*:»§«:*´`³¤³´`*:»«:*´`*´`³¤³´`*:»«:*´`³¤³´`*:»³¤³´`*:»§«:*´`´`*:»«:*³¤³´`³¤³´`
~3~
GOOD NEWS ADVISORY!
Pasco County Hens Find Sanctuary at United Poultry Concerns
From United Poultry Concerns

http://www.UPC-online.org

[Information from March 22, 2002 notice]

Machipongo, VA - A yellow truck with more than 200 white young hens bedded in straw drove in here from Pasco County, Florida yesterday, after being rescued from Cypress Foods, an egg company that declared bankruptcy in January. Thirty-thousand caged hens out of 200,000 died of starvation within 12 days because nobody fed them.

While most of the surviving hens were gassed to death in this horrible episode, more than 300 hens were successfully rescued to live out their lives happily at United Poultry Concerns (Va), the Eastern Shore Chicken Sanctuary (Md), Poplar Spring Animal Sanctuary (Md), and Oohmahnee Farm (Pa). In addition, people in Florida and North Carolina adopted some of the hens.

Those who arrived at United Poultry Concerns yesterday poured out of the truck onto the ground. They dove under bushes and shrubs, perched in trees, and sat on our six-foot fence. This morning we gathered up one hundred hens to continue their journey north to Princess Anne, Maryland, Washington, DC, and Hunker Pennsylvania.

"It's beautiful to see these hens testing out their new world, the green world where they belong. Let nobody say these hens are 'bred for the cage.' They are full of vibrant energy -- energy you feel just holding them in your arms," says United Poultry Concerns President Karen Davis."

Meanwhile, investigators took photographs and rescued at least 60 of the starving hens at the Cypress Foods complexes in Georgia, where more than one million birds were abandoned. Activist Christina Meade and her team rescued 60 birds and took photographs of legs, wings, and other body parts clinging to the bars as the birds were ripped from the cages to have their necks savagely broken -- which doesn't kill them -- and thrown onto dead piles while alive.

Florida rescuer P.J. McKosky of the Fund for Animals, who with two fellow rescuers drove the hens to United Poultry Concerns and supervised the Florida rescue after receiving an emergency call from UPC two weeks ago, tried pulling out hens from the manure pits, but after the manure reached his waist, he couldn't proceed without being sucked down into the thick slime.

"The egg industry exhibits everything horrible you can do to a living creature," McKosky told UPC. " That's why every rescue must be part of our larger goal of getting the hens out of these hellholes for good and back into the sunlight, like these amazing hens we're looking at now."

United Poultry Concerns is a nonprofit organization that promotes the compassionate and respectful treatment of domestic fowl. For more information, visit www.UPC-online.org


*´`³¤³´`*:»§«:*´`³¤³´`*:»«:*´`*´`³¤³´`*:»«:*´`³¤³´`*:»³¤³´`*:»§«:*´`´`*:»«:*³¤³´`³¤³´`
~4~
Animal Experimentation
The Facts that you Need to Know

From http://www.all-creatures.org/wlalw/index.html
World Animal Liberation Week

Animal experimentation is one of the most controversial issues that confront the animal rights movement. This issue is shrouded in secrecy produced by locked doors and security systems.  We cannot just walk into most laboratories and start asking questions.  We have to go somewhere else to get information.

Every year the United States Department of Agriculture / Animal & Plant Inspection Service (USDA/APHIS) publishes a document titled the Animal Welfare enforcement Report (AWER).  This document deals with many issues germane to the animal rights movement.  Animal exhibitors, dealers, transporters, and experimenters are all covered in some way by this report.

The recently released report for the year 2000 is heavily laden with statistics.  The report tells us that 1,416,643 animals were experimented on in fiscal year 2000.

This number is broken down by species: 69,516 dogs, 25,560 cats, 57,518 primates, 505,009 guinea pigs, 258,754 rabbits, 23,934 sheep, 66,651 pigs, 69126 "other" farm animals, and 166,429 "other" animals.  According to the report 104,202  (7.4%) of these animals were used in painful or stressful experimentation without benefit of anesthesia.  (The report is Internet accessible at  http://www.aphis.usda.gov/ac/publications.html  in the annual reports section.)

How meaningful are these statistics?  Do they give us an accurate picture of animal experimentation, or are they misleading?  It may be best to characterize these statistics as limited.  They are limited by the manner in which the USDA/APHIS enforces the Animal Welfare Act, and they are limited by the accuracy of the research facilities that file reports.

The first and most important limitation of these numbers is that they ignore the majority of animals used in experimentation.  Rats, mice, and many other species (i.e. all non-mammals) are not required to be reported.  Therefore, if we want an accurate total of the number of animals used in experimentation, we can only estimate.  Rodents and the other unreported species are estimated to make up 85 - 95% of all animals used in experimentation.  Therefore, the total of all animals experimented on could exceed 20,000,000, but we really don't know an exact total.

Are the numbers that are reported accurate?  Well, they are only as accurate as the source providing the information.  These statistics are based on annual reports filed by each research facility.  The labs are required to report how many animals are experimented on (breaking the numbers down into certain categories), as well as how many animals they are keeping on hand for breeding/conditioning.  However, no totals are ever given for the animals kept by laboratories for breeding purposes.  Only those animals actually experimented on are dealt with in the statistics of the Animal Welfare Enforcement Report.

One way to check the accuracy of the report is to compare it to the documents from which it was prepared.  In other words, do the individual facility reports match up with what the larger report indicates?  Also, how good are those individual reports?  Are they accurate, or are we being lied to? 

The fiscal 2000 reports are not yet accessible, but the fiscal 1998 reports are Internet accessible.  What do the 1998 reports tell us?


For 1998 laboratories in the state of Connecticut are listed as using 190 primates.  And if we compare the reports posted on the USDA/APHIS website for Connecticut the totals seem to agree.  However, are the reports themselves accurate?  One of the largest research facilities in the state of Connecticut is at Yale University in New Haven.  It seems that the folks at Yale are somewhat numerically challenged.  The report forms filed by Yale staff with the USDA for fiscal 1998 are very confusing.  The report lists 32 primates as experimented on and 71 as being held for use in breeding, conditioning, etc.  The exceptions to standard care section of the report lists 22 different primates as being deprived of water during experimentation.  This section also lists 65 macaque monkeys as being deprived of food during experimentation.  This means that either the primates were being deprived of both food and water during experimentation, or at least 87 primates were experimented on. Even if only 62 primates were experimented on (which means that 22 of these 65 were deprived of both food and water), that is still significantly different from the 32 primates reported by Yale as being experimented on.  Also, the total primates listed on Yale's USDA report are 103 (32 + 71).  This number is further contradicted by a USDA inspection report for Yale dated 7/14 & 15/98, which lists 198 non-human primates as being on the premises of Yale.  What was done with those other 95 primates that are not accounted for?  How did Yale conveniently neglect to mention them?

Additionally, as was stated earlier, the numbers for animals held for breeding or conditioning are not included in the experimentation total.  The Connecticut total for primates in this category is 182.  190 are listed as being experimented on in Connecticut.  So, the actual total for primates in labs in Connecticut for 1998 is 372, not 190.  But then, maybe we need to add those other 95 primates that Yale conveniently forgot.  That brings our total for Connecticut to 467 primates actually in labs in 1998.  The true total is more than twice that listed by the USDA Animal Welfare Enforcement Report for 1998.

Now, if we examine the numbers for the state of Louisiana a similar phenomenon occurs.  The numbers match for primates that are experimented on (7935), but another 5763 are listed for breeding purposes.  That makes the real total for Louisiana 13,698.  That is an omission of about 42%.

Are there any other examples of omission/inaccuracy?  Unfortunately there are many.  During fiscal 1998 Harvard Medical School reported experimenting on 293 primates and holding 43 on hand for breeding purposes.  This is a very interesting report in light of the fact that the Harvard Medical School is the recipient of the NIH grant that funds the New England Regional Primate Research Center (NERPRC).  This facility typically has well over 1000 primates on hand at any one time.  The annual progress report filed by the NERPRC with the NIH (for 1998 - the reporting period differs from the USDA fiscal year by 1 month) lists a research colony of 887 and a breeding colony of 674 for a total of 1561.  This is a discrepancy of over 1200 primates.

In the three instances discussed above the USDA numbers omitted 7265 primates, or over 46%.  If this same level of error is applied to the total for primate usage, a total is reached (for fiscal 2000) of 106,515 primates who are currently imprisoned in labs across the United States.

Another problem exists with the AWER.  The numbers can only be accurate on a national basis if all the labs are reporting on time.  This seldom happens.  For fiscal 2000 22 labs didn't report, or didn't report on time.  Totals for previous years have been much higher.

The most striking part of this entire scenario is how much we simply don't know.  While the USDA reports a total of over 57,000 primates in experimentation, we know that tens of thousands more primates are confined in labs for breeding purposes.  We have also seen that at least some labs report their animal use inaccurately.  The only thing we can really be certain of is that the death toll is unbearably high.

Our best estimates indicate that about 165 primates are experimented on every day, or about 60,000 per year.  And another 40,000 spend their entire lives in the barren captivity of breeding colonies.  Their lives are litanies of stress, deprivation, confinement, and loss.  Either they are tortured in experimentation, or they have their priceless offspring ripped away from them to be fodder for the vivisection machine.

Their lives are our collective responsibilities.  If we know anything right now it is that there is far too much we don't know.  We must make it our mission to expose the suffering that these animals endure.


[Editor's Note: Don't forget WWAIL - April 20-28]

World Week for Animals in Laboratories
http://www.wwail.org/

*´`³¤³´`*:»§«:*´`³¤³´`*:»«:*´`*´`³¤³´`*:»«:*´`³¤³´`*:»³¤³´`*:»§«:*´`´`*:»«:*³¤³´`³¤³´`
~5~
Dedicated to those that rescue
- a look from the other side....
Submitted by MichelleRivera1@aol.com

He woke with a start
could not figure out where he was.
Why am I warm, why am I safe,
why is the world suddenly soft?
Oh yes, the lady that talks so sweet
she rubs my ears and cooches my belly.
I like it here
wonder if she'll send me back?

It is quiet but I can hear life about me
it is a calm, safe feeling.
One I have never known
but have dreamt of.
I have only been here a day
wonder if they'll let me stay?

Maybe if I'm good and sweet
they won't put me on the street.
I'm so confused
the lady talks so nice all the time.
I got my own dinner last night
without a fight.
I hear some noise
wonder if she'll send me back?

She is calling my name
how sweet she sounds.
I am here, right here
waiting for my ear rub.
Better wag my tail
let her know I like her a lot.
There she is, she is so soft
wonder if she'll let me stay?

Time to go out she says
better not do it on the floor.
Out side with all the others
they seem happy here too.
I hope she lets me stay.

Wow food again
and all my own!
She just rubbed my head
and said 'what a good boy.'
Me a good boy
wow me a good boy!
Oh that smile of hers
hope she lets me stay.

Looks like play time
hey I can play too.
She is laughing
I remember that sound.
They used to do that when
I was little and they liked me.
You know the other people
then they just stopped laughing.
Please don't make me go back.

She is on the phone
thought I heard my name.
She is looking at me
she is smiling.
Better get over there and
get one of those ear rubs.
She is talking about me
Please don't make me go back.

Still talking about me
Wonder what she meant.
She said 'looks like a keeper to me.'
I hope she'll let me stay.

I was never allowed to give kisses
wonder what she would do?
Think I'll try.
Oh my, she's got tears in her eyes!
Oh what have I done?
A big hug, maybe she'll let me stay.

She said I'm home now
talks to me a lot, real nice.
Wow, what a day and
it's only just begun!
Imagine having many days
like this all together.
Oh, Please let me stay!

Thanks to all the rescues for all you do.

Donna Vozenilek
a friend for the cause,

*´`³¤³´`*:»§«:*´`³¤³´`*:»«:*´`*´`³¤³´`*:»«:*´`³¤³´`*:»³¤³´`*:»§«:*´`´`*:»«:*³¤³´`³¤³´`
~6~
Memorable Quote

"Man has been endowed with reason, with the power to create, so that he can add to what's been given. But up to now he hasn't been a creator, only a destroyer. Forests keep disappearing, rivers dry up, wild life's become extinct, the climate's ruined and the land grows poorer and uglier every day."
                             ~~ Anton Chekhov (1860-1904), Uncle Vanya, 1897

«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»
Susan Roghair - EnglandGal@aol.com
Animal Rights Online
P O Box 7053
Tampa, Fl 33673-7053
http://www.geocities.com/RainForest/1395/

-=Animal Rights Online=- 
&
Advisory Board Member, Animal Rights Network Inc.,
not-for-profit publisher of The Animals' Agenda Magazine
http://www.animalsagenda.org/
The Animals' Agenda Magazine: WebEdition
«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»§«¤»¥«¤»
(Permission Granted To Quote/Forward/Reprint/Repost This Newsletter In
Whole Or In Part with credit given to EnglandGal@aol.com)

*   Please forward this to a friend who you think
might be interested in subscribing to our newsletter.

* ARO gratefully accepts and considers articles for publication
from subscribers on veg*anism and animal issues. 
Send submissions to JJswans@aol.com


  ** Fair Use Notice**
This document may contain copyrighted material whose use has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owners.  I believe that this not-for-profit, educational use on the Web constitutes a fair use of the coprighted material (as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law). If you wish to use this copyrighted material for purposes of your own that go beyond fair use, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner. 



 

Return to the ARO Newsletter Archives

Return to the ARO Homepage

1