Where do you buy your eggs?

Thu, 06/09/2016 - 11:15am

    Given the disgusting news from Turner about the cruel and inhumane treatment of egg-laying hens at New England’s largest egg producer, we want to know: Where do you get your eggs?

    Do you have your own hens? If so, how to keep them happy and healthy?

    Do you buy from a neighbor up the road? If, so, why?

    Do you buy them from a local stand or health food store? Why?

    Do you buy them from a chain grocery store? Which ones do you buy (free-range? grain-fed?)

    We are interested in how you do obtain your eggs, which are fundamental to most diets, menus and recipes. We will be compiling the results of this short and informal survey to an article for the Summer Wave, our quarterly magazine, which is mailed to 14,000 homes in the Midcoast, with another 6,000 distributed to tourist centers in Kittery, South Portland and Augusta, as well as area stores, galleries, restaurants, shops and other gathering spots in the area.

    The focus of our Summer Wave is “Good Food in the Midcoast.”

    Send your thoughts to news@penbaypilot.com


     

    If you haven’t seen the Turner news, here is a press release from the Humane Society of United States:

    An undercover investigation by The HSUS has revealed cruel treatment of egg-laying hens at New England’s largest egg producer. The factory farm in question supplies eggs to several states, including Massachusetts, where volunteers are just finishing gathering signatures to place a measure on November’s ballot. The measure would establish a commonsense retail standard for the sale of eggs and other animal products, disallowing the sale within Massachusetts of products resulting from extreme methods of farm animal confinement.

    The Maine facility where we conducted the investigation is a massive complex of almost 70 warehouses that together confine some four million laying hens. It’s operated by Hillandale Farms and owned by egg magnate Jack DeCoster, whose filthy facilities in Iowa led to a 2010 salmonella outbreak for which he was criminally convicted. DeCoster is closely connected in business matters to Orland Bethel, the top guy at Hillandale, which now leases and operates the egg barns in the town of Turner, while DeCoster remains the owner of the facility. DeCoster and Bethel were at the heart of the 2010 egg recalls in Iowa and Ohio – a public-health crisis I wrote about in The Humane Economy. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that the outbreak sickened tens of thousands of consumers in multiple states. More than half a billion eggs were recalled due to salmonella at the operations run by these men, and DeCoster was sentenced to federal prison for his role in the outbreak.

    As you can see in the video, our investigator documented a veritable house of horrors, including:

    • Hens confined in cages packed so tightly, they can’t even spread their wings.
    • Hens forced to share their cages with the rotting carcasses of dead cage-mates. Some dead birds are mummified and stuck to the wire cage floor. A worker told the HSUS investigator that when the birds are mummified like that, it means they’ve been in the cage (with living hens) “for months.”
    • Hens trapped by their necks, wings, and feet in the rusty wire cages.
    • Hens found with bloody prolapses and horrendous facial abnormalities. The HSUS investigator was told by his supervisor not to do anything for one such hen. “As long as it’s standing up and laying eggs, that’s all that matters.”
    • Poisoned rodents found in hens’ cages and combined with chicken manure to be sold for fertilizer.

    The last year has seen a torrent of announcements from major companies like McDonald’s and Walmart touting that they’re starting to switch to 100 percent cage-free eggs. These are tremendously encouraging announcements, and collectively amount to a repudiation of the battery-cage systems that have come to dominate egg production in the last half century. As important and exciting as these corporate policies are, as of today, nine out of 10 egg-laying chickens in the United States are still locked inside cages where they can’t even spread their wings. We must accelerate the transition away from these inherently inhumane production systems and embrace a cage-free future.

    That process starts with a vivid reminder about what life is like in these battery cages and on these factory farms. That should provide all the motivation we need to close this ugly era of animal agriculture and start anew.