Posts Tagged ‘councils’

Celebrating cage-free councils!

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010
Free Range Hens - CC / Flickr

Free Range Hens - CC / Flickr

One in five local authorities in the UK have now gone cage-free, pledging to buy only non-cage eggs in their procurement policies. And last night at our Good Egg Awards event in Bournemouth, we celebrated over 30 local authorities who have taken the cage-free pledge in the last year! And they thoroughly deserve our recognition and applause for their commitment to animal welfare and leadership in ethical procurement. A grand total of over 80 local authorities are now officially recognised as ‘good eggs’ and are part of the movement to better welfare, better quality food that is sweeping the corporate and public procurement worlds.

Our event was timed to coincide with the Local Government Association’s annual conference and provided the delegates from award-winning councils the opportunity to celebrate together. The awards were presented by our special guest, Pam Ayres, whose hilariously funny, yet poignant comic verse had the audience laughing and crying in equal measure. Her poem on the life of the battery hen underscored the real difference that the assembled councils were making to the lives of literally thousands of hens, thanks to their switch to using only cage-free eggs.

After the proceedings, I was approached by the owners of one of the farms supplying an award-winning council. “We need your help” he said, and explained that Compassion’s energy was needed as much as ever to ensure that the ban on barren battery cages across Europe does go ahead as planned in 2012. He told of how rumours were still circulating in the farming community that the ban might be delayed, diluted, or simply disobeyed by other countries. I reassured him that Compassion will remain ever vigilant and will not rest on this issue until the ban is enforced in full and on time. I was pleased to reassure him that only recently, the European Commissioner in charge of this area had restated that there will be no delay on the cage ban. Nevertheless, it underscored our need to remain alert to the dangers. And it highlights just why the actions of the award-winning councils are so important, both to the hens that benefit directly, and to ensuring that politicians and higher welfare farmers feel supported in their quest to bring a better deal to our laying hens.

The roll-call of councils who received their awards on the night included: Peterborough City Council, Cambridge City Council, East Sussex County Council, Wychavon District Council, Bacons College, South London and Maudsley NHS Trust, Ceredigion County Council, Bristol City Council, Somerset County Council, Gloucester County Council, Herefordshire County Council, Winchester City Council, Suffolk County Council, Ryedale District Council, Telford and Wrekin Council, Oldham Metropolitan Borough Council, West Sussex County Council, Birmingham City Council, Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council, Kent County Council, London Borough of Hounslow, Oxfordshire County Council, Cambridgeshire County Council, Sedgemoor District Council and Bolton City Council. Congratulations to all of them. And a big thank you to everyone who has taken part in our Cage-free Councils Campaign. Together, we’re making a real difference to our food and farm animals.

Election results

Friday, May 7th, 2010

With the nation having had their say in the UK’s General Election, and a hung Parliament in prospect, we are now gearing up to engage with MPs old and new from all parties on the big farm animal welfare matters of our day.

As soon as we know who will be the new Minister responsible for agriculture and animal welfare, I will be writing to them highlighting key issues and asking for a meeting. The key points that I will be raising immediately include:

• The UK ban on the debeaking of laying hens is due to come into force on 1 January 2011. The previous Government planned to remove the ban by postponing it indefinitely. We will press the new Minister to ensure that if the ban is postponed, a new specific commencement date be set. We will make it clear that an indefinite postponement is completely unacceptable, condemning many millions of hens to avoidable suffering.

• Encouragingly, about 90 local authorities no longer use eggs from caged hens or are committed to ending their use in the near future. This is thanks to your support for our Cage-free Councils campaign. We will call on the new Government to set high standards of animal welfare for the procurement of food and meals by the whole of the public sector. This should extend to meat, milk and eggs.

• Pressures are building for the increasing industrialisation of UK dairy farming. A growing number of cows are being kept indoors for all or most of the year and many are pushed to extremely high milk yields. We will call on the new Minister to take action against the construction of so-called ‘mega-dairies’ like the one proposed for Lincolnshire.

We will keep you up-to-date on how you can best raise farm animal welfare issues with your MP. We aim to give further advice on the political action you can take, and will have this ready for you on our website by 18th May, when MPs return to Westminster.

And many thanks to everyone who took part in our Vote Cruelty-Free initiative. I am delighted to say that at least 42 elected MPs have pledged support for the manifesto put forward by a coalition of animal societies including ourselves. These MPs represent cross-party support for animal welfare reforms.

50th council goes cage-free

Friday, December 4th, 2009

Norwich City Council has become the fiftieth council in Britain to go cage-free on the eggs that it serves.  This milestone has been reached thanks to the hard work of our supporters who have taken up our campaign with great gusto.  The first 27 councils to take the cage-free pledge received our ‘Good Egg’ Award.  This was at the Local Government Association conference in July.  Collectively, those award-winning councils alone are responsible for freeing 15,000 hens a year from battery cages.  The political buy-in to a cage-free future is invaluable.

Barren battery cages still confine nearly 60% of the 27 million hens in the UK.  These cages prevent the hens from carrying out most natural behaviours, including flapping their wings.  If a pet parrot were kept in these conditions, it would rightly be deemed illegal.  Thankfully, the European Union has said that, from 2012, the barren battery cage will be banned.  That’s a huge step forward, especially as there are nearly 400 million hens for egg-laying in the EU.

Unfortunately, the EU ban will not extend to so-called ‘enriched’ cages.  These give the hens marginally more space and are legally obliged to come with objects that are supposed to offer nesting, perching and dust-bathing facilities.  The reality is that these provisions are a pale comparison of what hens really need.  That is why, in a report looking into the science and practice around these cages, we concluded that ‘enriched’ cages fail to overcome the severe welfare problems that we see in barren cages.   Our report went on to say, that ‘enriched’ cages “are so inadequate that this system deprives hens of the ability to meaningfully fulfil natural behaviours, leading to abnormal behaviours, frustration, suffering and body degeneration.”

Over the past few years, we have been engaging with food industry companies to encourage them to go cage-free on their eggs.  We seem to be at a positive tipping point with retailers on this issue.  Amongst leading retailers, Marks & Spencer, Sainsbury’s, The Co-operative Food and Waitrose have all gone cage-free, at least on the shell eggs they sell.  Morrisons has gone cage-free on its own-label shell eggs.  Other food companies have been joining this cage-free trend; McDonald’s, and Unilever’s Hellmann’s range of mayonnaises, being two such examples.  Indeed, the cage-free movement amongst companies has become so strong that a recent issue of the influential food retail magazine, The Grocer, declared eggs from caged hens "extinct."

These companies are proud recipients of our Good Egg Award, an award scheme we set up to encourage companies to take tangible steps to benefit animals and gain the positive recognition they deserve for doing it.  Over the three years, we have awarded over 170 companies from across Europe.  And the scheme continues to build year on year with new companies talking with us all the time.

Our strategy in Europe is to ensure that Europe’s 2012 ban on barren battery cages goes ahead on time and undiluted.  At the same time, we are working with companies and councils to show them the business and animal welfare benefits of ensuring that their eggs come from hens that have enjoyed cage-free lives.  In this way, we are building the incentive for producers to switch to higher welfare systems, such as free-range and barn, rather than cramped and cluttered cages.  Your help in this campaign is as crucial as ever.  Please help us by convincing your Council to go cage-free. Thank you!

Flickr

Campaigners outside the Polish Embassy in Stockholm, Sweden DSC00756Campaigners in Bratislava, Slovakia Supporters sign a petition to defend the the hens in Warsaw, PolandCampaigners at the Polish Embassy in The Hague, NetherlandsMr. Jankowski, The  Ambassador’s personal councilor with Amalia Sotirhou at the Polish Embassy in Psychiko, GreeceCampaigners at the Polish Embassy in Berlin, Germany Campaigners at the Polish Embassy in Helsinki, PolandCampaigners at the Polish Embassy in Tallinn, Estonia

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