Your Reading List

Ontario cities ban cage eggs

By 
Jim Romahn
Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: January 1, 2009

, ,

Orillia and Pickering have bowed to pressure from the Humane Society of Canada to ban the sale of eggs from caged hens in all municipal facilities.

The Humane Society calls it a landmark decision. It follows similar bans in university cafeterias, including the University of Guelph.

The Humane Society says the councils are also encouraging residents, restaurants, caterers, retailers and wholesalers to switch to certified organic free-range eggs instead of eggs from caged hens.

Bruce Passmore, director of outreach for the Humane Society of Canada, said “they are expressing their opposition to one of the cruelest production methods in animal agribusiness.”

Read Also

This solar panel recharges the four six-volt batteries on the SunStream Solar water trough on Scott Duguid's farm.  Photo: Greg Berg

VIDEO: Watering system a cattle health win

Portable livestock watering system helps Manitoba beef producer combat foot rot cases on pasture.

The society says “cages (are) so small that the hens can barely move. These hens are prevented from performing many of their most basic instinctive behaviours, such as walking, stretching their wings, dust bathing and nesting.

“Countries including Sweden, Switzerland and the Netherlands have banned the use of barren battery cages, and the European Union’s phase-out of these cages will be complete in 2012.”

California voters supported a ban on egg-laying cages, veal crates and sow farrowing crates.

In British Columbia, more than a dozen cities have passed resolutions requesting the removal of eggs from caged hens from city menus, and the Union of B. C. Municipalities is currently considering a similar province-wide motion.

At the recent Poultry Industry Conference at Kitchener, several researchers presented results of studies indicating that birds suffer less from diseases, infections, parasites and cannibalism in crates than in pens with roosts.

About the author

Jim Romahn

Freelance Contributor

explore

Stories from our other publications