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PETA Proposes New Welfare Standards for Animals on Dairy Farms

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Dairy Vendors Can Take Steps to Curb Abuse of Cows and Their Calves, Says PETA

For Immediate Release:
April 21, 2011

Contact:
David Perle 202-483-7382

Norfolk, Va. — Today, PETA launched a new initiative calling on grocery chains, restaurants, and dairies nationwide to adopt five basic animal welfare requirements and standards that would dramatically improve the lives of cows and calves on dairy farms. Under the new guidelines, vendors would commit to purchasing products only from those farms and co-ops that adhere to these minimal welfare standards. The initiative is being launched in the wake of a Mercy for Animals undercover investigation, which documented that workers on a Texas dairy farm bludgeoned calves in the head with pickaxes and hammers, burned calves' budding horns out of their skulls using no pain relief, and routinely committed other atrocities. A PETA investigation of a Land O'Lakes dairy supplier found similar abuses.

"The abuse of dairy cows and their calves is rampant on dairy factory farms as our undercover videos show," says PETA Executive Vice President Tracy Reiman. "PETA wants pizza and ice cream chains, grocery stores, and others who sell dairy products to require that suppliers adhere to minimal guidelines to prevent the worst abuses suffered by cows and their calves on dairy factory farms."

PETA's new standards of care include the following:

  • Keeping facilities clean and providing adequate flooring, foot care, and bedding
  • Immediately euthanizing "downed" cows who can no longer walk
  • Ending de-horning and tail-docking, cruel procedures in which cows have a portion of their tails cut off and their horns cut out of their skulls
  • Banning the use of bovine growth hormone, which contributes to lameness and a painful inflammation of the udder known as "mastitis" and which has already been banned in Europe and Canada
  • Providing group housing for female calves, without tethering

PETA has a long history of working successfully with companies to incorporate minimum animal welfare practices and standards into their supply chains.

For more information, please visit PETA.org.


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