The Humane Society of the United States and Leading Colorado Agriculture Groups Work Together to Pass Legislation to Phase Out Veal Crates, Gestation Crates
The House today gave final approval to landmark legislation to phase out the use of veal crates and gestation crates in Colorado. The measure came at the recommendation of an unlikely coalition of Colorado-based animal agriculture organizations and The Humane Society of the United States. SB 201 was introduced by Senate Agriculture Committee Chairman Jim Isgar (D-Hesperus) and House Agriculture Committee Chair Kathleen Curry (D-Gunnison). Governor Bill Ritter and Agriculture Commissioner John Stulp played a crucial and leading role in the negotiations.
Governor Ritter has promised to sign the legislation, and The Humane Society of the United States has agreed to officially withdraw an initiative petition on the same subject. SB 201 phases out veal crates within four years, and it phases out gestation crates within 10 years. It also jumpstarts a process, to be administered by the Agriculture Commissioner, to allow for ongoing deliberation about animal welfare issues in animal agriculture.
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Across Colorado, nearly 150,000 breeding pigs are confined in gestation crates. While there is no current veal industry in the state, Colorado's sizable dairy industry could potentially attract veal operations, and the veal crate provision was a preemptive measure.
http://www.hsus.org/press_and_publications/press_releases/coloradogestationcrate040708.htmlUp next, California this coming November.
http://www.humanecalifornia.org/