Egg Producers File Suit Against California's Proposition 2
By CnAgri PrintCalifornia's egg farmers filed suit Friday in Fresno County Superior Court seeking a determination that Proposition 2--a law regulating egg-laying hen enclosures--is unconstitutionally vague. The suit claims the law's lack of clarity in size and density requirements prevents egg farmers from modifying their housing facilities in time to comply with the January 1, 2015, implementation date.
"California's egg farmers have spent the last four years attempting to gain a clear understanding of how to comply with Proposition 2 but, unfortunately, we are no closer today to knowing how to comply than we were when the law first passed in 2008," said Arnie Riebli, president of the Association of California Egg Farmers. "Given the ambiguity in Proposition 2 and the risk of criminal prosecution for violating it, egg farmers have no choice other than to challenge the validity of the law."
ACEF's members support the goal of providing appropriate space to egg laying hens and have worked to establish a national standard for egg laying hen enclosures. Last year, ACEF joined with the Humane Society of United States and the United Egg Producers to support congressional efforts to establish national standards on egg laying hen enclosures, including dimensions and other key elements that are not found in Proposition 2.
Since the passage of Proposition 2 in 2008, ACEF has advocated the use of housing systems that provide 116 square inches of space per hen compared to 67 square inches of space in a conventional cage. But the HSUS - the author of Proposition 2 - says that Proposition 2 requires anywhere from 200 square inches of enclosure space per bird to a cage free environment. However, HSUS has never explained how they reached either interpretation.
The State Department of Food and Agriculture commissioned a study at the University of California at Davis which concluded that the law is unclear. As a result, ACEF has no choice but to reluctantly seek invalidation of this poorly drafted proposition."
If California egg farmers decide it is easier to relocate to another state to produce eggs rather than risk trying to comply with an uncertain law and be found in violation, a reduction in locally-produced eggs will have many ramifications for California consumers. Not only will egg prices to consumers substantially increase, but jobs will be lost, adding to increased costs to taxpayers for required social services. There will also be more truck traffic on roads to transport eggs from other states, further adding to pollution and impacted roadways.
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