Pew Commission Releases Final Report
Washington, DC – April, 2008 ––The current industrial farm animal production (IFAP) system often poses unacceptable risks to public health, the environment and the welfare of the animals themselves, according to a report released April 30 by the Pew Commission on Industrial Animal Production (PCIFAP).
Commissioners have determined that the negative effects of the IFAP system are too great and the scientific evident is too strong to ignore. “Significant changes must be implemented and must start now,” the Commission said. The findings and recommendations were announced at a press conference attended by 75 members of the media, legislative officials, public health organizations and interested citizens.
The Commission announced several key recommendations, including:
Ban the non-therapeutic use of antimicrobials in food animal production to reduce the risk of antimicrobial resistance to medically important antibiotics and other microbials.
Implement a disease-monitoring program for food animals to allow 48-hour, trace-back of those animals through aspects of their production, in a fully integrated and robust national database.
Treat IFAP as an industrial operation and implement a new system to deal with farm waste to replace the inflexible and broken system that exists today in order to protect Americans from the adverse environmental and human health hazards of improperly handled IFAP waste.
Phase out the most intensive and inhumane production practices within a decade to reduce the risk of IFAP to public health and improve animal well-being (i.e., gestation crates and battery cages).
Federal and state laws need to be amended and enforced to provide a level playing field for producers when entering into contracts with integrators.
Increase funding for, and expand and reform animal agriculture research.
“The goal of this Commission is to sound the alarms that significant change is urgently needed in industrial farm animal production,” said John Carlin, PCIFAP Chairman and former Kansas governor.
The PCIFAP consists of 15 Commissioners with knowledge and expertise in public policy, veterinary medicine, public health, agriculture, animal welfare, the food industry and rural society. The complete report is available at the Commission’s web site.
PCIFAP is a project of The Pew Charitable Trusts and the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
