The groups have been blasted for supporting an “animal welfare certified” label, despite an investigation finding widespread, systematic animal cruelty at farms that use the certification.
Pigs crammed into a shed at Sweet Stem Farm. The company was 'animal
welfare certified' by Global Animal Partnership at the time. Credit:
PETA
Three of the largest animal welfare groups have been criticized for
their endorsement of a controversial “humane meat” labeling scheme.
The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals
(ASPCA), the Humane Society of the United States, and Compassion in
World Farming currently all support the Global Animal Partnership, a
“humane” meat, egg, and dairy certification program. Leaders from
each of the groups feature on the Partnership’s board of directors.
As part of the scheme, farms and products can be certified and label
their foods with the “Animal Welfare Certified” logo. “From Farm to
Fork, the label you can trust”, the Global Animal Partnership states
on its website.
However, the certification scheme has been criticized for being
“deceptive” and “misleading” by People for the Ethical Treatment of
Animals (PETA). The group says a years-long investigation of 12
certified facilities has found widespread and systematic cruelty and
suffering at all of the farms visited.
Plainville Farms, a Pennsylvania-based company which was approved by
the Global Animal Partnership, were among those investigated by
PETA. Workers were documented kicking, beating, and throwing
turkeys, and left sick and injured birds to suffer without
treatment.
Plainville Farms workers abusing turkeys. The company was
“animal welfare certified” by Global Animal Partnership at the time
this video was recorded. Credit: PETA
PETA’s investigation into Plainville Farms resulted in former
workers being charged with a total of 141 counts of cruelty to
animals, including six felonies - the largest number in any
factory-farmed animal case in U.S. history - and 10 workers have
been convicted.
That such animal cruelty could take place on a certified farm shows
that “humane” labeling schemes can not guarantee what they claim to
do.
Sweet Stem Farm, a Pennsylvania pig farm that supplied Whole Foods,
was another investigated by PETA. Certified as a “Step 2” farm -
better than all of those certified in the scheme as “Step 1” - “Step
2” farms were touted by Whole Foods to be spacious and have an
enriched environment to keep pigs entertained. A PETA investigator
visiting the facility instead found pigs crammed into severely
crowded sheds on concrete floors and with painful, bloody rectal
prolapses that were left untreated.
PETA is now calling on the leaders from the three welfare groups
which support the Global Animal Partnership to step down from the
certification scheme’s board of directors.
“An animal welfare group signing off on ‘humane’ meat is like an
oncologist endorsing a tobacco company,” PETA Executive Vice
President Tracy Reiman said in a statement. “PETA is calling on the
leadership of the ASPCA, the Humane Society of the United States,
and Compassion in World Farming to stop betraying animals and duping
consumers by putting their seal of approval on this bogus branding
scheme and is urging everyone to do the only thing that will stop
animal abuse on farms—go vegan.”
PETA points out that the organizations’ leaders may have hoped being
on the board of the Global Animal Partnership would provide an
opportunity to improve animal welfare on factory farms. But the
initiative has been a “complete failure”, according to PETA.
Leadership from PETA was originally on the board when the
certification was founded, but left “when it became clear that the
initiative was never going to reduce animal suffering”.
Another animal welfare group, Farm Forward, also resigned in protest
from the Global Animal Partnership board back in 2020 after more
than a decade of support. Farm Forward said the scheme is no longer
a tool for change and said it is “increasingly a marketing scheme
functioning to benefit massive corporations.”