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AMI Says Practices in Meat Plant Video “Disturbing”
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
American Meat
Institute Says Practices Shown in Meat Plant
Video are Disturbing and in Sharp Contrast to
Animal Handling Practices in Meat
Industry
The
practices shown in a just-released video filmed
in a meat plant in California are disturbing
and stand in sharp contrast to animal handling
practices in the meat industry broadly, the
American Meat Institute (AMI) said
today.
“We
were disturbed by what we saw in the video
because those practices directly conflict with
our widely adopted industry best practices and
because the video is simply not typical of
animal handling at
The
In 1991, the industry created an
animal handling program that sought not just to
meet regulatory requirements, but to exceed
them. This effort started with a
partnership with livestock welfare expert
Temple Grandin, Ph.D., whose innovative
approach to understanding and handling
livestock has literally transformed the
industry’s practices.
Grandin
authored the industry’s comprehensive
“Recommended Animal Handling Guidelines and
Audit Guide,” originally released in 1999.
That guide is endorsed by groups like the
American Humane Association and Certified
Humane and is widely used as a condition of
business by major restaurant and retail
chains. The industry also launched an
annual animal welfare conference in 1999 to
bring these guidelines to life through colorful
and compelling instruction by Dr. Grandin and
other experts. The conference occurs each
year in February in
The
meat industry’s commitment to animal welfare
was underscored when AMI’s members voted to
make animal welfare a non-competitive issue in
2002. As a result, AMI member plants
share good ideas and assist each other in
developing and refining animal handling
programs and solving
challenges.
“There are ethical and economic
imperatives to handle animals humanely,” Riley
said. “Optimal animal handling results in
better quality products but most importantly,
it’s simply the right thing to
do.”
She
added, “We hope that in the future, when
problems like this are uncovered, plant
management and USDA will be notified
immediately so that prompt action can be
take to correct the situation. It is
regrettable that the video was held for months
and that the first person contacted was a
reporter and not someone in a position to stop
the practice immediately.”
For
more information on AMI’s Guidelines, visit the
Institute’s dedicated web site www.animalhandling.org.



