More about Food Labels
AWA Announces Landmark Sustainable Meat Conference
September 14, 2011 on 3:23 pm | By Animal Welfare Approved | In Agricultural Policy, Chefs and Restaurants, Consumer Buying Power, Environment, Events, Farmers' Markets, Food Labels, Food Safety, Genetically Modified, Grass-Fed Beef, Nutrition, People, School Lunches and Food, The Big Picture | No CommentsGeorge Washington University’s Urban Food Task Force, Animal Welfare Approved (AWA) and the Restaurant Association Metropolitan Washington (RAMW) have joined forces by providing a platform for DC’s vibrant culinary community to focus on strengthening the supply chain for sustainably raised meat.
READ MORE AND COMMENTRotten Eggs
July 13, 2011 on 4:53 pm | By Andrew | In Agricultural Policy, Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations, Consumer Buying Power, Food Labels, The Big Picture | No CommentsA recent press release issued by the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) and United Egg Producers (UEP) may have caught your eye. The press release heralds an “historic” new agreement on future egg production between HSUS and UEP, an industry body which represents 80% of all U.S. egg producers. A strange union, you might think, for two organizations normally at odds. So what exactly is this agreement about?
In his blog, HSUS president Wayne Pacelle says that the “landmark agreement” will “help millions of hens.” HSUS has been calling for cage-free egg production for years, so an agreement to end all caged egg production would represent an enormous advancement in welfare. Sadly for the hens, that isn’t the basis of this agreement. In defiance of common sense, and all previously expressed opinion, HSUS has achieved nothing more than an agreement to work with UEP towards new legislation which will move hens out of one type of battery cage into a another slightly larger cage. An historic welfare advancement? I think not.
READ MORE AND COMMENTUp to $5,000 Available to NY Retailers for “Buy Local” Promotions
April 8, 2011 on 11:23 am | By Brigid | In Consumer Buying Power, Food Labels, local | No CommentsThe Pride of New York Retail Promotion Grant program is working to help NY consumers identify food items from New York State. Their aim is to help increase sales for both NY farmers and retailers.
State Acting Agriculture Commissioner Darrel Aubertine says, “Consumer awareness and interest in buying local food has increased dramatically in recent years…This program will provide valuable assistance to retailers to help them source more local New York products as well as necessary resources to develop customized promotional materials that highlight local businesses. We are pleased to offer this financial opportunity that will support the New York State economy and benefit all sides of the equation, including retailers, farmers, food processors and consumers alike.”
READ MORE AND COMMENTNot all Organic is Equal–Final chance to let the NOSB know what you think!
April 7, 2011 on 11:23 am | By Andrew | In Agricultural Policy, Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations, Food Labels, Food Safety, The Big Picture | 1 CommentWhen you buy organic meat and dairy products, you probably have certain expectations about how they were produced and how the animals were raised.
You may expect that animals on organic farms would be raised with the highest welfare in mind, with lots of space and free access to pasture. You may expect that all organic farmers would be caring and conscientious enough to allow organic animals to exhibit their natural behaviors. You may expect that organic farms would be far superior to industrial farms and concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs).
Sorry to dash your hopes, but all organic farmers do not necessarily raise their animals with even Big Ag’s welfare standards as a base. It might surprise you to know that the United States National Organic Program (NOP) – the federal regulatory framework that governs organic food and farming in the U.S. – has no specific rules on the amount of space that organic farmers are required to give their animals whenever they are housed indoors. This obviously raises questions about animal welfare.
READ MORE AND COMMENTAWA Featured on Channel 5 NBC Chicago
January 31, 2011 on 6:48 pm | By Animal Welfare Approved | In Chefs and Restaurants, Food Labels | No CommentsAWA Launches Online Directory of AWA Farms and Products
January 13, 2011 on 9:32 am | By Animal Welfare Approved | In Chefs and Restaurants, Consumer Buying Power, Family Farms, Food Labels, Grass-Fed Beef, Nutrition | No CommentsAs consumer demand grows for products from animals raised with high-welfare standards, Animal Welfare Approved is pleased to launch its new Online Directory of AWA farms and AWA farmers’ products across the country. From beef to bison, milk to cheese, chicken to sheep, this directory is the go-to search engine to find the most humane products available in the United States.
READ MORE AND COMMENTOur full response to Lisa re: Bison burger sources and Certified Organic’s allowance for feedlots
August 6, 2010 on 6:36 pm | By Animal Welfare Approved | In Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations, Consumer Buying Power, Environment, Facebook and Twitter, Food Labels, Uncategorized | No CommentsIn response to Facebook Fan Lisa’s questions regarding the source of the bison burgers she purchased and also about the USDA rule regarding feedlots for Certified Organic bison and cattle, we emailed her the following information:
Unfortunately, Superior Midwest Foods said they wouldn’t be able to tell us the names of the bison farms for their burgers. They said they get the bison meat from several different farms, make it into burgers and ship them off to the retailers. This means the bison could have been raised on pasture or on a feedlot, no one really knows.
Regarding Certified Organic, sadly, this certification does not guarantee that the animals didn’t come from feedlots. While certified organic does require that the animals have access to the outdoors, and ruminants must have access to pasture with exception of the “finishing phase”, this doesn’t mean they actually have to go outdoors and graze on pasture to be considered organic or not be on a feedlot. To avoid this issue buy only from AWA or AGA farms as they are the only two labels that prohibit feedlots. A good source of advice would be http://www.organicconsumers.org/.
READ MORE AND COMMENTPanelists Offer Insights Into the Future of Farming
May 7, 2010 on 10:59 am | By Animal Welfare Approved | In Agricultural Policy, Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations, Consumer Buying Power, Environment, Events, Facebook and Twitter, Family Farms, Food Labels, People, Processing Plants, The Big Picture | 1 CommentOn May 4 Animal Welfare Approved hosted an expert panel of writers, farmers and representatives of sustainable livestock production. Entitled, “Green Pastures, Bright Future: Taking the Meat We Eat Out of the Factory and Putting it Back on the Farm,” the discussion centered on the need for truly sustainable livestock farming that takes into account animal welfare and the health of our environment – and ourselves. Panelists included investigative journalist and author of Animal Factory David Kirby; author of the bestselling Righteous Porkchop Nicolette Hahn Niman; chicken farmer and whistle-blower in the Oscar-nominated documentary “Food, Inc.” Carole Morison; and rancher, veterinarian and president of the American Grassfed Association, Dr. Patricia Whisnant.
READ MORE AND COMMENTA Bit of Dirt a Day Keeps the Doctor Away
February 3, 2010 on 10:41 am | By Andrew | In Food Labels, Food Safety, Nutrition, The Big Picture | 7 CommentsMost people have heard the old saying “a bit of dirt never hurt anyone.” When my kids were little and they dropped a piece of apple on the floor, I would run it under the tap for a second or two before passing it back to them for a (usually unsuccessful) second attempt to eat it. I did it almost without thinking–instinctively perhaps. And I remember my parents doing the same for me–and no doubt my grandparents did exactly the same for my parents when they were young.
Of course, the underlying principle here arguably has its roots in basic human biology: the more germs we are exposed to when we are younger, the stronger our immune systems are in later life. And this very same principle extends to the way many of us choose to farm.
READ MORE AND COMMENTAntibiotics in farming: has Tyson Foods shot itself in the foot?
January 25, 2010 on 1:12 pm | By Andrew | In Agricultural Policy, Consumer Buying Power, Food Labels, Food Safety, Home Feature, People, The Big Picture | 3 CommentsTyson Foods’ recent agreement to settle a lawsuit for falsely advertising its “raised without antibiotics” chicken brand has received limited media coverage – no doubt to the relief of the company’s boardroom. And with an annual turnover of nearly $27 billion, they probably won’t sweat too much over the $5 million that the company must now shell out as compensation to unhappy customers.
In falsely marketing its chicken meat as produced from birds “raised without antibiotics” while still feeding them antibiotics, Tyson Foods was shamelessly exploiting the growing public concern over the excessive use of antibiotics in industrial farming, particularly in the form of non-therapeutic growth promoters.
But while the intensive meat industry continues to vigorously oppose any attempts to reduce antibiotic use in farming, the irony is that Tyson Foods may well have inadvertently shot itself in the foot by publicly admitting that the overuse of certain antibiotics in industrial farming really is a threat to human health.
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