The USDA MUST Change Its Approach to Bird Flu
Wayne Pacelle
President, Animal Wellness Action; President, Center for a Humane Economy
Vaccinating birds, cracking down on cockfighting a good start
The USDA’s response to the H5N1 crisis continues to be, in a word, a disaster.
Bungled. Expensive. Deadly. And not protective of the American public.
It’s a performance that should raise the hackles of every American, whether they care about animal welfare, their own health and safety, or the price of eggs.
Today, we are sending a grievance letter to USDA nominee Brooke Rollins to detail how the agency is bungling the response to the H5N1 epidemic. The agency is killing commercially raised and backyard birds at an extraordinary rate by especially inhumane means, exploding consumer prices for eggs and other food staples, and doing very little of value to stop the spread of an adaptive and dangerous disease that is at work in 50 states and has more than a little potential to morph into the agent to drive the next human pandemic. You can read the letter here.
During the past two weeks, the USDA has been killing a million birds every day! These birds are dying in the worst of ways, even beyond the miseries and inevitable doom they experience on factory farms.
It is a toll both eye-popping and deeply saddening. It’s the USDA, not H5N1, that has done most of the killing of the 150 million animals who have perished since the virus began its search for animal hosts three years ago.
The USDA is suffocating birds in carts with carbon dioxide, burying them in firefighter foam, or subjecting them to ventilation shutdown (VSD). VSD entails turning off all supply inlets and exhaust outlets, heating the building to 1040F, and sometimes injecting CO2 gas into the building. VSD is used, for example, in large laying houses that may contain more than 300,000 hens per building.
An owner of a pheasant flock in Jefferson County, Wisc., reported that the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) of the USDA killed 188,000 pheasants by drowning them in a water-filled ditch. I watched an interview with a duck farmer on CBS Sunday Morning who was in tears because the USDA wiped out his flock of 100,000 of birds on his Long Island Farm.
USDA Has It Wrong on So Many Fronts
At times, the USDA’s response has been timid and incomplete. And in other ways, it has been overreaching and reckless.
As I wrote in our letter to Rollins, in cooperation with our agricultural veterinarians Jim Keen, DVM, PhD, and Tom Pool, DVM, MPH, the USDA is getting it wrong on multiple fronts.
We cannot kill our way out of the crisis.
领英推荐
Incoming Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins needs to restrain and retrain the people at the USDA. The agency should have a “stamp out” strategy with cockfighting, not the U.S. laying hen industry.
The agency has not pursued vaccination, largely because the National Chicken Council has urged the agency not to pursue that strategy. It is trying to ensure that its $7.24 billion dark meat export market is not disrupted, even as all hell breaks loose elsewhere.
But consumers will soon have paid more than $20 billion in higher egg prices, tripling the total value of this export market (which will certainly stay intact if vaccination is implemented)! And that says nothing of the $2 billion and counting that the government is drawing from taxpayers to indemnify farmers for the mass killing of their birds. The virus has been discovered in all 50 states and it is not slowing its movements.
Mexico and France have successfully vaccinated their poultry flocks against bird flu since 2023, greatly decreasing the impact of the epidemics in those two major agricultural nations. Mexico’s agriculture department and its health agency are running circles around the American agencies in effectiveness and cost-consciousness.
USDA Should Stamp Out Cockfighting, Not Birds Used in Agriculture
Animal Wellness Action and the Center for a Humane Economy have documented that there are tens of thousands of gamecock farms in the U.S. raising birds for fighting in domestic and foreign fighting pits. Even the USDA previously cited that there are 20 million backyard fighting birds in our homeland.
This is relevant because cockfighting activity is a known and substantial risk factor for avian disease spread, including bird flu. We also know that cockfighting has been a primary agent of spread for the second most significant avian poultry disease — virulent Newcastle Disease (vND). The smuggling of cockfighting birds from Mexico was the cause of 10 of 15 outbreaks in the United States of vND.
Cockfighting has the potential to spread the disease not only farther and wider, but to allow the virus to reassort and become more transmissible and deadly to humans. Some observers have said that H5N1 has the potential to make COVID-19 look like the sniffles, if a worst-case scenario develops.
In our letter to Brooke Rollins, we are urging her to put a stop to the USDA kill-them-all approach and embrace these strategies and tenets:
It’s also time for Congress to step off the sidelines and help with a course correction. There are plenty of reasons for Congress to intervene: higher food prices for staples, agriculture upended, and taxpayers getting it on both ends.
Please support our work to redirect our federal government on this animal health crisis that has the potential to morph into a human health epidemic. And to address one aspect of this crisis, urge your lawmakers to pass the FIGHT Act right away so that we can see a proper crackdown on cockfighting and reduce the risk of spreading H5N1 more widely in the United States and abroad.