Day 290 - 30 Oct 96 - Page 03
1 considering legislative changes or changes in the Codes of
2 Practice for farm animal welfare. And the Farm Animal
3 Welfare Network have input into considerations for
4 legislative changes. And that is basically through Clare
5 Druce.
6
7 The Farm Animal Welfare Network was consulted by the Farm
8 Animal Welfare Council when the Farm Animal Welfare Council
9 was drawing up recommendations concerning broiler welfare.
10 And FAWN, Mrs. Druce attending on its behalf, was invited
11 to the Farm Animal Welfare Council's pre-publication
12 briefing meeting prior to the Council releasing their
13 broiler report. The reference for that is day 108, page 6,
14 line 27.
15
16 Mrs. Druce also related how she had visited a great many
17 laying hen farms, most of which were battery units. She
18 had visited dozens, possibly hundreds, she said, over a
19 period going back for nearly 25 years. She had gathered
20 information on the broiler industry since 1984, which
21 included visits to broiler farms. Prior to 1984 the
22 organisation dealt solely with battery chickens. That was
23 referred to on day 108, pages 7 and 14.
24
25 There have been various statements through this case about
26 how everything must be fine because all the farms are
27 visited by inspectors from the Ministry of Agriculture
28 Fisheries and Foods. She referred to these visits on day
29 108, page 19 of the transcript. She said that only a small
30 percentage of farms were ever visited, or were visited.
31 There were something like 300 state veterinary officers to
32 inspect something like a quarter of a million farms.
33 Additionally, the farms were given prior warning of visits
34 so effectively farmers could clean up their act before the
35 inspectors arrived, so, in her view, the inspections were
36 virtually worthless. That relates to both battery farms
37 and broiler farms.
38
39 Giving evidence about broiler chickens, Mrs. Druce averred
40 her statement, which included her opinion that the modern
41 broiler chicken is a genetic freak, the product of
42 generations of selection for fast growth, and that the
43 selection has shown a marked lack of concern.
44
45 MR. JUSTICE BELL: Hold on a moment.
46
47 MS. STEEL: Sorry.
48
49 MR. JUSTICE BELL: I have got my pages in a different order. Is
50 that your second sheet?
51
52 MS. STEEL: It is one entitled 'broiler chickens'.
53
54 MR. JUSTICE BELL: I just want to be in the same order as you,
55 that is all. So that is your second sheet?
56
57 MS. STEEL: Yes.
58
59 MR. JUSTICE BELL: Yes.
60