Current:Home > InvestNew organic rules announced by USDA tighten restrictions on livestock and poultry producers -Elevate Money Guide
New organic rules announced by USDA tighten restrictions on livestock and poultry producers
View
Date:2025-04-16 23:27:43
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Livestock and poultry producers will need to comply with more specific standards if they want to label their products organic under final rules announced Wednesday by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
The USDA’s new Organic Livestock and Poultry Standards are being implemented after years of discussions with organics groups, farming organizations and livestock and poultry producers.
“USDA is creating a fairer, more competitive and transparent food system,” Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said in a statement. “This organic poultry and livestock standard establishes clear and strong standards that will increase the consistency of animal welfare practices in organic production and in how these practices are enforced.”
The Organic Trade Association pushed hard for the new regulations, which the group said would promote consumer trust and ensure all competing companies would abide by the same rules.
“These new standards not only create a more level playing field for organic producers, but they ensure consumers that the organic meat, poultry, dairy and eggs they choose have been raised with plenty of access to the real outdoors, and in humane conditions,” said Tom Chapman, the association’s CEO, in a statement.
The final rules cover areas including outdoor space requirements, living conditions for animals, maximum density regulations for poultry and how animals are cared for and transported for slaughter.
Under the rules, organic poultry must have year-round access to the outdoors. Organic livestock also must have year-round outdoor access and be able to move and stretch at all times. There are additional requirements for pigs regarding their ability to root and live in group housing.
Producers have a year to comply with the rules, with poultry operations given four additional years to meet rules covering outdoor space requirement for egg layers and density requirements for meat chickens.
John Brunnquell, president of Indiana-based Egg Innovations, one of the nation’s largest free-range and pasture-raised egg operations, said the new rules would help him compete with companies that have an organic label but don’t now give their hens daily access to the outdoors and actual ground, rather than a concrete pad.
“All of us worked under the same USDA seal, so a consumer really never knew how their organic eggs were being produced,” Brunnquell said.
The USDA’s National Organic Program will oversee the new rules, working with certifiers accredited by the agency.
Organizations representing the egg and chicken meat industry as well as the pork industry and American Farm Bureau either declined to comment or didn’t respond to a request to comment on the new rules.
veryGood! (92211)
Related
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Adam Sandler to Receive the People's Icon Award at 2024 People's Choice Awards
- Launching today: Reporter Kristen Dahlgren's Pink Eraser Project seeks to end breast cancer as we know it
- Hacked-up bodies found inside coolers aboard trucks — along with warning message from Mexican cartel
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Syphilis cases rise sharply in women as CDC reports an alarming resurgence nationwide
- Cher Denied Conservatorship of Son Elijah Blue Allman
- First human to receive Neuralink brain implant is 'recovering well,' Elon Musk says
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- Chita Rivera, revered and pioneering Tony-winning dancer and singer, dies at 91
Ranking
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Super Bowl prop bets for 2024 include Taylor Swift and Usher's shoes
- The mystery of Amelia Earhart has tantalized for 86 years: Why it's taken so long to solve
- Police Arrest Pennsylvania Man Who Allegedly Killed Dad and Displayed Decapitated Head on YouTube
- Sam Taylor
- Woman, 71, tried to murder her husband after he got a postcard from decades-old flame: Police
- Memories tied up in boxes and boxes of pictures? Here's how to scan photos easily
- Grading every college football coaching hire this offseason from best to worst
Recommendation
The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
Which Grammy nominees could break records in 2024? Taylor Swift is in the running
Travis Kelce Shares Sweet Message for Taylor Swift Ahead of 2024 Grammys
Weeks after dancer's death, another recall for undeclared peanuts
South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
Elon Musk can't keep $55 billion Tesla pay package, Delaware judge rules
Mark Zuckerberg, Linda Yaccarino among tech CEOs grilled for failing to protect kids
U.S. fighter jet crashes off South Korea; pilot rescued