
But the company also measures success “in what we do not see. The group sow housing system they created “is designed to enable pigs to choose when to eat when they are hungry, when to play when they feel social and when to sleep when they are tired.”īetter pig health and higher levels of job satisfaction in workers has resulted. The company says prior to redesigning its barns, staff toured operations in Europe and studied those approaches they used. Major integrated producer Maple Leaf Foods has already transitioned all its own production. It is interesting to note, however, that mandatory open housing for gestating sows is moving forward in Canada. Manitoba pork producers export large amounts of product to the US, along with young pigs. Cam Dahl, general manager of Manitoba Pork, said recently that the Supreme Court decision will affect not only Manitoba producers and processors but those in other provinces that also ship across the border. A neutral brief filed by a group of academics states that California consumers would almost certainly pay more for pork products, and producers would suffer economic harm.įor his part, Michigan State University Professor David Favre expects the court will uphold Prop 12, and “within 5 years livestock producers will be proposing national legislation setting uniform welfare standards for farm animals.” But he adds that “it is impossible to predict now whether a national law would improve animal welfare.” Canadian hog farmers worried NPPC President Terry Wolters said the judges were very well prepared and had many questions on topics such as product labelling, and what other aspects of production California or another state could potentially try and restrict on a national level if Prop 12 succeeds.Īs expected, the arguments against Prop 12 focused on the Commerce Clause which seeks to preserve a national market for goods and services. In October 2022, the Supreme Court heard arguments from the NPPC and other parties opposing Prop 12. In agreement, shortly afterwards the US Solicitor General filed a request with the Supreme Court to strike down Prop 12. On June 13, they filed a brief arguing that Prop 12 violates the US constitution’s Commerce Clause, which restricts states from regulating commerce outside their borders. Meanwhile, the National Pork Producers Council (NPPC), in collaboration with the American Farm Bureau Federation, launched a separate lawsuit against the state of California. In June 2021, the Court refused to do so, but that decision was reversed in March 2022 with the case hearing set for fall 2022. The North American Meat Institute challenged Prop 12, and asked the US Supreme Court to review it.


The US Supreme Court decision on a California law known as Prop 12 will greatly impact the swine industry in both the US – and Canada as well.
