Thomas Rogers, Salon
December 2009
The Humane Society's case against the Hudson Valley, the nation's largest producer of foie gras, dates to 2006, after the group gained access to farm files that showed elevated pollutant levels in its animal waste records.
American foie gras producers have survived a lot: high-profile opponents
(chef Charlie Trotter; chef Wolfgang Puck), bans (Chicago -- later
rescinded; a forthcoming 2012 ban in California), and a debilitating
recession that took a big bite out of the luxury food market.
But it's the opposition from animal rights groups -- specifically a legal
dispute between the Humane Society of the United States and New York's
Hudson Valley Foie Gras -- that could spell the end for American-bred foie
gras.
The Humane Society's case against the Hudson Valley, the nation's largest
producer of foie gras, dates to 2006, after the group gained access to farm
files that showed elevated pollutant levels in its animal waste records. The
lawsuit aims to make the farm pay hundreds of thousands of dollars to the
state in penalties. Rick Bishop, Hudson Valley's animal welfare officer,
blames the lawsuit on a bookkeeping error -- claiming that a missing decimal
erroneously magnified pollutant figures. But in August, the Humane Society
won discovery, and although the conditions are still being negotiated, it is
likely to give the Humane Society considerable access to the farm. As a
result, Bishop is concerned that the Humane Society will use the lawsuit to
put together another publicity campaign.
"If they smear us as environmental polluters that's going to have a lot of
clout," he says. He worries the legal fees and potential financial fallout
will put the farm at risk of closure. "They have the upper hand," he says.
And why is the Humane Society, a group most of us associate with protecting
puppies, so concerned about environmental violations? Over the past years,
the group has become a political and litigious force to be reckoned with.
According to Mark Caro, author of "The Foie Gras Wars," one of the group's
newer strategies is to bombard farmers it doesn't like -- like foie gras
producers -- with lawsuits, and deluge them with legal bills.
"The Humane Society is going after a lot of things that don't have to do
with the forced feeding of the ducks " says Caro. "Foie gras farms don't
have these huge profit margins to keep battling these things." It's a
strategy that's found success for two other groups, In Defense of Animals
and PETA in California, with their lawsuit against that state's only foie
gras producer, Sonoma Foie Gras. "The farmer didn't have the money to defend
himself," says Caro. According to Caro, the farm was indemnified from legal
action until its dissolution in 2012, when the state's new foie gras ban
goes into effect. "Now they can't sue Sonoma, so they go after Hudson
Valley."
The Humane Society objects to the notion that it's using its lawsuits as a
political weapon. "We're concerned about pollution, and that affects
wildlife," says Peter Petersan, the group's director of animal protection
litigation, "and that's an animal welfare concern." But this isn't the first
lawsuit it's directed at Hudson Valley (it has already attempted and failed
to get foie gras banned in New York as an "adulterated food"), and Paul
Shapiro, senior director of the group's Factory Farming Campaign, says that
it makes sense to pursue a case against a farm that he claims is both
creating environmental damage and "abusing farm animals." He says, "This
case has the potential to shine a bright light in a very dark area of
factory farming."
Shapiro's characterization of Hudson Valley as a "factory farm" is a
particular slap, since Hudson promotes itself as something entirely
different. Animals aren't confined to small cages, they say. The farm has an
independent animal welfare auditor, and has been working with Temple
Grandin, a well-known animal welfare expert, to minimize the trauma to its
animals.
While Grandin doesn't come out and endorse Hudson Valley's force-feeding of
animals, she says: "I think they are trying. I think they've made a lot of
improvements. There are certainly a lot of places out there that are doing a
lot worse than Hudson Valley."
The Village Voice's Sarah DiGregorio visited the farm earlier this year, and
didn't come across any sick or dead ducks, or any trace of vomit (which
would have indicated unhealthy conditions). She came away impressed with the
farm's efforts, and concluded that "the fact that some industrial farms
elsewhere are making foie gras in inhumane ways doesn't mean that all foie
gras production is inhumane." While the process known as "gavage" -- in
which the fowl are force-fed several times a day, to help enlarge their
livers -- is still controversial, Bishop (and many food journalists) argue
that it's painless procedure.
Then why is the Humane Society so aggressively pursuing Hudson Valley?
Clearly, it remains unconvinced that foie gras can be produced ethically
(Shapiro calls the practice "cruel and inhumane"), but according to Caro,
foie gras farmers are also an ideal target because they're so easy to
vilify. "It's basically this perfect storm of factors. It's a duck and
people like ducks; it's sticking a metal tube down the throat, which most
people think is awful; it's making their livers expand and eating liver,
which people think is gross; it's a French delicacy and most people think
it's foreign; and it's expensive." And, most important, "this is an animal
treatment battle that the movement thinks is winnable."
Ominously, if Hudson Valley Foie Gras does close, only one other major
producer will remain in the U.S. after 2012, and restaurants and diners will
likely turn to other countries to fill their plates, including those with
less ethically aware producers. Many foie gras farmers in Canada, for
example, keep their animals in small cages, in factory-farm settings,
according to Caro. "Most animal rights people would argue that the treatment
there is worse," says Caro. Shapiro admits that an influx of foreign foie
gras would be a downside to any potential decrease in American foie gras
production, but he argues that a countrywide ban on the product's sale would
mitigate the change's effects. Still, given that it's hard to envision such
a measure happening soon, it's unclear who the real losers in this battle
are -- consumers, foie gras farmers or the ducks themselves.
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