Voters at the polls in Denver this week have rejected Ordinance 308 with 58 percent share of the vote against, meaning a ban on new fur products won't be introduced for now. Another animal rights proposal was similarly rejected. Ordinance 309, which aimed to ban slaughterhouses in Denver, lost the vote with those against at 65 percent and those in favor at 35 percent.
Mink in a fur farm. Photo: Jo-Anne McArthur/We Animals Media
Two pro-animal initiatives that would have banned fur products and
closed industrial slaughterhouses in Denver have been rejected by
voters.
The two separate citizen-initiated ordinances both appeared on this
week's ballot for all Denver voters.
Ordinance 308 would prohibit the sale of new fur products in the
state. The proposed legislation is said to include "commonsense
exemptions" for second-hand fur products, and fur products used by
Native Americans for cultural purposes.
The ordinance follows similar political rulings across the US, as
sixteen municipalities have already passed prohibitions on the sale
of new fur products. And in 2019, California successfully passed the
country's first statewide fur ban.
Alongside these bans, the fashion industry itself has responded by
increasingly shunning real fur. Over 1,500 fashion retailers have
now implemented fur-free policies, including major brands like
Chanel, Canada Goose, and Saks Fifth Avenue.
However, voters at the polls in Denver this week have rejected
Ordinance 308 with 58 percent share of the vote against, meaning a
ban on new fur products won't be introduced for now.
Another animal rights proposal was similarly rejected. Ordinance
309, which aimed to ban slaughterhouses in Denver, lost the vote
with those against at 65 percent and those in favor at 35 percent.
The slaughter ban proposal was brought forward by activist group Pro
Animal Future, which argued slaughterhouses are inhumane to workers
and animals, and pollute the surrounding communities.
While a recent survey by ASPCA found that the vast majority of
Americans (89 percent) are concerned about industrial animal
agriculture, the proposed ban failed to convince Denver voters.
The ordinance had faced pushback from Superior Farms, a business
that operates Denver's only slaughterhouse and which would have been
shut down if voters agreed on a ban.
Superior Farms said that a ban could restrict the economy and result
in the loss of local jobs.
In their campaigning, Pro Animal Future had pointed out that
slaughterhouse workers face significant rates of serious mental
health conditions.
The group also highlighted how Superior Farms was sued by the
federal government for animal welfare violations. Its Denver
slaughterhouse had recently been exposed in an undercover
investigation earlier this year in August, where footage showed
terrified lambs being kicked and violently thrown, and lambs
continuing to vocalize and move after being ‘slaughtered'.
The environmental impact of animal agriculture was a contentious
point of the campaign too. Superior Farms' slaughterhouse
contaminates air and water in the "nation's most polluted zip code",
according to Pro Animal Future.
Tellingly, the only precinct in Denver to vote "Yes" for the
slaughterhouse ban was a nearby precinct connected by a trail that
goes right by the slaughterhouse.
With the slaughterhouse ban failing to pass, Superior Farms' Denver
slaughterhouse will remain open and operational. Located in
Globeville, the facility is estimated to slaughter half a million
animals per year - mostly baby lambs.