After one 'barn fire, the farm’s president spoke about the physical damage to the facility and when processing and shipping would resume but made no mention of the thousands of sentient beings burned to death.
Burned sows who died in gestation crates - 2011 photo by
CETFA investigators.
More than 500,000 farmed animals died in barn fires this year,
including many in blazes that likely could have been prevented, a
new report from the Animal Welfare Institute (AWI) shows. AWI
tracked 128 barn fires nationwide this year and determined that at
least 518,782 farmed animals had been burned to death as of Dec. 15,
2022.
Victims included goats, horses, lambs and sheep, dogs and puppies,
cows and calves, rabbits, geese, ferrets, ducks, peacocks, cats, and
even a kangaroo. But chickens were the primary casualties — with
some dying in droves of hundreds of thousands of birds at commercial
facilities. Just three of the fires — two in Minnesota, and one in
Pennsylvania — killed more than 480,000 birds — or 91 percent of the
total tracked victims.
Birds at factory farms are often crammed into filthy cages that are
stacked on top of one another, according to undercover
investigations. Those conditions cause chickens tremendous suffering
and can make it easier for accidental fires to spread.
“It is simply irresponsible that the poultry industry continues to
ignore the risks that come with cramming hundreds of thousands of
birds into tight quarters on these massive operations,” said Allie
Granger, a policy associate for AWI’s farm animal program. “Under
these conditions, emergency situations become death sentences, and
it is hard to imagine anything worse than being burned alive.”
AWI pointed to a recent fire at a commercial poultry farm in Lebanon
County, Pennsylvania, that resulted in the deaths of an estimated
250,000 birds and started in a “tightly packed row,” according to
news reports.
The farm’s president spoke about the physical damage to the facility
and when processing and shipping would resume but made no mention of
the thousands of sentient beings burned to death, according to the
farm’s official statement as published via news reports.
Most of the fires tracked by AWI took place in the Upper Midwest or
Northeast, with the most fires in Wisconsin, New York, Pennsylvania,
and Minnesota.
While some of the fires’ causes remain unknown, many were caused by
defective or improperly placed heating devices or malfunctioning
farming equipment, according to AWI’s analysis.
Sadly, this year’s massive deaths aren’t an anomaly. At least 2.3
million animals died in barn fires in 2020 and 2021 — and the
cumulative death toll since 2013 is more than 6.3 million animals,
according to AWI.
No federal laws in the United States protect farmed animals from
barn fires, and only a few states have adopted the
National Fire
Protection Association’s Fire and Life Safety in Animal Housing
Facilities Code, AWI said.
“We hope the industry will remain focused on this issue and strongly
encourage farms to adopt common sense fire safety measures,” Granger
said.
AWI recommends that all farms housing animals in barns — whether
hobby farms or commercial industries — request annual inspections
from the fire department, place fire extinguishers in barns, develop
an emergency action plan, and train all employees in fire prevention
to save defenseless animals’ lives.
Other fire safety tips include creating emergency lanes so that
facilities have multiple access points, installing sprinkler and
smoke detection systems, constructing buildings using fire-resistant
materials, installing on-site water storage units to help
firefighters, and frequently checking, repairing, and replacing
heating and other electrical equipment.
Particularly important equipment to check includes heat lamps, space
heaters, and weather-related lighting. Precautions should also be
taken during holidays when fireworks could lead to fire and during
colder winter months, when accidental fires were twice as likely
than during summer months, according to AWI.
We also would like to remind our readers that chickens don’t want to
die in fires OR at the slaughterhouse. The best way we can all help
save chickens’ lives is by choosing kind plant-based food options
that don’t harm them or any animals. There are many easy,
affordable, and delicious recipes out there that you can follow to
create healthful, compassionate dining experiences.