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Krekorian Bill to Protect Meat Safety Signed into Law by Governor

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  • Krekorian Bill to Protect Meat Safety Signed into Law by Governor

    PRESS RELEASE
    Office of Assemblymember Paul Krekorian
    Contact: Adrin Nazarian, Chief of Staff
    620 N. Brand Blvd. Suite 403
    Glendale, CA 91203
    (818) 240-6330
    (818) 240-4632 fax
    [email protected]

    July 22, 2008

    Krekorian Bill to Protect Meat Safety
    Signed into Law by Governor


    Sacramento, CA - Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger signed legislation
    today by Assemblymember Paul Krekorian (D-Burbank) to protect public
    health by outlawing the sale of potentially tainted meat for human
    consumption. The bill was in response to the practices of a California
    slaughterhouse that were exposed in an undercover investigation earlier
    this year, leading to the largest food recall in U.S. history,
    Congressional hearings, and nationwide news coverage.

    Krekorian's legislation, Assembly Bill 2098, will make it a crime in
    California to sell meat from "downed" animals - those who are too sick
    or injured to be able to stand and walk. Although meat from such
    animals is known to expose consumers to a much higher risk of
    potentially life-threatening conditions such as bovine spongiform
    encephalitis ("mad cow disease"), the E. coli bacteria and salmonella,
    many slaughterhouses throughout the United States have forced these
    animals into the slaughter line, often by resorting to inhumane
    practices. Krekorian's bill will create an economic disincentive to
    such practices by prohibiting the sale of any meat or products from such
    animals.

    "This legislation will protect the public from potentially deadly
    tainted meat, and it will protect farm animals from cruel and inhumane
    treatment," Krekorian said. "California cannot allow unscrupulous
    slaughterhouse operators to endanger the safety of America's food supply
    and engage in grotesquely cruel practices. AB 2098 is an important step
    toward a safer food supply and basic decency to the animals that provide
    it, and I am delighted that the Governor has signed it into law."

    Bradley S. Miller, National Director of the Humane Farming Association
    (HFA), the bill's co-sponsor, asserted, "For the sake of a few dollars
    profit, rather than putting downed animals out of their misery, the meat
    industry routinely keeps these suffering animals alive in order to turn
    them into steaks and hamburgers that they can sell to the public. This
    law will finally put an end to such practices in California."

    In January 2008, the Humane Society of the Unites States released
    undercover videotape of workers at the Westland/Hallmark slaughterhouse
    in Chino attempting to drive seriously ill downed cattle into the
    slaughter line. The cattle were pushed with forklifts, kicked and
    electrocuted, and even had pressurized water forced into their nostrils
    with hoses, by workers who were trying to force them toward the "kill
    box" for slaughter. The release of this video led to recall of 143
    million pounds of meat nationwide, the largest recall in history,
    including 45 million pounds that went to the nation's school lunch
    program. While individual workers were charged with abuse, the company
    faced no criminal charges.

    As a lawyer in private practice before his election, Assemblymember
    Krekorian represented the Humane Farming Association in connection with
    several investigations that HFA conducted regarding inhumane and
    dangerous slaughterhouse practices around the country.

    AB 2098 (Chapter 194 of the Statutes of 2008) will take effect January
    2009.

    # # #
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