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Target Follows McDonald's Lead, Drops Egg Supplier Sparboe Farms After Shocking Undercover Video

By STEVE KARNOWSKI and DEREK KRAVITZ   11/19/11 07:27 PM ET  AP

MINNEAPOLIS -- McDonald's and Target dropped one of the nation's largest egg suppliers after an animal rights group released an undercover video of the egg producer's farms in three states.

McDonald's Corp. said Friday it had dropped Sparboe Farms as a supplier after a video by the group Mercy for Animals showed cases of animal cruelty at five facilities in Iowa, Minnesota and Colorado. Target Corp. soon followed, saying it would pull eggs from the Litchfield, Minn.-based company off its shelves.

"Having been made aware of the unacceptable conditions in the company's egg laying facilities, effective immediately, Target will discontinue its business relationship with Sparboe Farms," Minneapolis-based Target said in a statement late Friday.

Sparboe produces 300 million eggs a year, in regular, liquid, frozen and dried form, and ships them to restaurants and stores across the country. The company's Vincent, Iowa, plant had billed itself as the sole fresh egg supplier to every McDonald's west of the Mississippi River.

McDonald's officials say Sparboe was a "significant" supplier and that it was unclear when, or if, the company would work with the Golden Arches again. Sparboe's Iowa facility produced 2 million eggs a day, seven days a week.

That changed Friday when images shot by Mercy for Animals showed a worker swinging a bird around by its feet, hens packed into cramped cages, male chicks being tossed into plastic bags to suffocate and workers cutting off the tips of chicks' beaks.

"The behavior on tape is disturbing and completely unacceptable. McDonald's wants to assure our customers that we demand humane treatment of animals by our suppliers," Bob Langert, McDonald's vice president for sustainability, said in a statement.

The nation's largest retailer – Bentonville, Ark.-based Wal-Mart Stores Inc. – also bought Sparboe eggs and has been demanding that suppliers treat their chickens humanely for years. Wal-Mart said it stopped working with Sparboe six weeks ago and that its decision had "nothing to do with animal welfare concerns," said Dianna Gee, a Wal-Mart spokeswoman. She declined to discuss why Sparboe was dropped.

McDonald's and other fast-food chains and grocery stores have been studying how chickens are caged and cared for in its egg farms. The Humane Society has persuaded several national food outlets, including Burger King, Costco Wholesale, Denny's and Wendy's/Arby's Group, to buy at least some of their eggs from producers that allow hens to roam.

McDonald's and Target's moves also followed a warning letter to Sparboe Farms dated Wednesday from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration that said inspectors found "serious violations" at five Sparboe facilities of federal regulations meant to prevent salmonella. The warning said eggs from those facilities "have been prepared, packed, or held under insanitary conditions whereby they may have become contaminated with filth, or whereby they may have been rendered injurious to health."

McDonald's eggs were safe because they were cooked thoroughly, and none of its operations will be affected by Sparboe, company spokeswoman Lisa McComb said Saturday. About 27 million Americans eat at McDonald's each day.

Sparboe Companies LLC said Saturday it would create a task force to review the company's food safety and animal care.

Beth Sparboe Schnell, Sparboe Farms' president and owner, said the company was "shocked and deeply disturbed" by the video and that an internal investigation identified four employees "who were complicit in this disturbing activity." They were fired this month.

She also reassured customers that there is "absolutely no food safety concern or any recall of any Sparboe Farms products. Sparboe Farms egg and egg products are safe to eat."

Sparboe also said it has made management changes, taken corrective actions sought by the FDA, and begun retraining all barn workers in proper animal care procedures.

McDonald's said the suspension of its business dealings with Sparboe was not temporary but refused to say that it would never work with Sparboe again.

"We're not going to turn around in a month and work with them again," McComb said. "But we would never say never."

In the case of one U.S. fishery that did not use "sustainable methods" in its farming, McDonald's ended its business relationship for eight years before the company "completely turned around its practices," McComb said.

Sparboe describes itself as the fifth-largest shell egg producer and marketer in the United States, operating seven processing plants supported by 33 egg-laying and pullet production sites in Iowa, Minnesota and Colorado. The company says it serves retail, wholesale and foodservice customers in 26 states.

Sparboe spokesman Lyle Orwig said Friday the company has a "zero tolerance policy" for any animal abuse or cruelty. He said all employees are trained by a veterinarian and work with a crew leader who also has been trained.

"If he (the crew leader) sees anything, he would automatically correct it if he sees someone doing something wrong," Orwig said.

Oak Brook, Ill.-based McDonald's said the "most alarming actions on video" didn't happen at Sparboe's facility in Vincent, Iowa, which supplied its restaurants, but they violated the standards the company sets for its suppliers. McDonald's also insisted the food it serves is safe.

McDonald's said it got Sparboe eggs via Cargill Inc., which said it was suspending Sparboe as a supplier.

"We will not tolerate mistreatment of animals anywhere in our supply chain," Chris Roberts, president of Cargill Kitchen Solutions, said in a statement. He also said the issues the FDA raised "warrant additional review by Cargill."

Tim Loesch, a spokesman for Wayzata-based Cargill, declined to say how many eggs Sparboe supplied it or how much the company was paid. Orwig said it was too soon to tell what effect the loss of McDonald's business would be.

"Right now our focus is making sure that we are compliant with everything and get to the bottom of how it could have happened," Orwig said.

Mercy for Animals isn't satisfied with McDonald's decision to stop accepting eggs from Sparboe, said Matt Rice, the group's director of operations.

"These are company-wide, policy-level abuses," Rice said. "There's a culture of cruelty and neglect at McDonald and its suppliers."

McDonald's said it is participating in a three-year study that compares traditional versus cage-free hen housing systems, but Rice said the company continues to get most of its eggs from hens in battery cages that hold a lot of birds in cramped conditions.

"McDonald's is simply sidestepping the issue now. It's time McDonald's requires all of its suppliers to un-cage hens and finally give these animals the basic freedom to spread their wings, to walk and engage in other natural behaviors," he said, noting that McDonald's has already switched to cage-free eggs in Europe.

Mercy for Animals conducted its investigation from May 23 to Aug. 1, Rice said. The group got its people hired at the farms and sent them in wired with hidden cameras, he said. They "documented daily abuses that would shock and horrify most Americans yet are largely considered standard and acceptable to the egg industry," he added.

Orwig, the Sparboe spokesman, said the undercover taping was troubling because company employees sign a code of conduct that they will report any abuses immediately to a supervisor. In this case, he said, there were no reports.

The video was first aired Friday on ABC's Good Morning America.

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Kravitz contributed to this report from Washington, D.C.

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MINNEAPOLIS -- McDonald's and Target dropped one of the nation's largest egg suppliers after an animal rights group released an undercover video of the egg producer's farms in three states. McDonald'...
MINNEAPOLIS -- McDonald's and Target dropped one of the nation's largest egg suppliers after an animal rights group released an undercover video of the egg producer's farms in three states. McDonald'...
MINNEAPOLIS -- McDonald's and Target dropped one of the nation's largest egg suppliers after an animal rights group released an undercover video of the egg producer's farms in three states. McDonald'...
MINNEAPOLIS -- McDonald's and Target dropped one of the nation's largest egg suppliers after an animal rights group released an undercover video of the egg producer's farms in three states. McDonald'...
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06:03 PM on 11/21/2011
Iam so glad these people went undercover to find these people abusing hens. i think its wrong they should treat hens better and healtheir. I dont think its right for them to do that to hens not proper way of doing the hens. like put in plastic bag to let them suffoicaite? thats so sick. they know better i hope they fire all of them cuz they kept the secret about these abuses since. thats my opionon of this anyone saw this and they should be fired cuz not report it . should study the rules and policy and no abuses there.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rocnjohnny
TEXICAN
05:01 PM on 11/21/2011
Wonder have they ever been to a slaughter house? How about a production pig farm? Probably not there would be similar results. People that work in slaughter houses get sick from breathing tissue that is blasted from pigs skulls. Armor is one of them, anything for a buck kind of operations.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jan Fredericks
02:11 PM on 11/21/2011
The truth always comes out -- yikes!
Someday we will be held accountable.

God's Creatures Ministry had their 4th annual Gentle Thanksgiving Dinner yesterday (no animal products). It was great! Whole Foods donated the tofurkeys and other food items!
12:06 PM on 11/21/2011
I hope Mickey d's and Target consider using locally grown and produced products - that would give a big boost to the local economies and local businesses. Not to mention teaching the careless corporate "farmers" (and i use that word loosely) a lesson.
11:31 AM on 11/21/2011
"McDonald's wants to assure our customers that we demand humane treatment of animals by our suppliers,"

Yet, they consistently deny requests to switch to "controlled atmosphere killing" for their chickens which as a result, would prevent chickens from entering the scalding tanks while still alive. If you eat chicken @ McDonald's or from on of their suppliers, there's a good chance that chicken was boiled alive.
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hjs
But then of course, African swallows are non-migra
12:42 PM on 11/21/2011
And they apparently have no auditing process to ensure that suppliers are meeting their requirement for humane treatment of animals.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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08:11 AM on 11/21/2011
Sick what we pay for, gross what we eat and even worst that people make billions treating a living soul like this.
01:09 AM on 11/21/2011
Iowa, Minnesota, Florida, and New York all tried to implement legislation that would make it illegal for whistle-blowers to surreptitiously film/publicize the abuses that go on in factory farm settings. The Minnesota, Florida and New York measures failed, but I do not know the results of the Iowa effort.

Remember: the industry's primary response is not to change their practices (this industry and its lobbyists spend plenty ensuring that animal cruelty laws do not apply to their factory farms); but to make sure that the public does not see what actually goes on there.

Kudos to Mercy for Animals for effecting the change in the marketplace, that the politicians don't have the balls to effect in the legislature...
12:14 AM on 11/21/2011
"Sparboe produces 300 million eggs a year, in regular, liquid, frozen and dried form"

when I worked at MickeyD;s back in the day, we actually had real eggs delivered to the store. We cracked them to cook them for breakfast. Walk into a MickeyDs in the morning and inhale. Do you even smell food cooking? They offer bacon, ham, sausage, eggs, pancakes and hashbrowns... but your nose will never know it.
11:53 PM on 11/20/2011
When I became a vegetarian at age 20 to avoid contributing to this very type of cruelty, I could have never imagine that nearly 30 years later, we would still dealing with the same egg laying factories, the same cruelties and the same ignorance. How can people by now, not realize that this is what goes into the mass production of eggs? Whether or not you eat meat, please, know just the source of your eggs. Egg layers are among the worst-treated animals in industrial farming, and that's saying a lot since most animals are horribly treated in these facilities.
02:27 AM on 11/21/2011
I agree with you, but I also find it appalling that the undercover worker allowed the abuses to the animals to continue for literally months by not reporting it.
SirCoolBreeze
GOP'ers = Alleged Unindicted Co-conspirators
06:48 AM on 11/21/2011
Really? What were they supposed to do? Blow the undercover operation to satisfy idiots who want to cover for the egg producers?

I find it "appalling" anyone would worry about multi-billion dollar egg producers after watching the video... D'oh!
11:35 AM on 11/21/2011
I recently read Gene Bauer's book "Farm Sanctuary" and it talks a lot about dealing with producers, feed lots etc. One of the things that was truly appalling was that these workers and operations would not even euthanize a sick and dying animal. Just because you report abuse, doesn't mean it's going to do anything. When you release a video like this, you move mountains (e.g. McD's and Target switching suppliers).
11:16 PM on 11/20/2011
The companies don't care about the cruelty, they just care that it was caught on tape
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conchop
logic ethics quality
07:37 PM on 11/20/2011
I have to admire the small farmer and the Amish farmers attitudes with regards to the ethics in farm animal treatment. Even though many animals are meant for slaughter and consumption, it is prudent to care for them properly and with benevolence.

Much the same can be said for the way we treat our planet. If we live well within the cycles of nature and treat nature with respect, natures bounties will sustain humanity. However, we can do a better job by maintaining vigilance and knowledge about where our products come from.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bcmom
Stop breeding puppies
09:12 PM on 11/20/2011
Tell the Amish to close their puppymills. They are the worse when it comes to the treatment of these animals. Their cruelty is unmatched.
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conchop
logic ethics quality
10:57 AM on 11/21/2011
Really? I did not know about this. I will research it and if I'm wrong in my assessment, then I will gladly stand corrected. Thanks.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
barkingcat
Woof?
12:06 PM on 11/21/2011
(Thanks for reminding people of this. Fanned and faved.)
09:57 PM on 11/20/2011
Putting Amish and "ethics is farm animal treatment" in the same sentence? Please do some research on the Amish and their love of puppy mills and the millions of dollars they make every year selling sick puppies up & down the East coast. If the Amish keep dogs in such deplorable conditions, I can only wonder how they treat chickens and other livestock that doesn't produce such high profits.
06:38 PM on 11/20/2011
and republicans want to do away with regulations on all industries. Let them eat the eggs.
09:39 AM on 11/21/2011
They want to deregulate everything. Look at what has happened to the stuff they have already deregulated and how it has destroyed our economy! I'm with you; give them the gross eggs! And some rotten meat while you're at it.
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HazelPethigFan
I don't know until I know
05:48 PM on 11/20/2011
Now there is an egg shortage in some upper midwest grocery stores. I've seen it directly. Yay...just in time for xmas cooking.

Dare I say "over reaction"?

Dare I say a backlash is building very swiftly?

The guy twirling the chicken over his head was wrong, but he is using a device quite similar to a device your grandmas used years ago to catch chickens for supper. This was done in very unclean chicken coops where chickens laid eggs voluntarily in small cages. Pungent manure was everywhere since chickens do not use toilets.

Were your grandmas eeeevil?
11:07 PM on 11/20/2011
My grandma didn't "twirl" chickens overhead, or keep 6 hens in a 4 foot cage. BTW Chickens don't lay eggs "voluntarily" in small cages, they are confined to these cages and lay eggs according to their biology. The cages are unclean only because the owners choose to keep them this way, chickens poop, but if allowed to roam in a pasture you would not be overwhelmed by the smell. If you have any respect for animals, and your own health, both physically and spiritually you will avoid all non-pastured eggs and other livestock.
06:21 AM on 11/21/2011
Were your grandmas eeeevil? Sounds like your's may have been.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BoycottFox2
Fox News Viewers Know Less.
05:47 PM on 11/20/2011
Their Lobbyists are currently working on renaming the product....
05:42 PM on 11/20/2011
What I don't understand is why the government hasn't shut down the operation. The facility is violating numerous food and safety laws. Their license to operate should be revoked and their corporate charter pulled.
11:38 AM on 11/21/2011
Not really. The only "food" animal welfare laws in place are the "Humane Slaughter Act" (like 80 years old or something) and chickens are not protected under it.