
  Photo: Delaware Public Media. 
Here is an excerpt from The Guardian article, which can be read online:
“Vets and animal advocates in the US are calling for restriction on cruel methods of culling birds, as farmers face killing millions of poultry due to a highly virulent avian flu tearing through the country [and around the world].
“In 2020, millions of birds were killed across the US after the Covid-19 pandemic shut down slaughterhouses and left animals stranded on farms. Now, bird flu, which has already led to the slaughter of millions of birds in Europe, is likely to result in another mass depopulation. . . .
“However, two commonly used methods to cull animals on-farm are attracting increasing backlash. The use of firefighting foam to suffocate animals and ventilation shutdown, in which animals are killed with extremely high heat and steam, are still permitted in the US, despite being effectively banned in the EU and labeled ‘inhumane.’
“Poultry flocks sickened with avian flu are commonly killed with carbon dioxide poisoning or firefighting foam, where birds are smothered with a blanket of foam.
“The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) says the method involves ‘drowning in fluids or suffocation by occlusion of the airways’ and is ‘not accepted as a humane method for killing animals.’. . .
“Last year, a group of AVMA [American Veterinary Medical Association] members submitted a resolution to classify ventilation shutdown as ‘not recommended.’ A decision on the resolution has not been made, but animal welfare experts say it is time for US-wide rules to govern the treatment of farm animals before slaughter.”
Under public scrutiny and criticism, an AVMA panel is giving “further consideration” to the AVMA’s consent to the practices of smothering chickens, turkeys and ducks to death with firefighting foam and subjecting them, along with factory-farmed pigs, to “ventilation shutdown,” a method that “incorporates components such as heat, humidity, and carbon dioxide, in addition to shutting down the ventilation system, to cause the death of pigs or poultry.” As the panel reconsiders its official stance, please urge the AVMA to adopt a “not recommended” standard of opposition to these brutally inhumane practices in its “AVMA Guidelines for the Depopulation of Animals.”
  
    Dr. Janet Donlin 
    Executive Vice President and Chief Executive Officer 
    American Veterinary Medical Association 
  
  1931 North Meacham Road, Suite 100 
  Schaumburg, IL 60173-4360 
  Phone: 800-248-2862 
  Fax: 847-925-1329 
  Web form: Contact Us
  
    Dr. Cia Johnson 
    Panel on Depopulation & Director of the AVMA Animal Welfare Division 
    American Veterinary Medical Association 
  
  1931 North Meacham Road, Suite 100 
  Schaumburg, IL 60173-4360 
  Phone: 800-248-2862 
  Fax: 847-925-1329 
  Web form: Contact Us
  Learn more about the true sources of avian influenza pandemics on
  industrialized poultry farms: 
  
      Avian Influenza (Bird Flu) - What You Need to Know
  
Tell Tractor Supply Company to stop selling baby chicks and ducklings. By carrying and selling these birds in its stores, Tractor Supply is encouraging the spread of avian influenza (bird flu) in backyard flocks and beyond. All of their newborns are purchased from factory-farm hatcheries and shipped by mail – most often by airmail – resulting in the stresses that predispose these birds to disease.
See Bird Flu and Tractor Supply: Urge “No Baby Chicks or Ducklings!”
  
    Hal Lawton, CEO 
    Tractor Supply Company 
  
  5401 Virginia Way 
  Brentwood, TN 37027 
  Phone: 615-440-4600 extension 4601 
  Website: www.tractorsupply.com
  
    Customer Solutions 
  
  Phone: 1-877-718-6750 
  Email: [email protected]
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