New Regulations May Drive California Egg Prices Up 40%

Discussion in 'Politics' started by Max E., Jan 2, 2015.

  1. Max E.

    Max E.

    Keep those taxes and regulations rolling California, lol.



    Grocery shoppers in California may soon be in for a shock. Egg prices could rise by 40 percent in California because of a new law that went into effect on January 1, 2015. The law, championed by animal rights advocates, requires farmers selling eggs in California to house their hens in larger structures. This stipulation also applies to eggs brought into the state from other parts of the country. On January 1, CBS “Evening News” called it a “Happy New Year indeed” for chickens in California, but joked that “consumers may be missing the yolk” as egg prices rise.

    California is the country’s largest consumer of eggs, The Wall Street Journal reported October 3. Farmers hoping to sell their eggs there will need to spend “hundreds of millions of dollars overhauling their farms” in order to conform to the new rules.

    Jim Dean, president and CEO of Centrum Valley Farms in Iowa and Ohio, said it could cost his company “millions upon millions of dollars” to comply, according to a January 1, Associated Press story. But it turns out that isn’t the only bad news about the law. AP added that the price of revamping henhouses and fewer hens per henhouse will result in farmers passing on costs to consumers in California, driving up prices, possibly as much as 40 percent. The regulation might also end up hurting chickens, too, since “housing them in larger pens means they are more likely to run, breaking a leg or wing,” according to one expert AP included. -

    See more at: http://newsbusters.org/blogs/joseph...california-egg-prices-40#sthash.4NhUajEQ.dpuf
     
  2. Now if it was anything to do with making tacos or burritos there would rioting in the streets.
     
  3. loyek590

    loyek590

    I've been buying cage free eggs for years. I don't mind the extra price. even cage free hens live a pretty miserable life. I don't like turning an animal into a machine.
     
  4. Max E.

    Max E.

    I like having the choice if i want to pay an exorbitant price for eggs, not having the government make that choice for me.
     
    Clubber Lang likes this.
  5. loyek590

    loyek590

    the farmers raising cage free say the law is so complicated they don't even know if they are compliant. Once the government forces all to raise cage free (or actually just larger cages) everything will say "Cage Free" on the package and it will mean nothing.
     
  6. loyek590

    loyek590

    if you want the choice to buy eggs from a hen that is put on a nest and never allowed to leave and walk, and kept in 24 hour light her whole life, worse than what some say we should treat a terrorist, that's a pretty perverted choice to defend in my opinion. But then again, Dick Cheney is always defending his choice.
     
    Ricter likes this.