Bon Appétit Management Company Announces Groundbreaking Animal Welfare Policy
Food service provider says no more gestation crates and battery cages, period.
Feb 21, 2012 10:00 AM ET
(3BL Media / theCSRfeed) Palo Alto, CA - February 21, 2012 - Bon Appétit Management Company, which operates more than 400 cafés for corporations, universities, museums and specialty venues in 31 states, announced the rollout of the food service industry’s most comprehensive farm animal welfare policy to date, to applause from The Humane Society of the United States.
“Bon Appétit has turned ‘very good’ into ‘great,’ setting a new high water mark in the food-service sector,” said Wayne Pacelle, president and CEO of The Humane Society of the United States. “Consumers are deeply concerned about animal welfare, and Bon Appétit is responding.”
As part of the new policy, Bon Appétit is:
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Requiring that all pork it serves — currently 3 million pounds annually — be produced without gestation crate confinement systems, using higher-welfare group housing systems instead.
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Switching all of its pre-cracked (liquid) eggs — currently 11 million eggs annually — from hens confined in barren battery cages to hens living in cage-free farms, as it already does for shell eggs.
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Entirely eliminating foie gras (livers of force-fed ducks) and veal from calves confined in crates from its menus.
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Ramping up efforts to seek out the most responsible meat, poultry and egg producers — those who have received at least one of the four highest animal-welfare certifications.