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On June 9, a semitrailer carrying 50 pigs rolled over on Interstate 694 in Little Canada. When state troopers arrived on the scene, 10 pigs had died and many others were roaming the highway, weaving through traffic.
To most consumers in the U.S., the transportation of animals used for food is invisible. It takes place in enclosed trailers and inside shipping containers. Incidents like the rollover on I-694 offer a brief glimpse into the horrors of farm animal transportation.
More than 20 million farm animals die on their way to factory farms or slaughterhouses each year in the U.S. alone. Most of these animals in transit are unable to lie down or rest, crowded into tight quarters without bedding. Trailers inevitably fill up with excrement as trips drag on, often for more than 24 continuous hours. Some animals succumb to dehydration, starvation or extreme temperatures.
In 2022, more than 3,000 baby birds shipped from Minneapolis-St. Paul Airport perished from scorching temperatures at the Miami-Dade Airport. The mail-order chicks died trapped inside boxes left on the tarmac for hours in 99-degree heat.
In cold weather, animals can freeze to death or become frozen to part of a vehicle.
The lack of enforcement of federal animal welfare legislation exacerbates the flaws in our food system. Federal law mandates that farm animals cannot travel on land for longer than 28 hours without unloading for food, water and rest for at least five hours.