About a month ago, three thousand,
five hundred pigs died horrible deaths in a hog barn fire near New Bothwell, in
southern Manitoba. Sadly, it was just the latest in what has
become an all-too-familiar occurrence in this province.
Trapped in a fiery inferno, the
animals would have likely suffocated in the smoke before the flames actually took over.
It’s hard to imagine the terror and panic that must have gripped them in those
moments. Firefighters battling such disasters say they’re often haunted for a
very long time by the sound of their screams.
The animals that
perished there, bring the total number of pigs to be burned
alive over the past decade in Manitoba to 64,000.
Surely you’d expect a rational,
caring government to respond by immediately tightening fire safety regulations.
Instead, it’s doing just the opposite. It’s moving to change building codes to
allow for fewer fire alarms, fewer smoke detectors and cheaper fire walls!
And surely you’d expect an industry
that claims to be both humane and
“business-savvy,” to support a move to greater safety, too. Yet, in its
apparent zeal to expand and save a few bucks on new barns, Manitoba Pork is
actually supporting Pallister in the de-regulation process!
According to Mike Teillet of Manitoba Pork, the barns seldom have any humans in them anyway, so there’s
no need for more exit doors. But what about the
animals? Surely modern technology can find a way to allow them to escape, too! Otherwise,
aren’t these structures just death traps waiting to happen?
The government and Manitoba Pork seem to be
giving us the message that they are content with the status quo; that hog barn
fires are simply a risk of this industry and that nothing more can be done. How many more pigs will have to suffer this needless and excruciating end?
What more powerful indication can there be
that the hog industry and government have become
so desensitized to the fact that these are living, sentient creatures? The pigs
that are the basis of this industry are often referred to as “animal units,” to describe how much they weigh and
how much manure they produce. The production system is under constant pressure
to produce more piglets at less cost, resembling an industrial assembly line.
Thousands of pigs live under one roof jammed into spaces so small that
sometimes they can barely move. The female pigs (sows) are kept in gestations
stalls from the age of 6 months till they are culled around 2 years of age. The
stalls are so small the sows cannot even turn around and can barely take a step
or two forward or backwards. They
never see the light of day or have the opportunity to root in straw or build a
nest before giving birth.
How far have we
moved from family farming to this industrial model, where thousands of animals
are kept inside buildings with minimal human contact, feed is automated and they
must live above pits of their own feces and urine?
Manitoba Pork and the government are sending
a clear message about their attitude toward the issue of hog barn fires.
Instead of letting us know what they will do to fix this problem, they are
saying it’s not worth fixing. Their justification is that the relaxed
regulations will reduce costs of barn construction by one or two percent.
Is this really how a civilized society wants
to allow its animals to be treated, even if those animals are destined to be on
someone’s dinner plate?
If thousands of our beloved cats and dogs
were routinely dying in fires in animal shelters there would be tremendous
pressure on government to put a stop to it. But, because the thousands of pigs
are hidden behind closed doors in these institutionalized barns, the public is
much less aware of their plight. Our guess is that, once that awareness grows, the public's taste for
pork will diminish.