State of Illinois
92nd General Assembly
Legislation

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[ House Amendment 001 ]


92_HB0756

 
                                               LRB9205137EGfg

 1        AN ACT in relation to egg-laying hens.

 2        Be  it  enacted  by  the People of the State of Illinois,
 3    represented in the General Assembly:

 4        Section 1. Short title.  This Act may  be  cited  as  the
 5    Safe Egg and Laying Hen Protection Act.

 6        Section 5. Definitions.  As used in this Act:
 7        "Department"    means    the   Illinois   Department   of
 8    Agriculture.
 9        "Forced   molting   procedure"   means   the   deliberate
10    withholding of food or water from a laying hen  in  order  to
11    induce  a  loss  and  regrowth of feathers for the purpose of
12    increasing or extending egg production.  The  term  does  not
13    include  withholding food or water from a laying hen upon the
14    advice of a veterinarian for the purpose of treating  disease
15    or otherwise improving the health of the laying hen.
16        "Laying  hen" means a female chicken kept for the purpose
17    of commercial egg production.

18        Section 10. Legislative findings; public policy.
19        (a)  The General Assembly finds that:
20             (1)  The battery cages and forced molting procedures
21        used by some  commercial  egg  producers  are  inherently
22        inhumane.   They  result in unnecessary cruelty to laying
23        hens and contribute to the production of  unsanitary  and
24        disease-containing eggs.
25             (2)  Forced  molting procedures are used to increase
26        and extend egg production.  The most common procedure  is
27        to remove all food (and in some cases all water) from the
28        hens  for  10  to  14  days;  this  disrupts their normal
29        hormone cycles,  causing  them  to  molt  or  lose  their
30        feathers.   Although this process results in an extension

 
                            -2-                LRB9205137EGfg
 1        of a hen's ability to lay eggs, it also  produces  stress
 2        and   immune   system  compromise,  which  increases  the
 3        likelihood   and   severity   of   bacterial    infection
 4        (especially  Salmonella enteritidis) and other disease in
 5        both the hen and her eggs.   Force-molted  hens  are  far
 6        more  susceptible to infection than unmolted laying hens.
 7        Forced molting in close-confinement battery  cages  makes
 8        the  spread of infection even more severe and practically
 9        inevitable.
10             (3)  Contaminated  eggs  are  a  leading  source  of
11        Salmonella enteritidis infection  in  people.   In  1997,
12        over  300,000  human  illnesses  and  between 115 and 229
13        deaths occurred as a result  of  Salmonella  enteritidis.
14        The  use of forced molting and close-confinement cages is
15        a major contributor to Salmonella  enteritidis  infection
16        in both poultry and eggs.  Countries and facilities where
17        the use of forced molting and close-confinement cages has
18        been  reduced  have  experienced  dramatic  reductions in
19        Salmonella levels in both laying hens and eggs.
20             (4)  The USDA's Food Safety and  Inspection  Service
21        is  encouraging egg producers to eliminate forced molting
22        practices because of the risks to public health resulting
23        from Salmonella infection.  Consumers Union has expressed
24        its  opposition  to  forced  molting  for  public  health
25        reasons,  and  many  other  countries  and  organizations
26        throughout the world oppose the  use  of  forced  molting
27        procedures  and  close-confinement  cages  on both public
28        health and humanitarian grounds.
29        (b)  The General Assembly declares that it is the  public
30    policy of this State to encourage the production of eggs in a
31    manner  that  provides  appropriate  and  humane treatment of
32    laying hens and results in the  production  of  sanitary  and
33    disease-free eggs.
 
                            -3-                LRB9205137EGfg
 1        Section 15.  Forced molting procedures prohibited.
 2        (a)  Beginning  January  1,  2002,  a  person  engaged in
 3    commercial egg production in this State shall not  subject  a
 4    laying hen to any forced molting procedure.
 5        (b)  Knowing  violation  of  this  Section  is  a Class A
 6    misdemeanor.
 7        (c)  In addition to  criminal  penalties,  a  person  who
 8    violates  this  Section  may  be  subject  to  administrative
 9    penalties  imposed  by  the  Department,  which may include a
10    civil penalty of up to $100 for each laying hen subjected  to
11    a forced molting procedure.

12        Section  25.  Additional rules.  The Department may adopt
13    any rules regulating the treatment of  laying  hens  that  it
14    determines  to be necessary for the protection of laying hens
15    from cruel and inhumane treatment by commercial egg producers
16    in this State.  In adopting any such  rules,  the  Department
17    shall    take    into   consideration   the   standards   and
18    recommendations of recognized authorities and  the  economics
19    of the Illinois egg production industry.

20        Section  30.   Powers  of the Department.  The Department
21    has   all   powers   necessary   or   appropriate   for   the
22    administration and enforcement of this Act, including without
23    limitation the power:
24             (1)  to adopt rules (including emergency rules)  for
25        the administration and enforcement of this Act,
26             (2)  to  impose reasonable fees for the registration
27        of existing battery cages,
28             (3)  to  investigate  any   alleged   or   suspected
29        violation of this Act,
30             (4)  to   enter   and  inspect  any  commercial  egg
31        production facility in this State,
32             (5)  to impose civil penalties after  giving  notice
 
                            -4-                LRB9205137EGfg
 1        and an opportunity for a hearing, and
 2             (6)  pursuant  to  a  valid  court  order, to seize,
 3        remove, or destroy any equipment  used  in  violation  of
 4        this Act.

 5        Section 35.  Complaint; investigation; action.
 6        (a)  Any  person  may complain to the Department about an
 7    apparent or threatened  violation  of  this  Act  or  a  rule
 8    adopted under this Act.  The Department shall investigate the
 9    complaint and shall report the result of its investigation to
10    the complainant.
11        (b)  If  it  determines that a violation of this Act or a
12    rule adopted under this Act is threatened  or  has  occurred,
13    the Department shall take appropriate administrative or other
14    action to correct, restrain, or prevent the violation.
15        (c)  The  Department shall notify the appropriate State's
16    Attorney  whenever  it  determines   or   suspects   that   a
17    significant violation of Section 15 or 20 has occurred.

18        Section 40.  Enforcement; injunction; nuisance.
19        (a)  The  Department  may  bring an action in the circuit
20    court  of  any  county  in  which  an  actual  or  threatened
21    violation of this Act or of a rule  adopted  under  this  Act
22    occurs, for the purpose of:
23             (1)  seeking  an order restraining any continuing or
24        threatened violation of this Act or  of  a  rule  adopted
25        under this Act,
26             (2)  seeking   an   order  condemning  as  a  public
27        nuisance  and  directing   the   seizure,   removal,   or
28        destruction  of  any  equipment used in violation of this
29        Act or of a rule adopted under this Act, or
30             (3)  collecting any civil penalties lawfully imposed
31        under this Act.
32        (b)  Any other person may bring an action in the  circuit
 
                            -5-                LRB9205137EGfg
 1    court  of  any  county  in  which  an  apparent or threatened
 2    violation of this Act  or  a  rule  adopted  under  this  Act
 3    occurs,  for the purpose of seeking an order restraining that
 4    violation.  In an action brought under this  subsection,  the
 5    court  may  award reasonable attorney's fees and costs to the
 6    prevailing party.

 7        Section 99. Effective date.  This Act takes  effect  upon
 8    becoming law.

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