Calif., Don’t count those chickens yet

Subscribe Now Choose a package that suits your preferences.
Start Free Account Get access to 7 premium stories every month for FREE!
Already a Subscriber? Current print subscriber? Activate your complimentary Digital account.

California was the first state to crack down on tailpipe emissions and the first to establish a comprehensive in-state greenhouse gas program. Now, it is positioning itself as a national leader on animal rights — if, that is, its move to give hens more cage room survives a legal attack from other states. Unfortunately, California’s legal case isn’t as strong as its moral one.

California was the first state to crack down on tailpipe emissions and the first to establish a comprehensive in-state greenhouse gas program. Now, it is positioning itself as a national leader on animal rights — if, that is, its move to give hens more cage room survives a legal attack from other states. Unfortunately, California’s legal case isn’t as strong as its moral one.

Americans rely on cheap chicken and eggs, the products of super-sizing livestock operations while squeezing costs. Farmers pack animals into pens, leaving hens with scarce room to extend their wings. There is a balance to be struck between keeping food prices low and mitigating the miserable conditions humans impose on livestock. California’s voters tried in 2008 to push their state closer to achieving that balance, opting to require egg growers to provide hens at least enough room to extend their wings and turn around. The rule takes effect next year.

But there was a problem: The voters didn’t appreciate other states weren’t going to follow along, and California imports about 4 billion eggs a year. Other states haven’t imposed similar cage-size requirements, so they might enjoy a cost advantage against California producers. To right that imbalance, the Golden State’s leaders approved a law requiring all eggs sold in California to come from farms that comply with its cage-size standards.

Missouri sued last month, arguing the Constitution gives Congress the exclusive right to regulate commerce that crosses state lines. Last week, five other states joined in. Though California’s law treats all businesses the same, the state has to show its effects on commerce outside the state are small relative to the local concerns it addresses. That is, rightly, a tough standard: Without strong and exclusive federal regulation of interstate commerce, states could enact all sorts of nice-sounding laws in an effort to benefit local producers.

Congress could and should step in to establish more humane farming rules, or at least grandfather California’s law. Federal lawmakers did something similar for the state’s tailpipe emissions program when they passed the Clean Air Act. Absent federal action, and if the courts rule against the state, California could at least demand labels to distinguish eggs produced according to state standards from those not. That would give Californians an opportunity to vote at the store as well as the ballot box.

— The Washington Post