On December 18, 2024
Opinions

Vermont Packinghouse animal cruelty investigation

Dear Editor,

According to a Dec. 9 article in VTDigger, a local slaughterhouse, Vermont Packinghouse, is under investigation again for cruelty to animals. Allegedly, workers failed to intervene when a truck driver unloading pigs kicked animals in the head and neck and shoved them off the back of the trailer. The pigs suffered heat stroke after an eight-hour journey from a New York farm. 

Vermont Packinghouse claims it is taking corrective action to “uphold its commitment to humane animal handling.” 

This statement from a slaughterhouse previously shut down for 15 noncompliance violations of federal and state animal welfare laws for improper stunning of pigs and sheep is outrageous. In each instance, employees failed to stun an animal effectively and render it immediately unconscious, as required under the federal Humane Methods of Slaughter Act. The “mis-stunned” animals tried to escape and had to be re-captured and stunned multiple times.

Vermont Packinghouse, local meat farms, and butcher shops use the word “humane” liberally to advertise their services and products. But labels do not always tell the truth.

“Food” animals, even locally raised ones, suffer all manner of cruelties from birth to death: Newborn dairy calves shiver alone in outdoor huts; pigs in double-decker trucks endure long-distance transport in extreme temperatures; terrified animals wait hours or days in slaughterhouse holding pens for their turn to die, etc. “Stunning” requires violence either by captive bolt, blow to the skull, or electrocution, and, as we know from Vermont Packinghouse’s prior offenses, it is easily botched.

Merriam-Webster defines “humane” as “marked by compassion, sympathy, or consideration.”Sympathy requires an ability to put oneself into the shoes of another. Killing animals for food is not a humane endeavor in which animals are treated with compassion. Vermont Packinghouse and local meat purveyors should lose the “humanely-produced” label and just call it meat. 

Lucy Goodrum, Reading

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Vermont’s public safety and recovery need adaptation

April 16, 2025
By Jenney Samuelson, secretary Agency of Human Services Vermont has long been a leader in treatment for addiction and substance use, particularly through its Hub and Spoke model, launched nearly a decade ago to address the opioid epidemic. This approach brought treatment into mainstream, integrating into doctor’s offices and expanding access to services through regional…

The state of maple

April 16, 2025
By Anson Tebbetts, Vermont Agriculture Secretary By the end of the month, we’ll have a clearer picture of how Vermont’s sugar makers view this season. How was the yield? What will prices look like? Where will the markets be? In June, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) will release the official results of its annual…

We moved to Vermont to escape Florida’s schools

April 16, 2025
Dear Editor, If you’re wondering what Gov. Phil Scott and Sec. Zoie Saunder’s education plan will be like in practice, I can tell you­— our family lived through it in Florida. My family relocated to Vermont from Florida just a couple of months after Saunders and her family. Unlike Saunders, we moved to Vermont to escape Florida’s…

In support of Woodstock police chief

April 16, 2025
Dear Editor, We moved to Woodstock, Vermont, in early 2017. It was the first time we had spent any time in Vermont, and we fell in love. We loved the town, the community, and everything else. We opened a business, and one of the first people we met was then officer Joe Swanson. He was…