Tyson adopting video checks, animal rights groups want more
PLUMERVILLE, Ark. — Tyson Foods on Wednesday unveiled a plan to stop abuses down on the farm, but an animal rights group that routinely distributes videos of disturbing practices of agricultural abuses said monitoring slaughterhouses won’t stop other cruelty that exists within the poultry industry.
The nation’s largest meat producer said it installed cameras and hired off-site auditors to review how it handles and kills birds at its 33 processing plants. The Springdale, Arkansas-based company also plans to explore using carbon dioxide to render the birds unconscious before they are killed.
Mercy for Animals said the company hasn’t done enough.
“Chickens raised for meat are bred to grow so unnaturally fast that they often collapse under their own weight,” the group said in a news release. Once on the ground, the birds sit in their own waste and develop sores after losing their feathers.


