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Activists
Win One in Battle Over Pate Foie Gras
Senate panel votes to ban sale of delicacy produced by the force-feeding
of ducks and geese. Fans of the dish are concerned.
LA
Times April 27, 2004
SACRAMENTO
- For a long time, the politics of pate have been conducted on the outskirts
of the law.
In their
zeal to spare ducks from the force-feeding used to ensure the rich liver
that makes foie gras a delicacy, animal rights activists have sneaked
onto farms and set free the fowl, and defaced a specialty food store being
built in Sonoma because it planned to sell goose and duck foie gras.
But activists Monday scored a legally legitimate - if somewhat tenuous
- victory before the California Legislature. After more than an hour of
intense testimony in which Hollywood celebrities appeared and dueling
veterinarians debated the stress level of ducks, a Senate panel voted
4 to 3 to ban the sale of any foie gras produced by force-feeding.
But foie
gras aficionados have ducked, as it were, any immediate deprivation of
their favored terrine.
The duck
debate by the Senate Committee on Business and Professions hinged less
on the health of the birds than on the economic welfare of Sonoma Foie
Gras, the one California farm that specializes in raising them. The panel
agreed to the measure only after it was amended to delay taking effect
for 7 1/2 years, which senators said would be enough time for the owner,
Guillermo Gonzalez, to retool his business, which employs about 25 people
in Farmington, near Stockton.
Even if the
bill passes the full Senate, its prospects in the less assertively liberal
Assembly seem in doubt. Still, the compromise offered no solace to gourmets.
"It
is ironic that in California, of all places, a tiny minority can insist
on force-feeding the omnivorous majority its own particular religion,"
said Daniel Scherotter, executive chef of Palio D'Asti, a San Francisco
restaurant, who testified against SB 1520.
The methods
used to create foie gras - the French phrase for "fatty liver"
- have become a target of animal rights activists around the globe. Fourteen
countries, including Italy and Israel, now have some sort of ban, according
to Senate researchers.
But no state
in America yet has legislated the production of foie gras. California,
which bans the sale of horse meat for human consumption, has provided
fowl with some empathetic protections in the past. It is illegal to give
away live fowl to lure patrons to a place of amusement, to artificially
color them, or train them to fight. The state also has its own version
of an 8th Amendment for birds, requiring that poultry be "rendered
insensible" to pain before they are slaughtered. They cannot be skinned
or defeathered while alive.
The new measure
would not only prohibit the sale of inhumanely produced foie gras, but
also prohibit anyone from force-feeding a duck, goose or other bird in
order to excessively enlarge its liver. Violators could be fined up to
$1,000 per incident.
The concern
with Gonzalez, who appeared before the committee, exceeded the senators'
devotion to ferreting out the truth concerning the core of the advocates'
allegations: whether ducks are force-fed food in a manner so intense that
the feeding tubes sometimes tear at their esophagi, psychologically scarring
them to the point where they become terrified at the prospect of subsequent
feedings.
Holly Cheever,
a veterinarian from upstate New York who testified for the advocates,
said she had twice inspected dead birds from farms in the Catskill Mountains.
"We saw trauma that is never seen in a migratory bird," she
said at the hearing, which was crammed with more than 60 duck advocates,
including actress Bea Arthur and Melissa Rivers, the E! Entertainment
channel commentator who specializes in critiquing Hollywood fashion.
Cheever said
some birds were so sickened by ruptured esophagi and enlarged livers that
they could not walk. "Some birds have been witnessed trying to escape
from their human handlers, having to drag themselves with their wings
because they could no longer stand," she said.
Another veterinarian
supporting the bill, Chris Sanders, disputed the suggestion that the ducks
would eat as much as they could in nature and called the birds farmed
for foie gras "couch-potato ducks."
"Birds
that migrate are athletes," he said. "They're not going to gorge
themselves."
The opponents'
duck experts, who said they had examined the feeding methods at Sonoma
Foie Gras, said very few of the fowl had been injured from the feeding,
and almost all could stand and walk without trouble.
Francine
Bradley, a poultry specialist at UC Davis' cooperative extension, said
livers enlarged from the feedings were not debilitating and would be "completely
reversible" in ducks that were not slaughtered.
"This
is not a diseased product," she said.
Asked by
Sen. Kevin Murray (D-Culver City) to compare the stress level of a force-fed
duck with one in the wild, she said, "I am not a duck, but if something
larger than me was chasing me and trying to consume me, I'd think that
would be terribly stressful."
Ken Frank,
who owns La Toque restaurant in Rutherford, said he had examined Sonoma's
ducks as well and come away comfortable with the way they were treated.
"These
are birds I look in the eye and I'm proud to put on the table," Frank
said.
Several senators
noted that despite more than 1,000 letters they had received on both sides,
they were unsure what the real experience of the ducks was. "If we
listen to these conversations, somebody is not telling the truth,"
said Sen. Edward Vincent (D-Inglewood).
But after
lobbying by the bill's influential sponsor, Senate President Pro Tem John
Burton (D-San Francisco), the panel agreed to send the bill to the entire
Senate. Burton predicted it would be received favorably there, though
its future in the Assembly is less sure. Burton said: "I was surprised,
and I've carried a lot of animal bills, at the amount of people who turned
out for this bill."
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