Councillor Jim Graham was cited as saying to the Washington Post that he doesn’t know where his eggs come from when he shops at his local supermarket, but that he would like to know.
Under the proposed law, egg sellers would be required to hang prominent signs saying “eggs may be from caged hens.”
Erik Lieberman, director of government affairs for the
National Grocers Association, was quoted as saying, “We see it as a government-mandated marketing programme. We don’t need a city mandating that signs go up in every grocery store.”
Paul Shapiro of the Humane Society was cited as saying it could set a precedent, adding, “The bill is important in that it protects consumers who are concerned about animal cruelty.”
Mitch Head, a spokesman for United Egg Producers, which represents about 85 percent of US egg producers, was cited as saying that about 95 percent of eggs sold are produced by caged hens, and that a decade ago, the number was closer to 100 percent.
The law would be another step in a recent trend towards advocacy for cage-free eggs, including the ban or reduction of cage eggs in the national supermarket chains
Whole Foods Market and
Wild Oats Natural Marketplace, as well as at the American University, George Washington University, Gallaudet University and Georgetown University.