U.S. Moves to Prohibit Beef From Sick or Injured Cows

The Agriculture Department proposed on Tuesday banning from the food supply all cows that are too sick or injured to walk, a long-sought victory for advocates of animal welfare.

The proposed regulation would end an exemption that allowed the animals, known as downer cows, into the food supply if a government veterinarian inspected the animal and deemed it fit for slaughter.

Agriculture Secretary Edward T. Schafer said that while the exemption was rarely granted — it applied to fewer than 1,000 of the 34 million cattle that were slaughtered last year — it had nonetheless created confusion among consumers.

The exemption was criticized after the Agriculture Department announced in February that 143 million pounds of beef would be recalled. Westland/Hallmark Meat, of Chino, Calif., had supplied the meat to retailers and school lunch programs. It was the largest beef recall in United States history.


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