New York Times
At Least 240,000 Chickens Are Killed in Fire at Florida Egg Farm
The financial loss from the fire, which destroyed two barns owned by Cal-Maine Foods in Dade City, Florida, was estimated at $1 million, officials said.
By Neil Vigdor
December 17, 2020
At least 240,000 chickens were killed early Thursday when a fire swept through two densely packed barns in Florida owned by one of the nation’s largest distributors of eggs, the authorities said.
The fire was reported around 1 a.m. by farmhands at the Cal-Maine Foods facility in Dade City, Fla., Shawn Whited, operations division chief for the Pasco County Fire Rescue, said in an interview.
Both barns that were destroyed housed two large coops, each of which had been filled with more than 60,000 young hens, known as pullets, that had not yet started to lay eggs, officials said. The farm is in a rural part of the county — about 40 miles northeast of Tampa — that does not have fire hydrants.
“So we had to bring in tanker trucks,” Chief Whited said.
The cause of the fire was under investigation by the state fire marshal, according to Chief Whited, who said that the financial loss had been estimated at $1 million. The farm — one of dozens of facilities that Cal-Maine Foods, based in Jackson, Miss., operates across the country — has four barns altogether.
The blaze was the latest in a spate of barn fires across the United States that have drawn the scrutiny of animal welfare groups, which had previously criticized Cal-Maine Foods about the conditions at its facilities.
Max Bowman, the chief financial officer and a vice president of Cal-Maine Foods, said in an interview on Thursday night that 2 to 3 percent of the company’s pullets had been lost in the fire and that it was not expected to disrupt production.
“Our core asset are these pullets and these hens,” Mr. Bowman said. “We take every reasonable measure to take care of them. That’s our regret that we lost those birds.”
Mr. Bowman said that pullets do not have the body mass of fully developed chickens and need to be kept warm, which may have contributed to the fire.
“It usually comes down to some sort of heating problem or electrical problem,” he said.
On the company’s website, Cal-Maine Foods estimated that it accounted for 19 percent of what are known as shell eggs — as opposed to powdered eggs — consumed in the United States. Eggland’s Best and Land O’ Lakes are produced and processed at Cal-Maine Foods facilities, the company’s website said.
Earlier this week, the Animal Welfare Institute estimated that more than 1.6 million farm animals had died in barn fires in the United States this year, 1.3 million of which were cage-free hens.
“It is completely unacceptable for the industry to tolerate massive numbers of animals burning to death when there are effective fire prevention and suppression strategies available,” Dena Jones, farm animal program director for the group, said in a statement two days before the fire in Florida.
Neil Vigdor is a breaking news reporter on the Express Desk. He previously covered Connecticut politics for the Hartford Courant. @gettinviggy • Facebook
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