* New York City Mayor-Elect Seeks To Ban Horse Carriages. Bill de Blasio, the mayor-elect of New York City, has announced that he intends to ban horse-drawn carriages, claiming that they are inhumane. De Blasio plans to replace the horse-drawn carriages with antique cars. The proposed law will have to be approved by the City Council before going into effect. Carriage drivers have vowed to fight this measure. [Read articles here and here.]
* Tyson Announces Changes for Pork Producers. On day after Smithfield announced changes regarding the use of gestation crates, Tyson Foods, the second largest pork producer in the US, also announced sweeping changes for producers. These changes include an expansion of third-party audits, use of video monitoring to decrease biosecurity risks, the end of utilizing blunt force trauma to euthanize hogs, the development and use of pain mitigation during tail docking and castration, and improved housing systems. [Read article here.]
* Primus Labs Moves for Dismissal in Jensen Farms Case. As we have previously reported on this blog, Jensen Farms, the cantaloupe operation where listeria contaminated the product causing several deaths and illnesses across the country, filed suit against PrimusLabs, the third party auditor that gave the farm a passing grade just weeks before the outbreak. The case was subsequently signed over to the victims, meaning any recovery would go to them, rather than to Jensen Farms. Primus Farms has now filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit, placing fault on the Jensen brothers and their distributer, rather than on the audit company. [Read article here.]
* New Mexico Judge Expected to Rule on Horse Slaughter Plant Today. After holding a contentious, day-long hearing on Monday, Santa Fe District Court Judge Matthew Wilson is expected to rule today whether Valley Meat Co. of Roswell, NM may go forward with horse slaughter operations. [Read article here.]