Is Your State Trying to Overturn Farm Animal Protection Laws?

Thousands of bills are introduced in most state legislatures each year. Keeping track of them can be challenging, but we are here to help you keep up with legislation — both good and bad — impacting animals across the country.
Here are some emerging trends and specific farm animal welfare bills you need to know about:
Fifteen states have laws that ban the extreme confinement of farm animals in cages and crates. These laws have elevated the welfare of millions of animals, including egg-laying hens. However, the current bird flu outbreak and resulting mass culling of millions of hens has reduced the supply of eggs in many states. Some lawmakers are using this shortage to justify overturning confinement bans in an effort to increase supply by allowing eggs from cruel battery cage systems to be sold into the state.
Michigan, Arizona and Colorado have introduced bills repealing confinement bans, with Nevada being the first state to pass a rollback this year. These shortsighted proposals would harm animals and, ironically, bring back the mega-crowded conditions that fuel the spread of bird flu.
With the Farm Bill still stalled in Congress, industrial agribusinesses are turning their eyes to the states where they have historically been successful in capturing power and building policies that benefit the factory farm system.
This routinely takes the form of ag-gag and right-to-farm legislation, which we have seen pop up in multiple states this year. Legislators in South Dakota passed an ag-ag bill, and legislators in Michigan introduced a bill to eliminate local control of animal agriculture.
Another concerning trend is an attempt to limit transparency and access to information about factory farms, with various bills introduced in Missouri, Nebraska, New Mexico and North Dakota.
In addition to causing immense animal suffering, factory farming does enormous environmental damage. Rather than change their ways, industrial agribusinesses often push state legislatures to roll back environmental regulations or not enforce existing regulations. Some states even go so far as prohibiting the enactment of environmental policies that are stronger than what is required under federal law.
Additionally, industrial agriculture continues to lobby for state funding to support the construction of methane digesters, also known as factory farm gas. Misleadingly sold as a climate-smart solution, factory farm gas actually incentivizes large factory farms that have huge negative environmental impacts. Iowa is championing a bill to ease permitting regulations on methane digesters, and similar legislation has been introduced in Maryland to include methane digesters in the state’s list of eligible renewable energy sources.
In 2023, Congress considered the Ending Agricultural Trade Suppression (EATS) Act, an awful bill that would have had devastating consequences. It aimed to repeal hundreds of state and local laws that protect farm animals, farm workers, consumers and the environment — just to increase profits for Big Ag. The EATS Act didn’t pass, but we anticipate it will be introduced again.
Wait: It’s not all bad news.
There is increased interest by state legislators to think creatively about how to address the impacts of factory farms. In Nebraska, legislation was introduced that closely mirrors the federal Industrial Agriculture Accountability Act, requiring factory farms to prepare for and respond to disasters like bird flu outbreaks.
Building on past successes in Oregon, a bill to prevent new factory farms from building or expanding in areas deemed environmentally sensitive was just introduced, and in Hawai’i, a bill excluding factory farms from existing regulations that shield farms from legal accountability was recently introduced. Oklahoma legislators have introduced two bills to increase accountability for industrial agriculture, including a moratorium on new poultry megafarms. And bucking the trend of rolling back confinement bans, legislators in Maryland, Vermont and New York have introduced bills establishing new bans on extreme confinement of farm animals.
Finally, legislators in Illinois have introduced a bill that would establish a Good Food Purchasing Policy, which would harness the state government’s purchasing power to drive improvements in farm animal welfare.
What You Can Do
You can help advance bills that protect farm animals and fight bills that don’t. Please join the ASPCA Advocacy Brigade to receive urgent alerts and breaking news that impacts animals in your community and beyond.
You can also visit the ASPCA Advocacy Center to view a list of current local, state and federal alerts that need action today.