Book Excerpt: Food Pets Die For
by Ann N.
Martin
Pets in pet food?
No, you say? Be assured that this is happening. Rendered companion animals
are just another source of protein used in both pet foods and livestock
feeds.
Rendering is a cheap,
viable means of disposal. Pets are mixed with other material from slaughterhouse
facilities that has been condemned for human consumption - rotten meat from
supermarket shelves, restaurant grease and garbage, "4-D" (dead,
diseased, dying and disabled) animals, roadkill and even zoo animals [Summer
'96 EIJ].
In 1990, John Eckhouse,
a reporter for the San Francisco Chronicle, wrote a two-part exposé
on the rendering of companion animals in California. While the pet food
companies vehemently denied that this was happening, a rendering plant employee
told Eckhouse that "it was common practice for his company to process
dead pets into products sold to pet food manufacturers."
Eckhouse's informant,
upset that some of the most disturbing information was left out of the Chronicle
article, subsequently brought his story to Earth Island Journal. (After
the Journal published this insider's extensive report ["The Dark Side
of Recycling," Fall 1990], the author placed a frantic call to the
Journal to say that he was "going underground" because he feared
for his safety.)
A Search for
the Truth
I had always assumed
that deceased pets were either buried or cremated. I had never heard of
rendering. In early 1992, I decided to find out what was happening to the
euthanized pets in London, Ontario.
Veterinary clinics
advised me that dead pets were incinerated by a local disposal company.
After hearing US horror stories, I was skeptical. I obtained the name of
the company that was picking up the pets, a dead-stock removal operation.
Classified as "recollectors," these companies - along with "receiving
plants," "brokers," and "rendering plants" - are
licensed by Canada's Ministry of Agriculture.
I asked the ministry
how the recollector disposed of the dogs and cats that it picked up. Two
months later, I received a letter along with a document from the dead-stock
removal company. This document, addressed to the investigator, was stamped
with the warning that the information in the document was "not to be
made known to any other agency or person without the written permission
of the Chief Investigator."
Small wonder. The
document confirmed that dead pets were, in fact, disposed of by rendering
(unless cremation was "specially requested" and "paid [for]
by their owners or by the veterinary clinic").
The dead animals
were shipped to a broker located about 300 miles away who sold the bodies
to a rendering plant in Quebec. When I contacted the rendering plant, the
owner admitted that cats and dogs were rendered along with livestock and
roadkill. "Do pet food companies purchase this rendered material?"
I asked. Again, his reply was, "Yes."
I was numb. How
had this barbaric practice gone undetected all these years?
When I advised the
veterinarians in my city about what was happening, most of them immediately
ceased using the dead-stock company and began using the local humane society
where the animals are cremated.
In the US and Canada,
the rendering of companion animals is not illegal. Millions of pets are
disposed of by rendering each year. According to the Eckhouse article, an
employee and ex-employee of Sacramento Rendering, a plant in California,
stated that their company "rendered somewhere between 10,000 and 30,000
pounds of dogs and cats a day out of a total of 250,000 to 500,000 pounds
of cattle, poultry, butcher shop scraps and other material." The rendering
plant in Quebec was rendering 11 tons of dogs and cats per week - from one
province alone.
The Situation
in the US
If this was the
case in Canada, I wondered if the US government was aware of what was happening?
The Food and Drug
Administration's Center for Veterinary Medicine (CVM) responded to my query
regarding the disposal of pets, stating: "In recognizing the need for
disposal of a large number of unwanted pets in this country, CVM has not
acted to specifically prohibit the rendering of pets. However, that is not
to say that the practice of using this material in pet food is condoned
by CVM."
The US Department
of Agriculture's (USDA) Food Safety and Inspection Services (FSIS) informed
me that dog and cat cadavers are excluded as an ingredient in pet foods
under FSIS regulations. But, when I asked the USDA if it could provide me
with a list of the companies that were using this inspection service, I
was told that only two small facilities were licensed for this service and
neither had subscribed to the service for four years.
Pet food companies
advertise that only quality meats are being used in their products. As of
1996, however, not one of the major pet food companies was using the USDA's
inspection service.
What's in the
Can?
Television commercials
and magazine advertisements for pet food would have us believe that the
meats, grains and fats used in these foods could grace our dining tables.
Over seven long years, I have been able to unearth information about what
actually is contained in most commercial pet food. My initial shock has
turned to anger as I've realized how little consumers are told about the
actual contents of pet food.
Animal slaughterhouses
strip the flesh and send the remains - heads, feet, skin, toenails, hair,
feathers, carpal and tarsal joints and mammary glands - to rendering plants.
Also judged suitable for rendering: animals who have died on their way to
slaughter; cancerous tissue or tumors and worm-infested organs; injection
sites, blood clots, bone splinters or extraneous matter; contaminated blood;
stomach and bowels.
At the rendering
plant, slaughterhouse material, restaurant and supermarket refuse (including
Styrofoam trays and Shrink-wrap), dead-stock, roadkill and euthanized companion
animals are dumped into huge containers. A grinding machine slowly pulverizes
the entire mess. After it is chipped or shredded, it is cooked at temperatures
between 220 F and 270 F (104.4 to 132.2 C) for 20 minutes to one hour. The
grease or tallow that rises to the top is used as a source of animal fat
in pet foods. The remaining material is put into a press where the moisture
is squeezed out to produce meat and bone meal.
The Association
of American Feed Control Officials describes "meat meal" as the
rendered product from mammal tissue exclusive of blood, hair, hoof, hide,
trimmings, manure, stomach and rumen (the first stomach or the cud of a
cud-chewing animal) contents - except in such amounts as may occur unavoidably
in "good processing" practices. In his article, "Animal Disposal:
Fact and Fiction," David C. Cooke asks, "Can you imagine trying
to remove the hair and stomach contents from 600,000 tons of dogs and cats
prior to cooking them?"
Drugs, Metal,
Pesticides, Pathogens
Pet food labels
only provide half the story. Labels do not indicate the hidden hazards that
lurk in most pet food. Hormones, pesticides, pathogens, heavy metals and
drugs are just a few of the hidden contaminants.
Sodium pentobarbital
and Fatal Plus are barbiturates used to euthanize companion animals.
When animals eat pet food that has gone through the rendering process, it
is likely that they are ingesting one of these euthanizing drugs.
Almost 50 percent
of the antibiotics manufactured in the US are dumped into animal feed, according
to the 1996 Consumer Alert brochure, "The Dangers of Factory Farming."
Pigs, cows, veal calves, turkeys and chickens are continually fed antibiotics
(primarily penicillin and tetracycline) in an attempt to eradicate the many
ills that befall factory-farmed animals - pneumonia, intestinal disease,
stress, rhinitis, e-coli infections and mastitis.
While this high-level
application of antibiotics means millions of dollars for the pharmaceutical
companies, the US Centers for Disease Control, National Resources Defense
Council and the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) all warn that these
"levels of antibiotics and other contaminants in commercially raised
meat constitute a serious threat to the health of the consumer."
Zinc, copper and
iron are listed on most pet food labels. But the metals in pet foods that
do not need to be listed on the label include: silver, beryllium, cadmium,
bismuth, cobalt, manganese, barium, molybdenum, nickel, lead, strontium,
vanadium, phosphorus, titanium, chromium, aluminum, selenium and tungsten.
The US FDA and Health
and Welfare Canada would be very concerned if the level of lead found in
pet food were found in the human food chain. For the dog food I had tested,
for example, a dog ingesting 15 ounces would receive .43 to 2.4 mg of lead
per day. Three mg per day is considered hazardous for a child. But when
it comes to pet food, no testing is undertaken by state officials for heavy
metals, pathogens, pesticides or drugs.
Although the pet
food industry is not regulated in the US and Canada, we as consumers have
been lulled into believing that government and voluntary organizations are
overseeing every ingredient stuffed into a container of pet food. What is
required is government-enforced regulation of the industry. Only state legislatures
can turn the tide, but it will be a long and difficult battle to persuade
our representatives to take up the fight.
In the meantime,
let the buyer beware!
Ann N. Martin, an
animal rights activist and commercial pet food critic, lives in London,
Ontario. Her article, "The Truth About Cats and Dogs," appeared
in the Summer 1996 Earth Island Journal. Excerpted from Food Pets Die For:
Shocking Facts About Pet Food (forthcoming in November by NewSage Press,
PO Box 607, Troutdale, OR 97060-0607, (503) 695-2211, fax: -5406).
"Ann Martin
is to the pet food industry what Rachel Carson was to the petrochemical-pesticide
industry."
- Dr. Michael W. Fox, The Humane Society of the US
Junk Food for Pets
Many people, born
before the 1950s, can still remember feeding pets dinner scraps without
concern that they were not getting the right balance of protein, fats and
carbohydrates. If we ate the food, we figured it was good enough for our
dogs and cats.
The pet food industry
has been in existence for more than 100 years, but only has gained real
success since the 1950s when America's food giants - cereal manufacturers
and meat packers - found a lucrative market for disposal of their byproducts.
Corporate giants
soon gobbled up small pet food companies. By the mid-1970s, pet food began
to imitate human food - hamburgers, meat balls in gravy and, more recently,
pasta. These humanized foods were designed to appeal to pet owners, not
the pet.
Now in the 1990s,
some pet food manufacturers advertise "all natural" food to cater
to health-conscious pet owners. Most contain the same dubious ingredients
as the rest.
Many veterinary
colleges provide only one or two weeks of nutritional education over the
course of four or five years. And who teaches these courses? Usually a "nutritionist"
from a pet food company.
Veterinary colleges
also receive grants from the pet food industry. Veterinarians, who have
little knowledge of canine and feline nutrition, wind up selling these corporate
pet foods in their practice. Vet clinics also provide clients with brochures
on animal nutrition - produced by the pet food companies.