Recently, Gene visited Southern California’s San Bernardino County to witness and document the factory farming industry in the region. The area is home to the Hallmark slaughterhouse, which specializes in killing “spent” dairy cows. Gene photographed and videotaped abuse there in the 1990s, and that documentation led to the enactment of state and federal policies to outlaw the mistreatment of “downed” cows (animals too sick even to stand). In 2008, new revelations of flagrant cruelty at the facility prompted the largest beef recall in U.S. history.
San Bernardino County is the site of massive dairy operations, which confine thousands of cows in feedlot-like conditions. At its peak in the 1970s, it was the most intensive dairy-producing region in the world. Urbanization in Los Angeles County drove dairy farmers to the area en mass, spurring the formation of the San Bernardino Dairy Preserve. Lest the word “preserve” mislead: This is no bucolic haven of green pastures where placid herds of cows roamed; it has been a crucible for industrial animal agribusiness. San Bernardino’s hot, dry climate prompted the development of “dry lot” dairies, where huge numbers of cows are concentrated in barren paddocks. All feed is purchased and brought to the cows who are never able to graze on pasture. The land and water has been polluted by the enormous quantities of waste produced by these CAFOs (Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations).
Industrial dairy production is a relentless cycle of impregnation and birth and re-impregnation for cows. They must give birth to begin lactating, and, in modern dairies, they have a calf every year. Their babies are taken from them immediately so that the milk can be sold. In many dairy-producing areas, female calves are raised separately from their mothers but on the same or a nearby farm. These calves will replace their exhausted predecessors who are deemed “spent” (that is, no longer profitable as milk producers) and sent to slaughter at about four or five years of age. Meanwhile, male calves are typically taken to auction just after birth and sold for the production of veal or beef.
In California’s intensive dairy regions, so many calves are born that a “calf-ranch” industry has developed. Every day, calves are picked up from dairies and transported to these ranches, where they are confined in wooden crates only slightly larger than those used in veal production. For these vulnerable, frightened newborns, the calf ranch is a bleak prelude to a miserable fattening period on a feedlot or to a few grueling years in dairy production — and, in either case, to a violent, premature death. Safran was slated to be sent to a calf ranch the day after he was born. Instead, he was rescued, and came to our Southern California Shelter.