Court Nixes Horse Processing Plant Plans

A judge ruled that criteria used to award inspection permits to horse process plants was flawed.
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Horse processing in the United States is at a standstill after a federal court ruled that criteria used to award inspection permits to horse process plants was flawed.

Horse processing has not taken place in the U.S. since 2007 when a combination of court rulings and legislation shuttered the last two domestic equine processing plants operating in Illinois and Texas. In November 2011 Congress passed an appropriations bill that did not contain language specifically forbidding the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) from using federal dollars to fund horse slaughter plant inspections. On June 28, Atty. Blair Dunn, who represents the owners of the Valley Meats Co. LLC in Roswell, N.M., announced that the company had received a Food Safety Inspection Services (FSIS) permit. The permit allows placement of USDA personnel at the processing plant to carry out horsemeat inspections. On July 2, the USDA announced that a second processing plant in Sigourney, Iowa, received an FSIS permit to begin processing horses.

Horse processing was slated to begin at both plants on Aug. 5. However on Aug. 2, Albuquerque-based U.S. District Judge Christina Armijo granted a 30-day temporary restraining order preventing those plants from opening.

Dunn said Armijo suspended USDA inspections at the plant on grounds that an environmental review of the plant was flawed. According to New Mexico Attorney General Gary King, the court also prohibited USDA inspectors from further involvement with the New Mexico or Iowa plants

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Written by:

Pat Raia is a veteran journalist who enjoys covering equine welfare, industry, and news. In her spare time, she enjoys riding her Tennessee Walking Horse, Sonny.

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