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Sunny-Side-Up
Gets Sunnier: UNH Now Serves Eggs From Cage-Free, Certified Humane
NH Farm
By Beth Potier, Media Relations
If the eggs served at the University of New Hampshire seem a little
happier and healthier, it’s because they now come from chickens
that have been raised cage-free in a certified humane way. UNH, a
leader in sustainable food service, will now buy all its shelled eggs
from a certified humane chicken farm in New Hampshire’s White
Mountains, making it the first university in the nation to serve certified
humane products.
“Our students and customers are increasingly aware of how their
food is raised or produced,” said University Hospitality Services
(UHS) assistant director Rick MacDonald. “Moving to certified-humane
cage-free eggs complements our efforts to serve local and sustainable
food when possible.” MacDonald notes that cage-free eggs, which
come from hens raised with all-natural vegetarian feed, are higher
in healthy Omega 3 fats.
Pete and Gerry’s Organic Eggs, located in the northern New Hampshire
town of Monroe, will supply UNH with the approximately quarter of
a million eggs the university consumes per year in its dining halls
as well as through catering, conferences and at the New England Center.
Most of those eggs will be Nellie’s Nest Cage-Free Eggs, which
are produced and distributed by Pete and Gerry’s.
“As a family farm, we think this is a fantastic opportunity
to introduce future customers to the benefits of cage-free eggs,”
said Jesse Laflamme, co-owner of Pete and Gerry’s Organic Eggs
and Nellie’s Nest Cage-Free Eggs. Laflamme notes that his grandfather
Les Ward, founder of the company, studied poultry husbandry at UNH
before World War II. “UNH is where it all began,” says
Laflamme. Pete and Gerry’s was the first egg producer in the
U.S. to be designated certified humane.
“Certified humane,” a designation granted by the non-profit
Humane Farm Animal Care Program, indicates that the eggs have been
produced to standards that include a nutritious diet without antibiotics
or hormones and animals raised with shelter, resting areas, sufficient
space, and the ability to engage in natural behaviors. “We welcome
UNH as the first university to serve eggs that are ‘certified
humane’ and commend them for taking a stand to help improve
the life of farm animals,” said Adele Douglass, executive director
of the Humane Farm Animal Care Program.
The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS), which collaborated
with UHS as well as the UNH Office of Sustainability on the initiative,
also applauded the move. “The University of New Hampshire has
taken a leadership role in animal welfare by phasing out the sale
of eggs from caged birds. We applaud their efforts to help reduce
animal suffering and encourage other schools to follow suit,”
said HSUS Factory Farming Campaign Manager Paul Shapiro.
According to HSUS, the nation’s largest animal protection organization,
approximately 95 percent of eggs sold in the U.S. come from hens confined
in barren “battery cages,” wire enclosures so small the
birds can’t spread their wings or engage in many other natural
behaviors.
UHS, an award-winning dining service nationally recognized for its
innovative offerings, boasts a number of forward-looking sustainability
initiatives. “We’re very focused on making an impact by
serving locally grown and produced food,” said MacDonald.
That focus is part of an innovative collaboration with the UNH Office
of Sustainability called Local Harvest, which emphasizes serving local
and regional foods in UNH dining halls, restaurants, and at catered
special events. “Our collaboration with University Hospitality
Services is an integral part of a broad community-wide food and society
initiative that includes an educational commitment that spans across
teaching, research, operations and extension such as the dining halls,”
said Thomas Kelley, director of the Office of Sustainability.
In September 2005, a first-of-its-kind Local Harvest dinner brought
more than 1500 students, faculty, staff and community members to a
university dining hall for a culinary celebration of local agriculture
that included exotic and familiar items from farms and producers from
New Hampshire and New England. Other projects of the Local Harvest
initiative are UHS’s strong support for the UNH Organic Gardening
Club, a food waste composting program, and a recently launched waste
vegetable oil project that will produce biodiesel for heating greenhouses
and powering farm tractors.
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