Iowa passes a third attempt at an ag-gag law - Entrepreneur Generations

On Friday, Iowa state legislators passed a bill that would penalize undercover animal rights activists who expose conditions on factory farms, buried in an agriculture bill that mostly addressed pandemic-related concerns. On Wednesday, Gov. Kim Reynolds, Republican, signed it.

The new law, heavily lobbied for by the Iowa Pork Producers Association and sponsored by State. Sen. Ken Rozenboom (a factory farm owner himself), is the third attempt on a so-called "ag-gag" law. "The first version was overturned on First Amendment grounds in January 2019, and the second was put on hold while a constitutional challenge moves through the courts," Alleen Brown reports for The Intercept.

The new law establishes a new crime, "food operation trespass," that would penalize anyone who enters without permission a place where meat is processed or sold, or any place where a "food animal" is kept. "A first-time trespasser would now face up to two years of incarceration and a fine of up to $6,250," Brown reports. "If they entered a farm without authorization a second time, they could be charged with a felony carrying up to five years’ imprisonment and a fine of up to $7,500."

At least two dozen other states have introduced similar bills, in a handful of states the laws have stuck, and in Idaho, Kentucky, Utah and Wyoming such laws have been overturned by courts, Brown reports.

from The Rural Blog https://ift.tt/3dP429b Iowa passes a third attempt at an ag-gag law - Entrepreneur Generations

0 Response to "Iowa passes a third attempt at an ag-gag law - Entrepreneur Generations"

Post a Comment