Arizona Restaurant Owner Sues Over Costly Cage-Free Egg Mandate
The Arizona Department of Agriculture says all eggs sold must be cage-free, a power that according to the lawsuit belongs to the state legislature.

An Arizona poultry regulation is increasing egg prices for restaurants and consumers. A Tucson restaurateur is suing, asking courts to declare the rule invalid.
In April 2022, the Arizona Department of Agriculture (AZDA) enacted a rule to shift the state to all cage-free eggs by 2025, based in part on "the public's growing concerns about animal welfare." Beginning in October 2022, "all eggs sold in the state must come from laying hens" with "at least one square foot of usable floor space per laying hen." Beginning in 2025, all hens in the state must be housed in such a manner. It was the tenth state to enact such a mandate.
Conditions in traditional egg production facilities can be miserable, with hens crammed into stackable cages smaller than their wingspans. Unable to move, they are forced to eat, sleep, and lay eggs in their own filth.
In 2017, responding to public pressure, businesses representing 70 percent of U.S. egg demand pledged to go cage-free within a decade.
According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), "cage-free" means that birds are "able to freely roam a building, room or enclosed area with unlimited access to food and fresh water during their production cycle." This differs from "free-range," which includes all cage-free criteria plus "continuous access to the outdoors."
No system is perfect. Cage-free facilities have higher rates of death and injury for birds as well as higher potential for disease and infection. And the cost to go from a stacked-cage system to cage-free is expensive, averaging around $40 per hen; in August 2022, the U.S. averaged 371 million egg-laying hens, according to the USDA. Poultry industry estimates have put the cost of switching the industry to cage-free at $6 billion or more.
A lawsuit filed last week by the Goldwater Institute, a free-market public policy organization, and the Pacific Legal Foundation, says the AZDA overstepped its authority. The groups note in their complaint that any such regulation must come from the Arizona Legislature, "which has the exclusive power to make laws."
In its rule, the AZDA claims "the express authority to regulate 'poultry husbandry' for eggs produced and sold in Arizona" under state law. In response, the complaint notes that the law says nothing about eggs or their sale.
Goldwater Institute attorney John Thorpe told Reason that even if the legislature had intended for the AZDA to have such authority, it couldn't. Under the Arizona Constitution, "it's unconstitutional to give that kind of sweeping delegation to an agency to essentially create new policies or to go in a new direction with regulation outside of the purpose that they've been tasked with."
The lawsuit was filed on behalf of Grant Krueger, a Tucson restaurateur, and three restaurants he owns and operates. Krueger told Reason that between those three restaurants, he purchases "well over 100,000 eggs a year," and since switching to cage-free eggs to comply with the new rule, his costs have "doubled if not tripled." As costs are passed on to diners, Krueger worries "that there is some degree of elasticity in demand and that ultimately consumers will choose with their wallets and potentially dine out less often."
Even before the new rule, egg consumers were struggling nationwide. While inflation has been persistent for the last couple of years, the retail price of a dozen eggs more than doubled between January 2022 and January 2023. The dramatic spike came as the result of an avian flu epidemic that devastated the egg-laying hen population; prices have since fallen, almost to their previous levels.
But prices aren't Krueger's primary complaint; even if a ban had come from the legislature, he says he would prefer it. "However the law would have been crafted from the legislators of the 30 legislative districts that make up Arizona, it would be more reflective of some of these legislative districts that have a strong agrarian focus to them. So, the lawmakers that would make the law would probably be substantially more sensitive to their constituencies' needs rather than it just being made by bureaucrats in Phoenix."
"It's just as much an issue of separation of powers" as about costs, Krueger says, and "ultimately, laws that are put upon us should be done by the legislative branch of the government, that more accurately reflect the people who have chosen those electors to make those decisions for them. It's the core of representative democracy."
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Which ones? We are currently visiting family in Tucson.
His main ones are at St Phillips Plaza. They have a pizza, Mexican, and Union is American bistro food. I prefer Union. But Proof (pizza) and Reforma (mexican) are both good. They share a central plaza.
https://www.stphilipsplaza.com/dining
We have enjoyed Union Pub before, and need to try the others.
I like Seis for Mexican .
Or El Charro if your wallet needs cleaning out.
Favorite breakfast burrito is Amelia's on grant and craycroft. Machaca burrito is amazing.
There’s a lot of layers to this.
I'm eggstatic about the prospect of this lawsuit winning.
Wonder if this violates the Hatch Act.
Laying-off workers might be the only solution.
That could result in a coop d'etat.
do you ever quit with the fucking yolks?
It’s part of white supremacy.
I just like to feather them in. Keep people abreast. Sometimes just a poultry amount. A few may be too chicken to participate.
scrambles my brain. omelete the rest of you proceed.
These jokes are cracked.
There's a dozen comedy-hens in here.
At least they are original, not poaching them from elsewhere.
The legal process isn't all it's cracked up to be.
Need a hard boiled lawyer.
Someone who's hard to beat.
And will whip them good.
Someone devilish
Are we not men?
No, we are Devo.
Egg-cellent!
You know, maybe the Looney Lefties who are PETA freaks would not be so enthused with Hamas if they discovered that the tunnels in Gaza had mini halal chicken ranches "vhere ze animals are to be BRED UND SLAUGHTERED!"
🙂
😉
Dr. Strangelove--Peter Sellrs--"An Astonishingly Good Idea"
https://youtu.be/zZct-itCwPE?si=XXCpwCdPC6vvgK6y
I don't see what is the issue (pardon.)
All eggs are cage-free once the farmer gets them out from under the caged hen, and doubly so when the hen isn't in a cage at all.
🙂
😉
"the public's growing concerns about animal welfare."
I'm always amused when they include stuff like this. If the public was so concerned with animal welfare they would be purchasing cage-free eggs of their own volition, no mandate necessary. The only reason for such a mandate is if someone in the government thinks the public is *not* sufficiently concerned with an issue.
This. Electric cars are so popular, they're going to be mandated in 2035.
Much easier to get rid of the democrats and not have that problem.
The outcome of these government overreach initiatives often leaves egg on their face.
It’ll be a real scramble to meet the regulatory requirements.
Its hard to boil down to consumer sentiment.
No yolking around on this.
Consumers will be shell shocked at the prices.
Hey, my utopian dreams are much more important than your liberties.
Or that the labels 'cage free' and 'free range' are basically a fraud. The avian flu showed there isn't a damn bit of practical difference between those two labels and regular factory eggs. The prices of all three of those spiked up because all three of those are industrial disease havens. One case of avian flu and the entire warehouse is dead in a few days. So the costs of restocking, disinfecting, etc drove the price of all three of those labels up to the normal price of 'pasture-raised' label and that was the production method that then constrained further price increases.
The Arizona Department of Agriculture says all eggs sold must be cage-free, a power that
according to the lawsuitbelongsto the state legislatureNOWHERE!FTFY
The tyrant often claims that his diktats are the will of the people, occasionally this is even true.
I expect that "the public" is, in this case, some fanatical animal rights group which has sympathizers in the Ag Dept, but has little broad-based support, or least none that is more than an inch deep.
In 2017, responding to public pressure, businesses representing 70 percent of U.S. egg demand pledged to go cage-free within a decade.
LOL. Title of the linked article; “Egg makers are freaked out by the cage-free future”. Seems like maybe they’re more freaked out by the demands of stupid SJWs that the SJWs get free shit and now the stupid SJWs are freaked out that TANSTAAFL.
I'm no expert on Arizona party politics, but how did something like this pass? Did everyone agree to disagree and go with the ban?
You know the 12-yr.-old and the plastic straws thing? The 97% of the scientific consensus supports global warming thing? Well, there’s no story that’s anything like that here because apparently, businesses representing 70% of US egg demand (70% by number of consumers? 70% by number of eggs?) just randomly decided to sign a contract to make their eggs more expensive to produce.
That shit happens. Like daytime running lights, for example. Some of the automakers lobbied to push it through because Canada demanded it, they figured if they could scale back their options it'd be easier on supply chains.
However, they weren't popular and so, if they force ALL automakers to do it, they wouldn't have to worry about the competition having better, cheaper options.
Regulatory capture happens in many ways.
That shit happens.
Making up statistics and falsely conflating a scant minority with near consensus with the specific intent to deceive people and influence policy? I know. I mentioned that.
Like daytime running lights, for example. Some of the automakers lobbied to push it through because Canada demanded it, they figured if they could scale back their options it’d be easier on supply chains.
Yeah, except daytime running lights doesn't exactly align with the "Love Mother Earth - Make food production needlessly expensive" GND agenda the way this and analogous legislation like CA's farrowing-crate law does.
Regulatory capture happens in many ways.
Yeah, my fault for bringing it up in a forum that wouldn't have anything to do with investigative libertarian journalism. My bad.
What the fuck is up your ass today?
I just found your post thought provoking so I explored some thoughts. Geez dude, nobody is disputing your comments. Relax and let others bring things up in a public forum, as well.
It didn't pass. It was formed by bureaucracy appointed by Hobbs.
Figures the idiot Hobbs laid this egg.
it was enacted in April of 2022..... Hobbs was not governor yet.
pure unaccountable bureaucracy.
Then it was Ducey. Ice cream baron who was pretty terrible.
Leadership to the board is governor appointment.
https://agriculture.az.gov
The cream doesn’t always rise to the top. A churn for the worse.
Scum rises faster than cream.
I’m no expert on Arizona party politics, but how did something like this pass? Did everyone agree to disagree and go with the ban?
They rolled over easy.
That's the thing - it *didn't* get passed. Some bureacrats, isolated in their wealthy enclaves in Phoenix, decided.
Something similar happend a couple years ago - state health department decided that all food prep facilities that weren't in a building had to be consolidated into a truck. You couldn't set up a stand and get that inspected and certified - it had to be in a trailer or truck.
So where I worked - where we haven't had an issue with food-borne illness in the 30 years the place had been open - had to make the food vendors spend thousands of dollars to comply.
All because some dingleberries on the asshole of Paradise Valley decided that that was 'necessary'.
And then the Border Patrol station right next to us eminent domained us and we're shutting down after they put all that money in;)
In 2017, responding to public pressure, businesses representing 70 percent of U.S. egg demand pledged to go cage-free within a decade.
You know, it just crossed my mind… why do libertarians keep ginning up culture wars on this stuff? Can’t they just let it go?
Our goal to be the most progressive, responsible and sustainable arena in the world. It might sound ambitious, but that’s the point. We aren’t named after a corporation. We are named after The Climate Pledge, founded by Amazon and Global Optimism in 2019, which is a commitment from companies globally to be net zero carbon by 2040.
Yup, if you want to make a pledge to the climate, the most important thing you can do is to have sports teams and entertainers and their entourage fly in from all over the world, and have tens of thousands of people drive to see these competitions/performances.
Nothing more climate pledge-y than that.
If we don’t get rid of these people we will end up starving to death. Seriously, how much much misery is everyone willing to endure in the name of tolerance?
It really is a choice between us and them. I vote we put them off the island.
Zealots. This is the equivalent of whipping themselves and whipping the rest of us as well.
You're all talk and no action. Post some scalp pics.
Not sure how to find the people most responsible.
I mean, let's face it, I'm no Leon, so I'd get basically one crack at this egg, and then have yolk all over my face.
But if the [l]ibertarian-ish candidate sends one mean tweet, I'm reluctantly voting for the other guy.
"It's just as much an issue of separation of powers" as about costs, Krueger says, and "ultimately, laws that are put upon us should be done by the legislative branch of the government, that more accurately reflect the people who have chosen those electors to make those decisions for them. It's the core of representative democracy."
This guy gets it.
Just let the chickens vote already, at least in Democratic primaries.
Which candidates do you think they would flock to?
The ones with the biggest cocks.
Some may prefer chicks.
As long as they're not hen pecked.
I have to admit, I really don't care about chickens' feelings.
I dunno, they all look alike to me. If I'm in the supermarket, how do I tell the caged eggs from the cage free ones?
The caged eggs are brown?
70% of them will be cage free... there was a consensus.
I drive around and see cornfields with tightly packed corn stalks which seem to be living in miserable conditions. When are our corn friends going to be liberated from these conditions?
Only when somebody has their ear.
They'll have to cob-ble together support.
🙂
😉
When are our corn friends going to be liberated from these conditions?
Every year, September to November, depending on the weather.
You can invest in corn in the stalk exchange.
Don't shuck and jive us.
🙂
😉
they are forced to eat, sleep, and lay eggs in their own filth.
Pretty much the lifestyle of women on public assistance I've known.
Not a well-done article. First off: The Department - which apparently DOES have the right (duty) to regulate hen animal husbandry- issue is not directly addressed; you simply side with the for-profit folks who say “hey, eggs were not SPECIFICALLY mentioned…” (well, what else is not specifically mentioned? Dirt? The bacteria in dirt? C’mon).
Secondly: Nowhere is the subject of cruelty to non-human animals brought up- which is an issue in state law that Departments also has to deal with. Why not?
We need authors here to be a bit more thorough in their research before summarizing the status of an issue.
Dave Huntsman
Hon, this is a *Libertarian* publication. This "department" and its "regulations" shouldn't exist, period. Arizona used to be a state which leaned on the side of freedom - but thanks to the thousands of Californians who fled that state due to its high cost of living but brought their left-wing politics with them, Arizona is getting more and more purple by the day.
Nothing good comes out of Arizona...
Conditions in traditional egg production facilities can be miserable
For who?
The illegal aliens who work there.
You can always tell when the people quoted are lying by statements like this: his costs have "doubled if not tripled."
Have costs doubled? Or have they tripled? Or have they in fact not gone up much at all?
Do you already buy so called free range or cage free eggs? If not take a look at the price difference. It will shock you. Mostly the costs of getting your eggs labeled cage free are in the bribes… er… fees you have to pay a legion of government stooges. The chickens don’t really care one way or the other.
A quick look online and cage free eggs actually do cost somewhere between 2 and 3 times that of normal eggs.
It's not always that much. Where I usually buy eggs:
$1.31 Penny Smart Grade A Large Dozen Eggs
$1.89 Meijer Cage Free Grade A Large Eggs, Dozen
But Meijer is the store brand. For other brands, "cage free" starts at $4.31, "free range" at $5.99, and "organic free range" at $5.72.