Shareholders
press Yum for stricter antibiotics policy
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[August 09, 2016]
By Lisa Baertlein
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Yum Brands Inc
investors on Tuesday filed a shareholder proposal requesting that it
quickly phase out harmful antibiotic use in its meat supply, taking aim
at the practices of the company's KFC fried chicken chain.
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The proposal from shareholder activists As You Sow, of Oakland,
California, and the Sisters of St. Francis of Philadelphia comes as
KFC lags rivals McDonald's Corp, Chick-fil-A, Subway and Wendy's Co
in setting policies to curb the routine use of antibiotics in
chicken production.
Those policies are a first step for many fast-food chains that are
under pressure to help combat the rise of dangerous "superbugs," as
antibiotic-resistant bacteria are known.
Yum's Taco Bell chain has committed to stop using antibiotics
important to human medicine in its chicken supply early next year
and the company's Pizza Hut chain has made a similar promise for the
chicken used in its pizza toppings. KFC, which buys far more chicken
than its two sister brands, has not made a similar promise.
Some 70 percent of antibiotics vital for fighting infections in
humans are sold for use in meat and dairy production.
Veterinary use of antibiotics is legal. However, as the number of
human infections from antibiotic-resistant bacteria increases,
consumer advocates and public health experts have campaigned to end
the routine use of antibiotics important to human medicine for
growth promotion or illness prevention in farm animals that are not
sick.
Advocates have targeted KFC because it has far more restaurants than
any other fast-food chicken chain and is second in sales behind
Chick-fil-A, which has committed to finishing its switch to chicken
raised without any antibiotics by the end of 2019.
McDonald's USA last week said it completed its move to chicken
raised without antibiotics important to human medicine. Wendy's
plans to make a similar switch by 2017.
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KFC has said that by 2017, antibiotics important for human medicine
will only be used to maintain chicken health and only under the
supervision and prescription of a licensed veterinarian. As per
federal government guidance, KFC does not allow the use of such
antibiotics for growth promotion.
Critics say the stated policy at KFC effectively allows for routine
use of antibiotics by its chicken suppliers.
"Yum Brands' silence in the face of this looming antibiotic
resistance crisis is bad for business," said Austin Wilson, As You
Sow's environmental health program manager.
As You Sow filed similar shareholder proposals at Wendy's and Burger
King parent Restaurant Brands International Inc, but pulled them
after the companies agreed to set stricter antibiotic policies by
the end of 2016.
(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles; Editing by Leslie
Adler)
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