Illinois ‘chicken bill' aims to boost small poultry farms, expand access to their products
Legislation would allow farmers to sell their poultry at farmers markets, roadside stands and through delivery
By GRACE FRIEDMANMedill Illinois News Bureaunews@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD — A bill that would lift long-standing restrictions on small poultry farmers in Illinois, reducing red tape and transforming the way local farmers process and sell their products, is heading to the governor.
Under a measure dubbed the 'chicken bill,' farmers who process fewer than 7,500 birds annually would be exempt from state and federal inspections of their poultry operations or from having to send birds to USDA-approved processing facilities — an increase from the previous 5,000-bird threshold. The change, part of an update to the Illinois Meat and Poultry Inspection Act, also allows these farmers to sell their poultry beyond their own farms — including at farmers markets, roadside stands and through delivery — a major shift from earlier restrictions.
'This is important for our small farmers to be able to get their product to the community, and that's what this is all about,' said Sen. Sally Turner, R-Beason, who co-sponsored the bill. The Illinois House voted 116-0 on Friday, May 30, to approve House Bill 2196, and the Senate passed it unanimously on May 22.
Turner represents a largely rural district spanning 10 counties. 'Farmers in my community, especially small farmers, are important to me, personally, but also to our whole district,' she said.
State Rep. Charlie Meier, R-Okawville, a farmer himself, said the legislation provides local agriculture with a much-needed boost.
'We always want to get the freshest product to the consumer. We want them to know where it came from,' Meier said. 'So what's better than meeting the farmer who's raised those chickens, knowing where they're coming from? They're fresh, and you're getting a good, healthy product.'
Initially, the bill faced pushback from some public health groups, which argued for stricter labeling and packaging rules to ensure the safety of poultry products for consumption.
The revised bill includes mandated temperature controls during storage, transportation, shipping and delivery. Processed poultry must be packaged in sealed, leak-proof containers to prevent contamination. Each package must also be clearly labeled with the farm's name and address, the product name, net weight and a statement indicating that the poultry was processed under exemption and not inspected by state or federal authorities.
'Everything you see in that bill was done by some of the public health coalitions,' Michael Desmedt, interim director of public health for DuPage County, said. 'I think our voices were heard, and they understood our concerns.''
Ed Dubrick, a poultry farmer and policy organizer with the Illinois Stewardship Alliance, a nonprofit organization that advocates for sustainable agriculture, said he went around the state and asked livestock farmers what they needed to help with the processing of their animals.
Dubrick said the current exemption was too limiting because farmers could only sell 'on or from the farm.'
'Expecting someone to come to the farm every time they want some chicken just really isn't realistic,' he said. 'But if we can bring it to a farmers market where the consumers are, that adds an opportunity.'
Illinois is one of the few states without more flexible on-farm poultry processing exemptions, Dubrick said.
'In many states — about 40 — you're allowed to process up to 20,000 birds under similar rules. We're only asking for 7,500,' he said.
Farmers will benefit, according to Dubrick.
'It gives them the opportunity to drive both their production and their profits on their farms,' he said
For consumers, he said, 'I think you'll see an increase in the availability of local poultry, and I don't think you'll see any difference in food quality or safety. Farmers are proud of their product. They're not going to put their name, their reputation, their business on the line.'
Anna Morrell, co-owner of The Little Farm at Weldon Springs in Clinton, said the bill could make it more viable for her and her husband to scale up their small operation, which began in 2020.
'This basically just opens up another avenue for getting poultry processed with lower overhead and gives us an avenue of sales into farmers markets,' Morrell said. 'We're currently not operating under the poultry exemption. We take our meat to USDA-inspected facilities, but there are very few processors in Illinois that process poultry.'
Morrell said the current law had made it more challenging for poultry farmers in Illinois to sell their products; this bill would decrease the number of miles farmers have to travel to get their poultry processed.
If signed, Legislators and advocates say the bill represents a rare collaboration between producers, public health departments and state lawmakers.
'And let's see if we can't keep a few more farm families on the farm and give kids another chance at a future on the farm,' Meier said.
Grace Friedman is a journalism student at Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing Communications, and a fellow in its Medill Illinois News Bureau working in partnership with Capitol News Illinois.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Yahoo
Sugar Prices Slump to 4-Year Lows on the Outlook for Abundant Global Supplies
July NY world sugar #11 (SBN25) Wednesday closed down -0.20 (-1.24%), and August London ICE white sugar #5 (SWQ25) closed up +3.80 (+0.82%). Sugar prices on Wednesday extended their 3-month-long slide and posted 4-year nearest-futures lows. The outlook for improving global sugar supplies is weighing on prices. However, fund short covering on Wednesday lifted London sugar off its lows and into positive territory. Grains, Unrest, & Gold: What Middle East Tensions Mean for Your Portfolio Now Coffee Prices Plummet on an Improved Supply Outlook Can Soybean Prices Keep Trending Higher? Get exclusive insights with the FREE Barchart Brief newsletter. Subscribe now for quick, incisive midday market analysis you won't find anywhere else. Sugar prices have fallen over the past 3-months due to expectations of a global sugar surplus. On May 22, the USDA, in its biannual report, projected that global 2025/26 sugar production would increase by +4.7% year-over-year (y/y) to a record 189.318 million metric tons (MMT), with a global sugar surplus of 41.188 MMT, up 7.5% year-over-year. The outlook for higher sugar production in India, the world's second-largest producer, is bearish for prices. On June 2, India's National Federation of Cooperative Sugar Factories projected that India's 2025/26 sugar production would climb +19% y/y to 35 MMT, citing larger planted cane acreage. The outlook for abundant rainfall in India could lead to a bumper sugar crop, which is bearish for prices. On April 15, India's Ministry of Earth Sciences projected an above-normal monsoon this year, with total rainfall forecast to be 105% of the long-term average. India's monsoon season runs from June through September. Signs of larger global sugar output are negative for prices. On May 22, the USDA's Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS) predicted that Brazil's 2025/26 sugar production would rise +2.3% y/y to a record 44.7 MMT. Also, India's 2025/26 sugar production is projected to rise +25% y/y to 35.3 MMT, citing favorable monsoon rains and increased sugar acreage. In addition, Thailand's 2025/26 sugar production is expected to climb +2% y/y to 10.3 MMT. In a bearish factor, the Indian government said on January 20 that it would allow its sugar mills to export 1 MMT of sugar this season, easing the restrictions placed on sugar exports in 2023. India has restricted sugar exports since October 2023 to maintain adequate domestic supplies. India allowed mills to export only 6.1 MMT of sugar during the 2022/23 season to September 30 after allowing exports of a record 11.1 MMT in the previous season. However, the ISMA projects that India's 2024/25 sugar production will fall -17.5% y/y to a 5-year low of 26.2 MMT. Also, the ISMA reported last Monday that India's sugar production from Oct 1-May 15 was 25.74 MMT, down -17% from the same period last year. In addition, Indian Food Secretary Chopra said on May 1 that India's 2024/25 sugar exports may only total 800,000 MT, below earlier expectations of 1 MMT. The outlook for higher sugar production in Thailand is bearish for sugar prices. On May 2, Thailand's Office of the Cane and Sugar Board reported that Thailand's 2024/25 sugar production rose +14% y/y to 10.00 MMT. Thailand is the world's third-largest sugar producer and the second-largest exporter of sugar. Sugar prices have some support from reduced sugar production in Brazil. Unica reported Monday that cumulative 2025/26 Brazil Center-South sugar output through May is down by -11.6% y/y to 6.954 MMT. Last month, Conab, Brazil's government crop forecasting agency, said 2024/25 Brazil sugar production fell -3.4% y/y to 44.118 MMT, citing lower sugarcane yields due to drought and excessive heat. The International Sugar Organization (ISO) raised its 2024/25 global sugar deficit forecast to a 9-year high of -5.47 MMT on May 15, up from a February forecast of -4.88 MMT. This indicates a tightening market following the 2023/24 global sugar surplus of 1.31 MMT. ISO also cut its 2024/25 global sugar production forecast to 174.8 MMT from a February forecast of 175.5 MMT. The USDA, in its bi-annual report released May 22, projected that global 2025/26 sugar production would climb +4.7% y/y to a record 189.318 MMT and that global 2025/26 human sugar consumption would increase +1.4% y/y to a record 177.921 MMT. The USDA also forecasted that 2025/26 global sugar ending stocks would climb +7.5% y/y to 41.188 MMT. On the date of publication, Rich Asplund did not have (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. This article was originally published on
Yahoo
10 hours ago
- Yahoo
Did Cotton Prices Just Hit a Bottom After Falling to a 9-Week Low?
July ICE cotton futures (CTN25) were under modest selling pressure on Wednesday and slipped to a nine-week low below 65 cents a pound. The overall technical posture for the cotton futures market favors the bears as prices are in a seven-week downtrend on the daily bar chart. However, there are also some early, bullish clues that the cotton market has forged a price bottom. Since scoring a contract low of 62.05 cents a pound on April 4, July cotton futures have chopped in a sideways trading range. This is likely 'basing' action on the daily chart that has put in a price bottom. Coffee Prices Plummet on an Improved Supply Outlook Coffee Prices Sink on the Outlook for Ample Supplies Can Soybean Prices Keep Trending Higher? Stop Missing Market Moves: Get the FREE Barchart Brief – your midday dose of stock movers, trending sectors, and actionable trade ideas, delivered right to your inbox. Sign Up Now! With a price bottom likely in place, the cotton bulls now need some bullish fundamental news to start a price uptrend. Last week's monthly USDA supply and demand report had some price-friendly elements for the cotton market. The 2025/26 marketing year U.S. cotton balance sheet was revised to show lower production, beginning stocks, and ending stocks, with consumption, imports, and exports unchanged from last month. U.S. harvested area was lowered 2% to 8.19 million acres following extensive rainfall and delayed planting in the Delta. The national average yield for 2025/26 was reduced more than 1% from last month's report, to 820 pounds per harvested acre, also because of the conditions in the Delta. As a result, U.S. cotton production was forecast down 500,000 bales, to 14.0 million, and is below the 14.4 million bales produced in 2024/25 and the second-smallest crop in the past decade. Beginning U.S. stocks for the 2025/26 marketing year were reduced 400,000 bales following a corresponding increase in projected U.S. exports for 2024/25. As a result, 2025/26 ending stocks were lowered 900,000 bales to 4.3 million, for a stocks-to-use ratio of 30.3%. The projected season-average price for 2025/26 was unchanged in the USDA June report, at 62 cents per pound. For the 2025/26 marketing year, USDA forecast downwardly revised global cotton production, consumption, beginning and ending stocks, and world trade. World production was lowered over 800,000 bales as a 1-million-bale increase for China was more than offset by reductions for India, the United States, and Pakistan. Global consumption was reduced by over 300,000 bales for 2025/26. Beginning world cotton stocks for 2025/26 were lowered over 1.1 million bales, largely reflecting a 1-million-bale reduction in India's 2024/25 crop. As a result, global ending stocks for 2025/26 were lowered by nearly 1.6 million bales, primarily reflecting the reduction in beginning stocks and a decrease in production that exceeds the decrease in consumption. USDA's June supply and demand report also showed the agency forecast 2024/25 China cotton imports at the lowest level in eight years, at 5.5 million bales – roughly one-third of last year's volume. 'Several factors have pressured demand: the highest domestic production in nearly a decade, lower consumption, and less demand for government reserves.' China's 2024/25 cotton production is estimated nearly 4.7 million bales higher, at 32.0 million bales, on record yields in the Xinjiang autonomous region. Meanwhile, consumption is projected to fall nearly 2.0 million bales, to 37.0 million. At the start of the marketing year, the volume of foreign cotton in bonded warehouses was at the second-highest level for data going back to 2015. Therefore, plentiful supplies coupled with lower operating rates have driven down imports. Chinese companies are shifting production to their Vietnamese mills, spurring greater cotton consumption and imports in Vietnam. USDA's 2025/26 global outlook sees world cotton production forecast down 800,000 bales, to 117.0 million, as smaller crops in India, Pakistan, and the United States more than offset a larger crop in China. Global consumption is forecast down 300,000 bales, to 117.8 million, on lower supplies but remains the highest level in five years. USDA lowered global cotton ending stocks by 1.6 million bales, to 76.8 million, on lower production and beginning stocks in the United States. There's an old trading adage: 'Never short a dull market.' The past five weeks have seen choppy and sideways price action in July cotton futures. The price-bullish basing price action I mentioned above has arisen from the dull market conditions. Still, the cotton market needs a jolt of bullish fundamental news to generate a solid price uptrend. The U.S. stock indexes have been trending up and recently hit multi-month highs. That's bullish for cotton. The down-trending U.S. Dollar Index and up-trending crude oil prices are bullish 'outside-market' factors for the natural fiber. However, what the cotton market bulls really needs is a continued thawing in U.S.-China trade relations (China is a major cotton importer) and some drier and hotter weather in U.S. cotton regions — namely Texas. Both elements are entirely possible in the coming weeks. My bias is that the cotton futures market has put in a major price bottom, but prices will continue to chop sideways until some fresh, bullish fundamental news arises to start a new price uptrend. I think that news will come sooner rather than later. On the date of publication, Jim Wyckoff did not have (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. This article was originally published on Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


Business Wire
17 hours ago
- Business Wire
Lineage Streamlines Import Process with Newly Certified Customs Bonded Warehouse Space in Seattle
NOVI, Mich.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Lineage, Inc. (NASDAQ: LINE) (the 'Company'), the world's largest global temperature-controlled warehouse REIT, today announced that its Seattle – Garfield facility, located at the Port of Seattle, is now an approved Class 3 Public bonded storage facility. This is Lineage's first customs bonded facility in the state of Washington and one of the first refrigerated storage facilities with customs bonded space in the Seattle market. With this new certification, the site is now better equipped to help customers navigate the complexities of international logistics, enabling greater precision, flexibility and ease by providing safe temperature-controlled storage of imported goods under U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) supervision until they are cleared for domestic commerce or re-export. These services provide a crucial gateway for temperature-sensitive imports arriving via the Port of Seattle. Located at 2001 W Garfield Street on Pier 90, Lineage's Seattle – Garfield facility offers cold storage, drayage, temperature-controlled rail and on-demand trucking. The new customs bonded warehousing service complements the site's existing USDA and FDA inspections, drayage and intermodal services, strengthening Lineage's ability to help make the import process easier and more streamlined for customers. 'Our certified customs bonded warehouse space in Seattle marks an exciting milestone for Lineage, reflecting our commitment to anticipate and meet customer needs in a dynamic global trade environment,' said Brian Beattie, President, North America West, at Lineage. 'By expanding our import service capabilities in a critical hub for global trade, we aim to offer our customers greater flexibility to respond to shifting market conditions while maintaining compliance and protecting product integrity.' The Seattle – Garfield facility joins Lineage's growing network of bonded warehouses and I-Houses in key markets across the U.S. strategically positioned for global connectivity. The company now operates 10 bonded warehouse locations and 42 USDA-approved I-House facilities nationwide, streamlining both regulatory compliance and import logistics for food shippers. To learn more about Lineage's global facility network and integrated transportation solutions, visit About Lineage Lineage, Inc. (NASDAQ: LINE) is the world's largest global temperature-controlled warehouse REIT with a network of over 480 strategically located facilities totaling over 84 million square feet and approximately 3.0 billion cubic feet of capacity across countries in North America, Europe, and Asia-Pacific. Coupling end-to-end supply chain solutions and technology, Lineage partners with some of the world's largest food and beverage producers, retailers, and distributors to help increase distribution efficiency, advance sustainability, minimize supply chain waste, and, most importantly, feed the world. Learn more at and join us on LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, and X. Forward Looking Statements Certain statements contained in this press release may be considered forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. Lineage intends for all such forward-looking statements to be covered by the applicable safe harbor provisions for forward-looking statements contained in those acts. Such forward-looking statements can generally be identified by Lineage's use of forward-looking terminology such as 'may,' 'will,' 'expect,' 'intend,' 'anticipate,' 'estimate,' 'believe,' 'continue,' 'seek,' 'objective,' 'goal,' 'strategy,' 'plan,' 'focus,' 'priority,' 'should,' 'could,' 'potential,' 'possible,' 'look forward,' 'optimistic,' or other similar words. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date of this press release. Such statements are subject to certain risks and uncertainties, including known and unknown risks, which could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected or anticipated. Therefore, such statements are not intended to be a guarantee of Lineage's performance in future periods. Except as required by law, Lineage does not undertake any obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements contained in this release.