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As egg prices soar, new bills would allow Texans to have chickens in backyard

Chickens rest at Gardopia Gardens, an urban farm on the East Side, on Friday, Feb. 24, 2023.
Billy Calzada / Express News photographer

State Sen. Bob Hall, R-Edgewood, filed SB 326 to amend Chapter 217 of Local Government Code to allow six chickens in a single-family residential lot.

By Bethany Blankley
The Center Square
Feb 23, 2023 Excerpt:

Excerpt:

As egg prices continue to soar, new bills filed in the state legislature would allow Texans to have chickens in their backyards.

Texans are currently paying between roughly $4 and nearly $9 for a dozen eggs at HEB, for example, equal to or more than the cost of cooked rotisserie chickens.

“Inflationary pressure and the worst avian flu outbreak in U.S. history have combined to send egg prices upward over much of the last year,” David Anderson, Ph.D., AgriLife Extension economist, Bryan-College Station, said in an AgriLife Today report. AgriLife points to a U.S. Department of Agriculture retail egg report showing that a dozen eggs cost $1.79 in December 2021 and $4.25 on average in December 2022 nationwide.

“One reporter in Houston interviewed a backyard producer who told them this is the first time ever that it’s been cheaper to produce eggs than buy them at the store,” Anderson said. “The situation with egg prices is something people are following now, but I think it is also something that happened over the course of time with several factors aligning.”

In response to continued demand, constrained supply and rising prices, Republican and Democratic lawmakers proposed bills to allow more Texans to have egg-laying hens in their backyards.

State Sen. Bob Hall, R-Edgewood, filed SB 326 to amend Chapter 217 of Local Government Code to allow six chickens in a single-family residential lot. The bill allows municipalities to impose some “reasonable regulations.” It also prohibits poultry breeding, raising or keeping roosters, and imposes a minimum distance between a chicken coop and another lot.

Read the complete article here.