Just this morning I went out to visit a farm in southern Iowa where they have free-range chickens. We went out to the pasture and watched the farmer drag two wire coops about 10 feet, so that the chickens (broilers) could enjoy a new patch of grass. The chickens had room inside those coops to stretch their wings and turn around and whatnot. The laying hens had much more freedom: they could stay in the henhouse or run around the property as they liked, though they didn't go too far from the food and water, I suspect. It's hot out here.
Anyway, after the visit, the spouse and I were discussing chicken prices. These broilers sell for $3.00/lb., and that's when you buy them right there on the property, with no mark-up from a retailer. The local supermarket has chicken on sale this week for $.79/lb.
I have to wonder what new laws in California will do to chicken prices, since I assume that more room per chicken equals fewer chickens per farm, under current conditions, which should push prices up. That might make small, free-range operations more competitive. And that, in turn, could mean that more of them could flourish, meaning that there might be more chicken-processing plants that would accept small processing orders, which would help the small farms, too (the Iowa farmer we met today said he has to drive about 2 hours to get to a locker that will take his chickens, and we're about 45 minutes from Des Moines). I hope that that's the case, but I'm sure there are other factors I'm not considering.