Our View: Please support bill on animal breeding

The Minnesota Legislature is now considering an important bill that would crack down on cruel and unscrupulous cat and dog breeders.

Such a bill is long overdue.

We have all heard horror stories throughout Minnesota of “puppy mills” where dogs are hideously mistreated – crammed in cages, ill-fed if at all, forced to be outside in all weather, beaten, abused and generally treated like garbage. There are even puppy mills whose owners actually think, in their twisted minds, they are treating their animals just fine, but they are not. Just because one does not beat an animal does not mean that animal is “just fine.” Animals need air, room to move, socialization and kind attention, if not love. Some of these unscrupulous breeders could care less about animals; their only passion is for profits generated by the abject exploitation of living creatures.

Fortunately, news about these notorious puppy (and cat) breeding mills have roused the anger of the public and of legislators. The proposed bill, dubbed “Dog and Cat Breeders – Standards of Care” was authored mainly by Sen. Barb Goodwin (D-Columbia Heights). It has bipartisan support, but public pressure is always important to ensure a bill’s passage, and this bill is no exception.

The bill, in great detail, covers licensing and regulation for commercial dog and cat breeders by the Board of Animal Health. It specifies standards of care; provides for investigation and seizures under certain conditions; allows for civil enforcement and penalties; and requires a whole range of compliances.

One of the bill’s provisions is breeders will not be allowed to keep their animals in outdoor confinement.

Another good provision is it regulates the sale of cats and dogs, including a ban on selling animals under the age of eight weeks.

The bill is now being considered by the Agriculture and Rural Economies Committee in the Minnesota Senate.

If enacted, it will become law this coming summer. Please write, call or email your representatives and senators to let them know you strongly support the bill. The bills Senate File number is 0462. To learn more about the bill and to email your legislators, go to: www.senate.leg.state.mn.us

These suffering animals cannot speak up for themselves; it’s our human responsibility to do it for them.

 

2 comments (Add your own)

1. Evren wrote:
But then responsible edebrers never have any of their dogs wind up in shelters because they screen homes and take back thir own pups at any time for any reason. Well, not always. I too consider myself a responsible breeder, but I have also worked the shelter side of it. The biggest problem shelters face is IRRESPONIBLE breeding. Out of a couple thousand animals I have seen go through rescue and shelters, only ONE was a dog from a responsible breeder problem is, that breeder was dead. She couldn't take back her dog, and a neutered Champion titled pomeranian landed in our shelter. Yes, the responsible breeder made sure he was neutred before she placed him. ONE responsibly bred dog out of thousands.Where did the VAST majority of our shelter dogs come from? They were mutts that were Free to Good Home after some jerk let his mutt b- itch get pregnant. hey went to whomever would take them, and were tossed out like trash when they weren't cute little puppies anymore, because, hey! You can always get some cute little mutt puppy for free, so why bother training, vaccinating and caring or some worthless 13 month old dog? Did you know the vast majority of the dogs I euthanized were between 12 and 18 months old?And of the purebreds that came in, which did indeed make up 25% of the incoming animals, every single one was a case of Muffy had papers, and Biff has papers, so let's breed em and make money , not one was of genetically tested parents. Not one breeder' of these offered to come get their pup back in cases where we could find the breeder. Not one of these dogs was reasonably close enough to the breed standard to even remotely be well bred.So yes, some edebrers' ARE to blame for the overpopulation problem, but so are the BUYERS who buy these poorly bred dogs because they are cheap and easily found in newspapers. There is no ONE cause of overpopulation wait, yes there IS! IRRESPONSIBILITY!!!!

Sun, April 1, 2012 @ 5:47 AM

2. ykahqmtxrqq wrote:
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Sun, April 1, 2012 @ 2:43 PM

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