Meisha Rosenberg,
AlterNet
February 2018
Animal advocates who have been tracking puppy mills for years are used to witnessing the suffering that happens when the sins of commercial breeders are protected by industry lobbyists.
In September 2016, the HSUS Animal Rescue Team carried out a raid on a
puppy mill with the Cabarrus County Sheriff’s Office in North Carolina.
(image: Meredith Lee/The HSUS)
In December 2017, a police K9 officer entered an eight-bedroom mansion
in Wolfeboro, New Hampshire, home to dog breeding facility De La Sang Monde
(“of world blood”) and found 84 Great Danes wandering a horrific scene:
feces and maggots made the floor as slippery as an "ice-skating rink,"
according to an ex-worker. The juxtaposition of the lavish home with the
malnourished dogs—one with puncture wounds stapled shut by breeder Christina
Fay, who is appealing 10 counts of cruelty—is what makes this case so
shocking.
Animal advocates who have been tracking puppy mills for years are used to
witnessing the suffering that happens when the sins of commercial breeders
are protected by industry lobbyists.
This month, purebred dogs, many co-owned by the wealthy like investments,
will be put on display at the 142nd Annual Westminster Dog Show, held in New
York City. A look underneath the pomp and Pomeranians reveals the ugly
politics of the American Kennel Club (AKC) and the Pet Industry Joint
Advisory Council (PIJAC), which lobby against policies that would help
prevent abuses of breeders like Fay and worse.
The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) estimates there are 10,000
puppy mills, defined as large-scale breeding operations placing profit over
welfare. Its Horrible Hundred lists mills that have for years kept dogs in
muddy pens; left them with rotting teeth and matted fur; stacked dogs in
cages; starved nursing mother dogs; and made euthanasia "plans" for shooting
dogs with a gun. Operations frequently churn out AKC-registered dogs: Mike
Chilinski had 161 malamutes found in 2011 living off their own feces and
severely malnourished. AKC “Breeders of Merit” have been found guilty of
cruelty even after AKC inspector visits.
With only 120 inspectors countrywide for all manner of animals, the
United States Department of Agriculture, mandated to enforce the Animal
Welfare Act, rarely cracks down on violators. That's where state laws and
local ordinances come in, and animal advocates have won significant
victories here, with California recently joining the more than 200
localities banning pet stores from selling dogs from breeders.
Lindsay Hamrick, New Hampshire state director for the HSUS, thinks
legislation requiring licensing can prevent abuses to animals like Fay’s
Great Danes, whose care has cost the nonprofit $800,000 as of December 2017.
The rescued dogs have "everything from significant opthamology issues to
orthopedic issues to cardiovascular issues," she said. And in New Hampshire,
of the approximately 260 pet vendors—a definition encompassing stores,
rescues, and breeders— “only four of them are commercial kennels, and we
know there are far more than four entities producing puppies on a scale we
think needs regulating,” says Hamrick.
New Hampshire's proposed bill, SB 569, would require a license for five
or more breeding female dogs and require anyone charged of cruelty to post a
bond for their animals' care. The AKC has issued a legislative alert against
it and an affiliated group, the Dog Owners of the Granite State (DOGS), has
roadblocked attempts to tighten regulation for at least a decade, according
to Hamrick. The AKC typically argues that requiring government inspection
for a certain number of breeding females threatens responsible hobby
breeders. So Hamrick said she asked DOGS if any members have more than five
breeding females, and "they have not provided that statistic."
Similarly, in response to pet store bans, the AKC states, "When regulated
sources of healthy, purpose-bred puppies are banned, it creates a vacuum
that is filled with dogs from unregulated sources that may lack even basic
health and temperament checks." Their strategy casts aspersions on rescued
animals while misleadingly using "purpose bred," which refers to a dog bred
to perform a job—not a dog bred for conformation (i.e., the externally
visible features of a dog's physical structure and appearance, as defined by
the dog's breed standard).
In May 2016, Alvin Nolt of Thorpe, Wisconsin, was found with puppies on
unsafe wire flooring, a repeat violation at his facility. Wire flooring is
especially dangerous for puppies because their legs can become entrapped in
the gaps, leaving them unable to reach food, water or shelter. (image:
Wisconsin Department of Agriculture)
The AKC's fear-mongering about rescued animals ignores the fact that
while shelters and rescues—just like breeders—aren't subject to any unified
monitoring, many shelters—unlike breeders—must release data to the public
and follow laws on everything from drug permitting to quarantine.
Furthermore, as more states, like New York, recognize the need to regulate
nonprofit rescues, larger nonprofits like the ASPCA and HSUS are welcoming
the changes.
New Hampshire law treats shelters, breeders, stores and brokers the same:
"What I find unfortunate is that while the shelters have never opposed ways
for them to be regulated by the department of agriculture, the DOGS
routinely oppose the regulation of commercial breeders," says Hamrick.
Overall the trend is toward regulation and transparency. David Favre,
editor-in-chief of the Animal Legal and Historical Center website and
professor at Michigan State University, said that while laws vary widely,
“the direction of the law is heading towards more and tighter regulations on
commercial breeding operations.” According to a study published by the
Center for Animal Welfare Science at Purdue University, in a nationwide
survey of 1,523 responses, "there was strong consensus that breeders should
be regulated," with a clear majority preferring "mandatory compliance with
best practices, breeder education, and increased transparency of
dog-breeding practices."
There are currently two bipartisan bills in Congress aimed at introducing
some of these standards. Change happens slowly, as when Virginia passed a
law in 2009 defining a commercial breeder as someone with 30 or more female
breeding dogs. Then, in 2014, the HSUS found more than six pet stores in the
state still sourcing animals from out-of-state puppy mills with violations.
Stop Puppy Mills Ohio has just begun a reform effort; Ohio is second only to
Missouri for sheer number of commercial breeders.
According to John Goodwin, senior director of HSUS’s Stop Puppy Mills
campaign, "The AKC has been a significant problem in efforts to stop puppy
mill cruelty. They have pushed back against just about every bill that I've
seen that would bring about even modest reform in commercial dog breeding
kennels." With a Political Action Committee newsletter banner that reads
“Your Dog. Your Rights. Protect Them Both,” the AKC has lobbied against
everything from attempts to prohibit the stacking of cages and replace
wire-flooring to spay/neuter mandates to bills outlawing tethering.
They join PIJAC and the National Animal Interest Alliance (NAIA) in using
inflamed rhetoric to lump animal welfare groups together as "extremists."
Would responsible breeders really be affected by any of the new laws
proposed, such as New Hampshire’s or Ohio’s? It seems unlikely. As more laws
have passed, the AKC profited in 2016, from an 8 percent increase in
registrations; revenues, at $72.8 million, grew by 7 percent.
The AKC’s negative influence on animal welfare extends to breeds warped by
inbreeding. After the 2008 BBC One documentary Pedigree Exposed showed
viewers the suffering of Boxers with epilepsy and Cavalier King Charles
Spaniels with syringomyelia, an extremely painful condition thought to be
inherited, the BBC dropped Crufts (their Westminster), and the United
Kingdom’s Kennel Club has altered some breeding standards. Since the
American Kennel Club has only become more entrenched in its
industry-friendly anti-regulation stance, it’s up to American consumers to
work for reform.
How can potential dog guardians help reduce the suffering created by
breeders? The best option is by adopting dogs from a shelter or rescue,
especially dogs who may otherwise be euthanized. "Shelters have purebreds in
addition to loveable mutts, and rescue groups exist for just about any breed
you can think of," HSUS points out.
If you really want to buy a puppy from a breeder, please do so from a
responsible breeder who will let you meet the puppy's parents in person.
Don't just rely on paperwork that can't be verified.
"Purebred 'papers' don’t tell you anything about where a puppy was raised or
how her parents were treated," notes HSUS. "Most pet store puppies come from
puppy mills, and puppy millers pose as small, local breeders online. Even if
they advertise dogs with AKC papers, they may still be puppy mills—inhumane,
commercial dog-breeding facilities where dogs are typically kept in small
wire cages for their entire lives, are given very little food and water and
often do not receive veterinary care. They are usually bred continuously and
are discarded or killed when they can no longer breed anymore."
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