The legislation will prohibit the use of elephants, primates, bears, big cats, and giraffes in circuses across the commonwealth starting on January 1st, 2025. The bipartisan bill had widespread public support and was passed unanimously by the Massachusetts House of Representatives and by a voice vote in the Massachusetts Senate... after 20 years of activism.
We have great news to share with you to close out World Elephant
Week on a positive note. In a major win for elephants and other
exotic animals, Massachusetts has just become the 11th state in the
nation to ban exotic animal acts in traveling circuses!
Massachusetts Governor Maura Healey signed House Bill 4915 into law
earlier this month. The legislation will prohibit the use of
elephants, primates, bears, big cats, and giraffes in circuses
across the commonwealth starting on January 1st, 2025. The
bipartisan bill had widespread public support and was passed
unanimously by the Massachusetts House of Representatives and by a
voice vote in the Massachusetts Senate.
Although the bill passed without controversy this summer, this
victory was over 20 years in the making, as animal activists have
been working to pass similar legislation in the state since 2001.
The strong bipartisan support for this bill and its historic passage
shows just how far public opinion has shifted on the issue of using
animals in circus acts in recent years.
Public awareness campaigns, shared by animal advocacy organizations
like Species Unite, have been crucial in shedding light on the
abusive tactics used to subdue and exploit animals in circuses.
Elephants and other circus animals are forced to perform tricks for
the public using torturous, fear- and pain-based training tactics
that include being whipped, stabbed with bull hooks, and shocked
with electric prods. These wild animals are also subjected to long
periods of highly stressful confinement as they are moved from place
to place to perform for different noisy crowds across the country.
As the true horrors of animal circus acts have finally come to
light, public support has plummeted, and many famous circuses have
phased out exotic animal acts while more and more states work toward
bans. The Massachusetts ban comes just three months after Maryland’s
Governor Wes Moore signed a similar bill into law, making Maryland
the 10th state to outlaw exotic animal circus acts.
There has never been a better time to push for a permanent, federal
ban on this form of animal cruelty.