My friend Linda Kaim pointed me at an AKC complaint that
California's AB 485 would cost people the "freedom to choose your own dog". As usual, it pays to be skeptical of anything from the AKC, and a quick read of the
text of the bill shows that the circumstances behind it are anything but benign:
122354.5.
(a) A
pet store operator shall not sell a live dog, cat, or rabbit in a pet
store unless the dog, cat, or rabbit was obtained from a public animal
control agency or shelter, society for the prevention of cruelty to
animals shelter, humane society shelter, or rescue group that is in a
cooperative agreement with at least one private or public shelter
pursuant to Section 31108, 31752, or 31753 of the Food and Agricultural
Code.
(b) All sales of dogs and cats
authorized by this section shall be in compliance with paragraph (1) of
subdivision (a) of Section 30503 of, subdivision (b) of Section 30520
of, paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) of Section 31751.3 of, and
subdivision (b) of Section 31760 of, the Food and Agricultural
Code.
(c) Each pet store shall
maintain records sufficient to document the source of each dog, cat, or
rabbit the pet store sells or provides space for, for at least one year.
Additionally, each pet store shall post, in a conspicuous location on
the cage or enclosure of each animal, a sign listing the name of the
public animal control agency or shelter, society for the prevention of
cruelty to animals shelter, humane society shelter, or nonprofit from
which each dog, cat, or rabbit was obtained. Public animal control
agencies or shelters may periodically require pet stores engaged in
sales of dogs, cats, or rabbits to provide access to these records.
(d) A
pet store operator who is subject to this section is exempt from
the requirements set forth in Article 2 (commencing with Section
122125) of Chapter 5, except for the requirements set forth in Section
122135, paragraphs (3) and (4) of subdivision (a) of, and paragraphs (5)
and (6) of subdivision (b) of, Section 122140, and Sections 122145 and
122155.
(e) A pet store operator who
violates this section shall be subject to a civil penalty of five
hundred dollars ($500). Each animal offered for sale in violation of
this section shall constitute a separate violation.
(f) For
purposes of this section, a “rescue group” is an organization that is
tax exempt under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, and
that does not obtain animals from breeders or brokers for
compensation.
As we've
already seen, there's a lot of ways to hide revenue in 990s, including as executive salaries and other compensation. The way this bill is written would appear to permit puppy mills to rebrand themselves as "rescues" (or to create new intermediary "rescues") who would launder the dogs, shifting the actual profit center. Because of the perverse way
USDA APHIS rules regulate commercial dog breeders, ironically it would be
small-scale breeders (PDF) who would be most affected by the new language:
Q. Under the final rule,
what is the new
definition
of a retail
pet
store?
A.
In the final rule, “retail pet store” means a place of
business or residence at which the seller, buyer, and
the animal available
for
sale
are
physically
present
so
that
every
buyer
may
personally
observe the animal
prior
to purchasing
and/or
taking
custody
of it after
purchase. [Emboldening in the passage above is mine. - RM]
By
personally
observing the animal, the
buyer
is exercising
public
oversight
over
the animal
and in this
way
is helping to
ensure
its health and
humane
treatment.
Retailers
who sell their pet
animals
to customers
in face-
to-face
transactions
do not have
to obtain
an
AWA
license because their
animals
are
subject
to such
public
oversight.
Under the
AWA
regulations,
a “retail
pet
store”
is
also a place
where
only
the
following
animals
are
sold or offered
for
sale as pets:
dogs,
cats,
rabbits,
guinea
pigs,
hamsters,
gerbils,
rats,
mice,
gophers,
chinchillas,
domestic
ferrets,
domestic
farm
animals,
birds,
and
coldblooded
species.
Essentially, this eliminates small-scale breeders from selling in California, because their puppies are not from a "rescue", and because they meet the APHIS definition of "retail pet store". That this is approximately insane is par for the course; it is, after all, California.
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