This article originally appeared in Dog News and is published here by permission of the author.
Bells Are Ringing! (At Least For Now)
Carlotta Cooper
Dog breeders in
Tennessee are celebrating, at least for the next few months.
Tennessee recently became the first and, so far, the only state to
get rid of a commercial breeder law. It took five years but the law
will be gone after June 2014.
It should be said at
the start that the commercial breeder law in Tennessee was never as
harsh as the laws passed in some states. The law was passed in 2009
during the first wave of commercial breeder laws. Perhaps HSUS had
not fine-tuned their approach yet. We also fought the law hard and
had a lot of help from hunters as the 2009 legislative session went
on. Most legislators would not oppose the law but they were troubled
by it enough that they weakened it considerably. In the end, the
Tennessee commercial breeder law had a sunset provision. It would end
in June 2014 unless the legislature voted to make it permanent.
As you might expect,
most of the owner and breeder groups in the state have been watching
and waiting anxiously over the last five years to see how things
would go. Early on it became apparent that hardly any dog (or cat)
breeders were signing up for state licenses. Informal statements made
by the new department set up to license and inspect “commercial”
breeders suggested that there was no one to license and inspect as
described in the commercial breeder law.
This information was
confirmed in a state audit from 2012 which revealed that only 20
breeders had signed up for the program. The commercial breeder law
had used figures from the Humane Society of the United States which
promised 500 breeders in the state would sign up and that the program
would be self-sustaining. Not just self-sustaining, but that the
program would be a money-maker for the state in terms of sales tax
and revenue from breeder license fees. By the end of 2013, the state
reported that the program was nearly a million dollars in debt and it
would continue to lose approximately $300,000 per year.
Faced with these
obvious signs that the commercial breeder law was a complete failure,
the Tennessee legislature killed the bill that would have extended
the law and made it permanent. Even last ditch efforts by HSUS to
extend the law for just one year failed. Sometimes even legislators
can tell something is manure when they step in it.
There were other signs
that things would not go well for HSUS and animal rights groups
during the 2014 session, but they started last year and earlier. HSUS
spent at least $100,000 lobbying against a bill in Tennessee in 2013
that would have required someone to share undercover videos of animal
abuse with law enforcement. They spent another $100,000 on a media
campaign against the same bill – a media campaign that got very
ugly and earned them no friends with the public or in the
legislature. Many legislators began to see a rotten, bullying side of
HSUS that they usually try to conceal.
One result of HSUS's
strong arm tactics last year was that every single animal rights bill
in the Tennessee legislature was defeated this year. Not just the
commercial breeder extension bill, but an animal abuse registry bill,
a tethering bill, and others never made it out of committee. Only one
bill made it out of a subcommittee.
It would be nice to
think that Tennessee dog owners and breeders could count on these
results every year but, unfortunately, we can't. Every year is
different and this is an election year. Legislators who understand
our issues need support. Some may be defeated. Some may retire. New
lawmakers are always being elected and they may not know anything
about dog breeders or pet issues. No matter what state you live in,
it's important for you to stay in touch with your state
representative and senator. Let them know how you feel about animal
issues. Lawmakers frequently say that they vote for or against
something because they only hear from one side. Let your legislators
hear from you so they know that dog owners and breeders care about
these issues. The same goes for your U.S. representative and senator.
Tennessee owners and
breeders owe special thanks to the Tennessee Federation of Dog Clubs,
the Sportsmen's and Animal Owners' Voting Alliance (SAOVA), and to
the AKC for their legislative help this year. Thank you to everyone
who made a phone call or sent an e-mail. Now we'll start working on
next year's agenda because we know that HSUS will be back with
another version of a commercial breeder bill.
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