APHIS Changes Bode Well
Carlotta
Cooper
On
Friday, February 3, 2017, USDA-APHIS released a flurry of
announcements about their web site that set animal rights activists
twittering. Here’s part of one announcement:
“APHIS,
during the past year, has conducted a comprehensive review of the
information it posts on its website for the general public to view.
As a result of the comprehensive review, APHIS has implemented
actions to remove certain personal information from documents it
posts on APHIS’ website involving the Horse Protection Act and the
Animal Welfare Act. Going forward, APHIS will remove from its website
inspection reports, regulatory correspondence, research facility
annual reports, and enforcement records that have not received final
adjudication. APHIS will also review and redact, as necessary, the
lists of licensees and registrants under the Animal Welfare Act, as
well as lists of designated qualified persons (DQPs) licensed by
USDA-certified horse industry organizations.
“We
can still publicly post a list of our licensees/registrants that we
regulate under the Animal Welfare Act…
“Those
seeking information from APHIS regarding inspection reports, research
facility annual reports, regulatory correspondence, lists of
regulated entities, and enforcement related matters may submit
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests for that information….”
Other
announcements explained that the Animal Care Search Tool on the site
has been deactivated – the tool so beloved by animal rights groups
and individual activists (i.e., trolls) to look up breeders and
target them for harassment. Yet another announcement explained that
APHIS was taking these actions in response to litigation concerning
information and the privacy of those regulated. The agency said it is
trying to balance the need for transparency with rules protecting
individual privacy.
What
does all of this mean for dog breeders regulated by USDA-APHIS?
Despite suggestions from animal rightists claiming that the removal
of this information is a nefarious plot against animals by the Trump
administration, all indications suggest that the USDA is reacting to
several lawsuits filed against them and other agencies by stakeholder
groups that had been harmed by the release of personal information to
activists. Not only did APHIS state this in several announcements,
but federal agencies have not fared well recently in court when it
comes to how they have handled the personal information of licensees.
On
September 9, 2016, in the case of American
Farm Bureau Federation et al. v. Environmental Protection Agency et
al.,
Case No. 13-cv-1751, in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth
Circuit, the federal appellate court revived a bid by two farm groups
to stop the United States Environmental Protection Agency from
releasing addresses and other information about large scale animal
farms under the Freedom of Information Act. The ruling found that,
excluding what is required in the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA),
providing this kind of personal information to environmental groups
was a serious privacy violation. The lawsuit dates back to 2013 when
the EPA released the names, addresses, and GPS locations (as well as
other personal information in some cases) of roughly 100,000
agricultural operations to environmental groups. This ruling over the
EPA should have ramifications for many federal agencies. In addition,
Tennessee Walking Horse groups have sued USDA – and won – and
they continue to raise funds for an industry-wide effort to sue the
agency again over privacy concerns and disagreements with the agency.
Finally, PETA did not come out well in a lawsuit against the
department of Health and Human Services when they tried to argue that
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had withheld
information sought by the group in FOIA requests concerning importers
of nonhuman primates – People
for the Ethical Treatment of Animals v. United States Department of
Health and Human Services,
No. 15-cv-309, slip op. (D.D.C. January 5, 2017).
When
USDA states that it has been monitoring legal developments and taking
advice from counsel, I think we should believe them. People regulated
by government agencies have the same civil rights as anyone else. We
should all have a reasonable expectation that government agencies
will handle our personal information with some discretion instead of
making it openly available online.
Whatever
may have motivated USDA-APHIS, the removal of personal information
for easy public viewing should be welcomed by most dog breeders. At
least one large group of USDA-licensed breeders viewed the news
favorably. Many of them have been harassed by animal rights activists
online or in person – people who had dredged up their personal
information and inspection reports on the USDA-APHIS web site,
sometimes making false reports about the breeders. Doing away with
the harassment breeders have experienced from animal rights groups
and from individuals simply trolling the APHIS site for personal
information about breeders seems to far outweigh any potential
problems according to people who have been the victims of animal
rights groups.
Dog
breeders are not the only ones who have suffered from the release of
too much personal information by federal agencies. At least one
cattle operation – Harris Farms in California, also the birthplace
of racehorse California Chrome – was the target of arson totaling
over $2 million in damages by the animal rights terrorist
organization ALF in 2012 due to information released by the EPA.
Scientists and researchers who work with animals have also been
victimized by animal rights activists. Their laboratories are
inspected by USDA-APHIS under the Animal Welfare Act. In fact, the
Animal Welfare Act was initially created by Congress in the 1960s
specifically to oversee laboratory animals. Activists have
increasingly targeted individual researchers according to a 2014
report by the Federation of American Societies for Experimental
Biology (FASEB), the largest coalition of biomedical research
associations in the United States. In 2004 ALF (the Animal Liberation
Front) broke into psychology labs at the University of Iowa. They
removed hundreds of animals, smashed equipment, and spray-painted
walls, resulting in more than $400,000 in damages. By 2009, after
APHIS began posting more detailed information on their web site,
activists were making the attacks more personal. They set fire to the
car of a UCLA neuro-scientist who worked with rats and monkeys in the
driveway of his residence. Other researchers have reported that
activists have shown up at their homes in the middle of the night
where they have made threats against their families.
Some
animal welfare advocates have expressed concerns about the changes
because they may lead to problems for breeders that sell puppies to
pet stores and are required to provide inspection reports, or the pet
store has to have access to the breeder’s most recent inspection
report. According to the Washington
Post,
only seven states currently have laws that require pet stores to show
USDA inspection reports from breeders, though there may be some
states considering similar laws. Laws in those seven states may need
to be changed in response to USDA-APHIS’s new policy. If individual
puppy buyers insist on an inspection report from a USDA-licensed
breeder, they can either make a Freedom of Information Act request
which is, admittedly, slow. Or they can directly ask a breeder for a
copy of a recent final inspection report.
APHIS
notes that final inspection reports will still be posted on their
site, minus the kind of personal data to which those regulated by
USDA and other agencies have objected. What won’t be as easy to
obtain are incomplete or initial reports from inspectors. For
example, if an inspector comes to your kennel and notes that you have
some rust on a crate and a cobweb in the corner, telling you to fix
the problems before they return, that report will not be posted. You
will, presumably, fix the rust on the crate and get rid of the
cobweb. When the inspector returns and makes a final report, that
report will be posted on the APHIS site, noting that the problems
have been addressed. This can make a big difference when it comes to
being called out by animal rights groups. Such groups will no longer
be able to cherry pick an incomplete report claiming that a breeder
has violations that are not being addressed. (Naturally, if you do
NOT address violations noted, that will also be noted and you will
still be subject to USDA fines and penalties.)
Some
information regarding inspection reports, research facility annual
reports, regulatory correspondence, and enforcement records will be
made available through Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests.
Some enforcement records (such as initial decision and orders,
default decisions, and consent decisions) will be available on the
USDA’s Office of Administrative Law Judge’s website. APHIS has
noted that they are still making decisions and adjustments about what
they will be posting.
As
you might expect, animal rights groups such as the Humane Society of
the United States are livid about the changes announced by
USDA-APHIS. HSUS is honking mad and already vowing to file a notice
of “violation” over what they contend to be their agreement with
the USDA about public access to information. We’ll see how
USDA-APHIS responds to the threats from HSUS. While this change at
APHIS has been in the works for several months – pre-dating the
Trump administration – it’s worth noting that President Trump and
various cabinet members have not been friendly to HSUS and animal
rights groups in the past. The agricultural advisory group put
together by Mr. Trump before his election was noticeably anti-animal
rights in philosophy. HSUS was virulently opposed to Mr. Trump’s
election as well. HSUS may continue to have some support at
USDA-APHIS, but they probably won’t have much support in the new
administration.