Want to defeat an animal protection law? Tea Party might help
Posted: August 20, 2012 Filed under: Animal Advocacy, Companion Animals, Farmed Animals, Puppy mills | Tags: commercial dog breeding, Missouri Farm Bureau, Missouri Prop B, puppy mills, The Humane Society of the United States 2 Comments »
United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) found that in some of Missouri’s puppy mills–the ‘Dirty Dozen– violations included ‘sick or dying puppies who had not been treated by a veterinarian; dogs found shivering in temperatures as low as 9 degrees; and dogs so emaciated that their bones were visible through their skin.’ – The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) / Photo: HSUS
By Katerina Lorenzatos Makris
If you’re trying to kill or modify a proposed animal welfare law—for example one that regulates high-volume commercial breeders or “puppy mills”—you might want to enlist the assistance of the Tea Party, according to the Missouri Farm Bureau (MFB).
“The Missouri Tea Party picked up that Prop B [the Puppy Mill Cruelty Prevention Act] was important,” said MFB’s director of marketing and commodities Kelly Smith, “and that they should be opposing it. They were a big help in doing that.”
Smith laid out a detailed strategy including other ways to fight animal welfare groups in his presentation “Protecting & Growing Agriculture Amidst the Activist Conflict – A Missouri Experience,” made to the Animal Agriculture Alliance “United We Eat” Summit in 2011. Read the rest of this entry »
Lobbyists to ‘pay the price’ for helping animal welfare groups in Missouri
Posted: August 19, 2012 Filed under: Animal Advocacy, Companion Animals, Farmed Animals, Puppy mills | Tags: commercial dog breeding, HSUS, Missouri Farm Bureau, Missouri Prop B, puppy mills 2 Comments »
Missouri demonstrators on the issue of Prop B, the “Puppy Mill Cruelty Prevention Act,” passed by voters but then replaced by Gov. Jay Nixon with a less stringent law / Photo: Missouri Farm Bureau and TruffleMedia
By Katerina Lorenzatos Makris
In this year’s election season, lobbyist firms who helped in the push for a law to regulate dog breeding in Missouri—condemned by animal protection groups as the “puppy mill capital of America”—might get punished.
“Those guys will be paying the price for doing that,” said Kelly Smith of the Missouri Farm Bureau (MFB). “There are several of those guys [lobbyists] that run rural state rep and state senate campaigns that will not be doing that in the future.” Read the rest of this entry »
‘Mutts’ comic strip characters helped pass a law to regulate dog breeders
Posted: August 18, 2012 Filed under: Animal Advocacy, Companion Animals, Farmed Animals, Puppy mills | Tags: ASPCA, Best Friends Animal Society, Humane Society of the United States, Missouri Farm Bureau, Missouri Prop B, Mutts comic strip, Patrick McDonnell, Puppy Mill Cruelty Prevention Act, puppy mills 2 Comments »
One of neglected dogs removed from a Missouri breeder by authorities and The Humane Society of the United States / Photo: HSUS video
By Katerina Lorenzatos Makris
Some of the most powerful opponents of commercial dog breeders—nemeses fierce enough to help pass a law that would have mandated welfare standards for dogs used in “puppy mills”—those enemies apparently were, well… imaginary, according to the Missouri Farm Bureau.
Creator Patrick McDonnell employed his imagination, in the form of characters Earl, Woofie and friends in his popular comic strip Mutts to speak up for Missouri’s Prop B, the “Puppy Mill Cruelty Prevention Act.” Read the rest of this entry »
‘These guys are good—we don’t like them, but they are good at what they do’: farm bureau about Humane Society
Posted: August 17, 2012 Filed under: Animal Advocacy, Companion Animals, Farmed Animals, Puppy mills, Veterinary | Tags: American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, commercial dog breeding, Missouri Farm Bureau, Missouri Prop B, puppy mills, The Humane Society of the United States 7 Comments »
Animal welfare groups say Missouri’s large-scale commercial breeders often severely neglect the tens of thousands of dogs used to create about a million puppies per year to be sold in pet stores / Photo: HSUS video (not necessarily in Missouri)
By Katerina Lorenzatos Makris
“The emotion of the puppy, man’s best friend. How do you not want to protect these little innocent puppies?” asked Missouri Farm Bureau’s Kelly Smith in a speech to commercial dog breeders and other farmed animal producers. “That was very hard. And that was something that the rest of animal agriculture had to learn and deal with. It was very, very hard to do.”
The protection to which Smith referred might have been provided by a Missouri law, Prop B, the “Puppy Mill Cruelty Prevention Act,” proposed in 2010 by The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) and other animal welfare groups, who said it would improve the lives of the tens of thousands of dogs—many severely neglected and ill—who are used to create about a million puppies annually in the state’s 1,000-plus commercial breeding establishments.
But the state’s dog breeders and farmers believed it was a law against which they needed to protect themselves, said Smith, the farm bureau’s marketing and commodities director. Read the rest of this entry »
Law would have required better care for dogs than for children, says farm bureau
Posted: August 16, 2012 Filed under: Animal Advocacy, Companion Animals, Farmed Animals, Puppy mills, Veterinary | Tags: commercial breeding establishments, dog breeders, dog breeding, HSUS, large-scale commercial breeders, Missouri Farm Bureau, Missouri Prop B, puppy mills, The Humane Society of the United States 5 Comments »
Animal protection groups say large-scale commercial breeders neglect and abuse dogs / Photo: The Humane Society of the United States video (photo not necessarily from Missouri)
By Katerina Lorenzatos Makris
While in the past few years the Missouri Department of Agriculture has seized 5,500 dogs from neglectful commercial breeders, a representative of the state’s farm bureau said that not only is more regulation unnecessary, but that a 2010 law proposed to improve conditions for the animals would have set an anti-farming precedent and in some ways would have required that breeders take better care of dogs than of children. Read the rest of this entry »
Missouri breeds 30% of puppies sold in U.S. pet stores, says farm bureau
Posted: August 12, 2012 Filed under: Animal Advocacy, Companion Animals, Farmed Animals, Puppy mills | Tags: HSUS, Missouri Farm Bureau, Missouri Prop B, Pupppy Mill Cruelty Prevention Act, puppy mills 6 Comments »
Animal welfare groups allege that dogs are neglected and abused by Missouri’s large-scale commercial dog breeders / Photo: Yes on Prop B
By Katerina Lorenzatos Makris
“Puppy mill capital of America,” is what The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) calls Missouri.
It was on that battleground last year that mega-group HSUS along with other animal welfare organizations lost their war to establish a law that they say would have improved the lives of the tens of thousands of dogs used to produce about a million puppies annually in the state’s 1,000-plus commercial breeding establishments.
Prop B, the Puppy Mill Cruelty Prevention Act, was actually passed by 51.6 percent of Missouri voters. However, to the satisfaction of dog breeding and farming lobbies and the outrage of animal activists, Gov. Jay Nixon overturned and replaced it with a different law that many call a severely gutted version of the one that voters had approved. Read the rest of this entry »
