STOP PUPPY MILLS

 

 

 

 

                     

mpmboycot

        Why do we call them Puppy Mills?  Mass production is the key!  When you walk into the "breeding facility" as the state Agriculture Department (who are supposed to be regulating them), the first thing you notice is the method of production.  Many of them are in stacked cages, similar to chicken coops.  They often are laying in the feces of the dogs above them along with their own.  There are many where the odor is so bad, most visitors would become nauseous.   Then you will begin to count the mothers.  After you hit 100-150 & begin to lose track of who is who, then you realize how futile it is to count at all. 

      You will quickly notice that the parents of these sweet, little,  adorable puppies have little or no personality, unlike your pet...the pet that is loved & pampered.  Instead they are there for one purpose and one only & that is to make a living for the breeder.  After breeding every season (twice a year), they finally simply give up and become the breeding machines they were wanted to be.

    The experience is grueling!  The mere thought that humans can impose this type of miserable life on a domesticated living being is frightening to say the least.  After having your heart broken, by the many that you want so desperately to help...but can't, you regretfully just walk away, knowing that they will all die there in the misery they have liven in for the sake of the heartless breeder.  Now, I ask you?  Could you find a better term for that "facility" than PUPPY MILL?  Maybe "Dog Auschwitz?"

      WARNING!  THESE PHOTOS ARE GRAPHIC but for those that really want to KNOW what the parents often look like, these are only a few.  For a really good look go to stoppuppymills.com, where a dear, sweet & courageous person has experienced visiting many of these mills.  Thanks to Kim & others like her, many of the victims were rescued, often at the last of their lives, but to die with the dignity that they all deserve.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2HM8UmHM8Uo  This link is hard to watch but every person considering a pet should be required to watch it!

   https://community.hsus.org/ct/Q1N0_yK1SmTC/  This is a clip from Oprah's Show on Puppy Mills. 

                           

                  MISERY IN MISSOURI

         Ever been ashamed of telling someone where you live?  I don't mean...that you live in the poor rent district, a bad end of town or that your home is a mess.  What I mean is when someone ask what state you live in.  I moved to Missouri in 1985, because after living in a large metropolitan area with high crime, I felt my family would be safer in a small, but developing city...that being Springfield, Mo.

         After being in this city for about a year, I quickly got involved in a local animal shelter, the Southwest Missouri Humane Society.  I was shocked at the number of animals there, most of which had to be euthanised...there were simply not enough adopters to save them all.  The city I discovered had NO spay/neuter policy & in fact, the Director of the Humane Society laughed when I asked WHY! 

        It wasn't long before I noticed that every time I turned a corner, or looked out my office window...a stray dog when running across the street or parking lot.  Having been taught at an early age that when a pet needs help...there was absolutely no excuse not to help it if it was non aggressive anyway.  So, I soon became labeled The Dog Lady in my nice, quiet middle class neighborhood. Before I knew what had happened, different neighbors would come to my door with the typical "problem" of finding a pitiful stray dog or cat or I remember once a man showing up for my help with a dog he had accidentally hit with his car as he was driving home from work. 

      Now, needless to say, my former city had strays & had an Animal Control Department that would pick them up if you called.  However, most of that happened in the "low rent district"...not the middle & upper middle class neighborhoods.  I suddenly felt bombarded with the bare facts that very few o the citizens of Springfield or the Ozarks in general had much respect for pets.  It was one thing to drive up in a gas station parking lot in the fall and look into the cold, dead eyes of a killed deer strapped across a truck bed, but the reality of a community that simply "didn't care" about their domesticated animals was just too much for me.

     I was taught as a God loving Christian that animals were a BLESSING to us.  I remember the wrath of my Mother when I was only five years old, after nipping our Aussies skin with scissors while I mutilated my own hair.  I was just a little snip & she didn't even bleed...but you would have thought I had murdered her.  How grateful I am to my family for teaching me to truly love & respect animals.  By the way, I grew up in the deep south where most Missourians think the dumb, cruel & backward live.

    I expected more of the people living in the so called BIBLE BELT.  I had never even heard the term PUPPY MILL until being called by Sister Loraine at the Missouri Hotel on Commercial Street. In about 1989, she told me a Pomeranian had been pitched out of a car window....my son & I drove to pick her up...she was walking in circles.  She smelled so bad we nearly lost our supper. Why, 8 rotten teeth & of course the feces tangled in the top of her coat, dropped  from the dogs living in the cage above her. 

The next day was my awakening. I took her to the vet and when I asked why she circled, I was told "Well Ann, she is a "MILL DOG" and that is how they exercise.  They only have standing room to live in.!"  As outraged as I was & hurt for Peaches as we named her, I left my career as an insurance agent, cashed in my retirement & began the quest to fight them with every barrel.  Any animal welfare organization that doesn't do the same is only aiding & abetting the atrocity.  Please take action & join the fight!

Take a look at what the Companion Animal Protection Society says about the puppy mill states and how our "leaders"(Fed. & State) regard pets. 

USDA's Failure to Enforce the Animal Welfare Act

The USDA has been extremely negligent over the years in its enforcement of the Animal Welfare Act (AWA) as it pertains to commercial dog breeders and brokers. CAPS has been investigating this problem since 1995. In some instances, we have investigated facilities the day after or before a USDA inspector found no violations. CAPS investigators found numerous non-compliant items. Falsifying an inspection report is a federal felony.

Under the U.S. Criminal Code, it is a federal felony for a government employee to falsify a federal document, such as a USDA inspection report. It is also illegal for government officials to knowingly use fraudulent federal documents, as top-level USDA officials have allegedly been doing, to prepare required annual reports to Congress. Falsification of records, conspiracy to falsify records, and conspiracy to defraud the U.S. government are federal felony crimes punishable by up to five years imprisonment and/or a fine.

USDA officials like to emphasize the word "minimum" with respect to animal care standards. Sadly, USDA is not even enforcing the minimum standards. Because USDA continues to make excuses for its failure to enforce the AWA, congressional oversight hearings are an absolute necessity.

CAPS and its pro bono lobbyists have been meeting with members of congress to present the findings from our investigations of numerous USDA licensed facilities. CAPS is requesting oversight hearings on the USDA's failure to enforce the AWA, advocating changes to the AWA and recommending new policies regarding the actions of USDA inspectors.

To keep building our case against the USDA and its failure to enforce the AWA, CAPS' evidentiary findings must stay current. We must demonstrate that this disregard of the AWA is pervasive throughout USDA's AHPS/Animal Care and not just a question of a few bad inspectors. Thus, it is essential that CAPS continue its in-depth investigations of USDA licensed facilities. Investigations - we also rescue puppy mill dogs as evidence of the cruelties being committed at these facilities - are costly.

Below is a white paper prepared by Crowell & Moring, CAPS' pro bono lobbyists in Washington DC. It outlines CAPS concerns about the USDA's failure to enforce the Animal Welfare Act and lists some suggested solutions. We provide this white paper (with attached Poor, Lorton and Wee investigation reports) to congressional aides prior to meeting with them.

The Animal Welfare Act Needs Strengthening and the USDA's Administration of the Act Must be Overhauled.

As the only national organization dedicated exclusively to protecting companion animals, the Companion Animal Protection Society (CAPS) is committed to ending the abuse and suffering of puppy mill dogs. Since 1995, CAPS has investigated over 100 puppy mills, with our most recent puppy mill investigations having been conducted in Minnesota, Illinois, Missouri, and Iowa. Further, CAPS works closely with the media, and has generated stories with "Dateline," "20/20," "Hardcopy," and magazines such as Life, People, and the Readers' Digest, as well as television stations in Boston, Chicago, and elsewhere.

Based on our years of investigative experience, CAPS has concluded that although the Animal Welfare Act (AWA) gives the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) the power to license, inspect and regulate breeders and brokers who deal in dogs for commercial purposes, the USDA's implementation of AWA has been grievously insufficient - fulfilling neither the letter nor the intent of the AWA.

Sadly, the problems we have identified are not new. In a March 1992 report, the USDA's independent Office of Inspector General (OIG) found that the USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) could not ensure the humane care and treatment of animals as required by the AWA. Indeed, in a subsequent January 1995 report, the OIG, recommended new legislation to strengthen and enhance APHIS' authority.

CAPS believes strongly that the time has come to fix these problems once and for all, and we urge the Congress to take the actions necessary - including oversight of the USDA's activities and enactment of remedial legislation - to achieve this goal. A brief summary of our concerns and some suggested solutions are set forth below.

Summary of Concerns

Importantly, although some improvements in the USDA's regulations are warranted, the larger problem is that the USDA is simply not enforcing them adequately. The USDA's rules (see generally, 9 CFR Parts 1-4), are too often ignored, not only by those who are regulated, but also by the regulators themselves. Thus, although the USDA's rules establish fundamental standards intended to provide for the humane care and treatment of dogs and other animals, unfortunately, as CAPS finds repeatedly in our field investigations, the standards for housing, ventilation, lighting, interior surfaces, primary enclosures, sanitation, pest controls, feeding and watering, outside shelter, compatibility, adequate veterinary care, and handling are, in all too many cases, being ignored. Complete copies of our field investigations are available upon request. Simply put either through omission, misfeasance, and (we fear) in some cases, even malfeasance, the USDA is not getting the job done. CAPS urges Congress to act swiftly to remedy the systemic failures we have identified.

Suggested Solutions

We question whether the USDA is even institutionally capable of adequately implementing the puppy mill protection provisions of the AWA. Thus, we believe the appropriate congressional committees should conduct prompt and vigorous oversight of the USDA's management of this program with the following questions in mind:

CAPS believe that prompt and vigorous congressional oversight of the USDA and strengthening of the AWA, as outlined above are essential. CAPS is working to achieve these goals.

Please write the following USDA officials and ask them to enforce the Animal Welfare Act as it pertains to federally licensed dog breeding and brokering facilities and to implement the above solutions suggested by CAPS.

Ms. Cindy J. Smith
Adminstrator
U.S. Department of Agriculture
Animal and Plant Inspection Service
Room 312-E, Whitten Building
1400 Independence Avenue, S.W.
Washington, DC  20250
cindy.j.smith@usda.gov

Mr. Kevin Shea
Deputy Adminstrator
U.S. Department of Agriculture
Animal and Plant Inspection Service
Room 312-E, Whitten Building
1400 Independence Avenue, S.W.
Washington, DC  20250
kevin.a.shea@usda.gov

Dr. Chester A. Gipson
Deputy Administrator of Animal Care
U.S. Department of Agriculture
Animal Plant and Inspection Service
USDA-APHIS-AC, Rm. 2D13
4700 River Road, Unit 97
Riverdale, MD  20737
chester.a.gibson@usda.gov

Mr. Tom Vilsack
Secretary of Agriculture
U.S. Department of Agriculture
1400 Independence Avenue, S.W.
Washington, DC  20250

Ms. Kathleen A. Merrigan
Deputy Secretary of Agriculture
U.S. Department of Agriculture
1400 Independence Avenue, S.W.
Washington, DC  20250
(awaiting congressional approval)

List of USDA licensed breeders and brokers:
www.aphis.usda.gov/ac/publications.html

Look under Facility Lists and then Dealers. "A" dealers are breeders and "B" dealers are brokers. Breeders raise animals for resale to brokers. Brokers then transport and sell these animals directly to pet shops. They may also breed.

            Now, the ball is in your court!  Missouri has begun to implement the "Bark Alert" plan. When you see what you suspect as neglect or abuse in a shelter or breeding facility...TURN THEM IN!  Don't wait.  Some little furry kid my die if you wait.  You could be an answer to their safety & the beginning to a better life. 

Also remember city, county & private shelters are NOT exempt from the rules and your local shelter is included, so Speak Out for the Voiceless!  They would for you!