[ SHOWGSD-L ] Sanatorum

  • From: Stormy435@xxxxxxx
  • To: showgsd-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Mon, 1 Aug 2005 16:58:27 EDT

Many listers were enroute, or not at their computers, when Kathy posted Sen. 
Sanatorum's complete remarks. I am assuming these were read into the record, 
not live to the Senate???   Somebody???   You will notice that he (or his staff 
:-(,    is addressing the concerns of all of us, and putting these remarks on 
record just before the Senate recess.   I don't see that he has addressed the 
fact that as co-sponsors he has an organization that was named before a 
senate committee as a supporter of   domestic terrorist groups, and IT's 
supporter.
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The following e-mail from the PA Fed. of Dog Clubs:
**********************************************************

These remarks by Senator Santorum encourage us to believe that he is  hearing
the concerns that many people have expressed.  We expect the AKC to  continue
to have an influence on the progress of this legislation.


SETTING THE RECORD STRAIGHT ON PAWS
Mr. SANTORUM.  Mr. President,  on May 26, 2005 I introduced with my colleague
Senator Durbin the â??Pet Animal  Welfare Statuteâ?? of 2005, or 
â??PAWS.â??   PAWS
amends the Animal Welfare Act to strengthen the Secretary of  Agricultureâ??s
authority to deal with the problems of substandard animal  dealers.
I want to make clear to our colleagues and the public that we believe the 
vast majority of animal dealers are conscientious persons who make every 
effort 
to treat their animals humanely and to comply with the law.  But,
unfortunately, there are some  animal dealers who do not care properly for 
their animals
and who seek to profit  at the expense of the animals and the public.  They
exploit the weaknesses and  loopholes in the current law to evade or ignore
basic standards for the care and  condition of animals.  These  substandard
dealers give the entire pet industry a black eye, all the while  preying upon 
the
public.  It is  these unscrupulous animal dealers at which PAWS is targeted.
PAWS strengthens the Secretary of Agricultureâ??s authority to deal with 
substandard animal dealers by making four important improvements to the 
Animal 
Welfare Act.  First, it will bring  under coverage of the Animal Welfare Act 
high
volume dealers who are in every  respect like those dealers currently
regulated, but are evading regulation  because they sell animals exclusively 
at retai
l.  PAWS will continue to exempt real retail  pet stores, and will add a new
exemption for small dealers and hobby and show  breeders.  Second, PAWS will
help  the Secretary of Agriculture identify persons not complying with the 
law
by  requiring those who acquire animals for resale to keep records of the
source  from whom the animals are acquired and make these records available 
to the 
Secretary upon request.  Third, PAWS  will create an incentive for dealers to
quickly correct serious problems by  giving the Secretary authority to
temporarily suspend dealersâ?? licenses for up  to 60 days if a violation is 
placing
the health of an animal in imminent  danger.  Finally, PAWS will  strengthen
the authority of the Secretary to obtain injunctions to shut down  dealers 
who
fail to comply with the law.  
The marketplace for animals has changed dramatically since the 1970s when 
the current animal dealer provisions of the Act were written.  At that time 
only
retail pet stores and  small hobby and show breeders sold pet animals, so
regulating wholesale sellers  and exempting persons who sold animals at 
retail
and were regulated by the  market made some sense.  With the  advent of the
Internet, mass national marketing channels, and mass importation  of puppies 
for
resale, there are a large number of unregulated dealers who are  in every
respect identical to the dealers regulated by the Act, except that they  
evade
regulation by selling exclusively at retail.  By regulating these high volume
retail  sellers, we will assure that they meet the same standards for the 
humane
care  and treatment of animals that breeders and brokers selling at wholesale
have  been meeting for 30 years.
PAWS defines the term â??retail pet storeâ?? so that only real retail pet 
stores are exempt, where customers can see the animals and the conditions 
where 
they are kept.  PAWS also adds a  specific exemption for small dealers and 
hobby
and show breeders.  Only persons who sell more than 25 dogs  per year would
be regulated.  In  addition, breeders who sell dogs and cats from fewer than 
7
litters a year bred  or raised on their own premises, or fewer than 25 dogs
and cats per year bred or  raised on their own premises, which ever is 
greater,
would be exempt.  For example, if an Irish Setter breeder has 6  litters that
average 6 puppies each for a total of 36 puppies, they can sell  them without
being regulated.  If a  toy breeder has 10 litters that average only 2 
puppies
each for a total of 20  puppies, they can sell them without being regulated. 
These breeders could also sell 25  or fewer other dogs a year not bred or
raised on their own premises such as stud  puppies or puppies from 
co-ownerships,
without being regulated.  I firmly believe that the sport and  hobby of
breeding and raising dogs and cats should not be a federally regulated  
activity. 
PAWS will, for the first  time, put an explicit exemption into the Animal
Welfare Act to protect small  hobby and show breeders from regulation.
Some persons who sell dogs for hunting purposes have expressed a concern 
that PAWS will bring them under regulation.  The current Animal Welfare Act
already  covers persons who sell hunting dogs, and has for almost 30 years.  
They
are regulated on the same basis as  those who sell dogs for pets.  PAWS  will
continue to regulate sellers of hunting dogs on the same basis as those who 
sell dogs as pets.  Only high volume  sellers who exceed the exemptions set
forth in PAWS will be subject to  regulation.
Some rescue and shelter organizations have expressed concern that because 
they often charge an adoption fee to those who adopt the dogs they place, 
these 
organizations will fall within the definition of â??dealersâ?? in PAWS and be 
regulated.  True rescue and shelter  organizations who do not sell dogs or 
cats
in commerce, for profit, will not be  brought under regulation by PAWS,
whether or not they are formally incorporated  as not for profit 
organizations. 
Some high volume dealers in cats and dogs who will be brought under  coverage
of the Animal Welfare Act by PAWS, but who are still small enough that  they
breed and raise dogs or cats in essentially a residential environment, have 
expressed concern that they will be forced to build kennels and catteries 
and 
will no longer be able to raise animals in a residential environment.  There
is nothing in PAWS, or in the  current Animal Welfare Act, that precludes
persons from breeding and raising  animals in a residential setting, provided 
the
animals are properly housed and  cared for.  In implementing PAWS,  the
Secretary of Agriculture will have to assure that the animal care  
regulations take
into account breeders and dealers who conduct their operations  in a
residential setting.
I want to make clear that PAWS is a very different piece of legislation  than
the bills that Senator Durbin and I have introduced in previous  Congresses. 
PAWS does not require  or justify creating any new animal care standards,
like our previous legislation  did.  It focuses only on bringing  under
regulation high volume commercial dealers currently evading regulation and  
on
strengthening the Secretary of Agricultureâ??s ability to identify and bring  
into
compliance high volume dealers who are not in compliance with existing law  
or, as
a last resort, shut them down.
Senator Durbin and I in the Senate, along with our colleagues 
Representatives Gerlach and Farr who have introduced PAWS in the House of  
Representatives,
consulted with a broad array of animal interest and animal  welfare groups in
creating PAWS.  We  believe that the enactment of PAWS will be a major
milestone in the history of  animal protection in the United States.  We are
delighted that it has brought  together animal interest groups and animal 
welfare
groups that in the past have  often been on opposite sides of animal 
legislation,
including our own past  bills.  Having said that, no  legislation is perfect
when introduced.  As Chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committeeâ??s
Subcommittee on  Research, Nutrition and General Legislation, which has 
jurisdiction over
PAWS, I  intend to convene a hearing and mark-up of PAWS shortly after the
August recess  to make technical corrections, and to clarify some of the 
billâ??
s
language to  better reflect our intentions as set forth in this statement.   
PAWS is not intended to restrict breeding or impose a hardship on rescue  and
shelter organizations.  PAWS  specifically recognizes the importance of
protecting small breeders and the  non-commercial purebred dog and cat fancy 
from
federal regulation.  My family and I purchased our beloved  German Shepherd 
dog
Schatzie from a small breeder.  We and Schatzie raised a litter of  puppies
in our own home last year, and fully understand the hard work and  commitment
that it requires.  I also  know that most commercial breeders are dedicated 
to
their profession and to  their animals.  I believe that PAWS  will protect
small hobby and show breeders and the vast majority of compliant  commercial
breeders as well as the public from those breeders and brokers who  evade or 
fail
to comply with the law.  And, most importantly, it will protect the animals
themselves.  I urge my colleagues and all those in  the animal welfare 
community
to join us in this effort."   
*********************************

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