The U.S. House Agriculture Committee has passed its long-awaited $1.5 trillion Farm Bill, including what the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals had called dangerous provisions that would directly hit “billions of farm animals, dogs, cats, and other animals”.
The ASPCA denounced passage of the House Farm Bill, which it says would overturn existing state and local animal welfare laws, with disastrous consequences for farm animals and higher-welfare farmers.
Additionally, it says, the bill not only fails to provide critically needed advancement in enforcement to protect dogs in puppy mills, but actually makes it harder to help dogs that are suffering. The bill also fails to provide support to the tens of thousands of American horses that are exported for slaughter each year, the organization says.
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“The Farm Bill has the power to impact U.S. agriculture policy for decades to come, and the House Agriculture Committee has squandered this opportunity to advance much-needed reforms, choosing instead to pass a disastrous proposal that attacks state protections for farm animals, puts dogs in puppy mills at even greater risk, and fails to address the horse slaughter crisis,” said Nancy Perry, senior vice-president of government relations for the ASPCA.
“Congressional leaders have a responsibility to reject the predatory systems that perpetuate cruelty to animals, and we urge them to pass a final Farm Bill that upholds state farm animal protection laws, institutes much-needed funding and transparency measures to support a more humane food system, and includes both Goldie’s Act and the SAFE Act, bipartisan bills that are critical to ensuring the welfare of dogs, horses, and other animals,” Perry said.
In a press release, the ASPCA said the House Farm Bill includes the following dangerous animal-related provisions:
- Weakens enforcement for dogs suffering in puppy mills: Instead of increasing protections for dogs in puppy mills, the House Farm Bill allows the U.S. Department of Agriculture to continue lax enforcement of the Animal Welfare Act, codifying some of the USDA’s worst practices, all of which lead to animal suffering being ignored. Rather than requiring the agency to remove suffering animals, the bill merely asks it to “consider” removing a dog in a state of “unrelieved suffering”. Worse, it narrows the definition of “suffering” and allows the agency to shirk its enforcement responsibilities by simply notifying local law enforcement and passing the buck on to them.
- Attacks local and state farm animal welfare Laws: The House bill includes so-called “compromise” language based on the Ending Agricultural Trade Suppression (EATS) Act, a dangerous overreach of federal power that would eliminate existing state and local animal welfare laws, including bans on cruel farming practices. This language is a direct response to the success of animal welfare laws like California’s Proposition 12, which was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court last year, and the latest transparent attempt to acquiesce to the demands of industrial agriculture interests, steamrollering states’ rights and ignoring the will of voters. If this language stays in the Farm Bill, millions of farm animals will be forced back into inhumane cages while thousands of independent, higher-welfare farmers will be further disadvantaged in a marketplace unfairly dominated by factory farming.
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The ASPCA said the House Farm Bill also fails to include a bipartisan prohibition on horse slaughter. Despite congressional efforts that have effectively blocked the operation of horse slaughterhouses on U.S. soil since 2007, tens of thousands of American horses continue to be shipped to Canadian and Mexican slaughterhouses that supply other countries with horsemeat. The Save America’s Forgotten Equines, or SAFE, Act would expand the Dog and Cat Meat Prohibition Act, which was passed as part of the 2018 Farm Bill, to include equines, prohibiting the commercial slaughter of horses in the U.S. and ending their export for that purpose abroad.
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The House Farm Bill must now pass the House floor. Once the Senate releases and passes its own Farm Bill, House and Senate leaders will need to concur on a single bill that must be approved by both chambers before it can be shared with President Joe Biden to be signed into law.
The ASPCA called upon members of the public to contact their U.S. representatives to urge them to reject the dangerous provisions in the House Farm Bill that threaten animal welfare and pass a more humane version that protects animals, people, and the planet.
Source: PR Newswire