| Senators Santorum and Durbin Release PAWS Discussion Draft |
March
2006 |
Senator Rick Santorum (R-PA) and Senator Richard Durbin (D-IL) have
now released a "Discussion Draft" of an amended version of
S. 1139, the "Pet Animal Welfare Statute of 2005" (PAWS).
The Discussion Draft includes language clarifying several original provisions
and adds some new provisions which resulted from input following a November
2005 hearing on the bill.
The Discussion Draft of the new bill contains the following clarifications
and additions:
CLARIFICATIONS:
- All references to hunting, security and breeding dogs are eliminated
from the dealer definition in both PAWS and the existing Animal Welfare
Act, ensuring that persons selling such dogs are treated the same as
persons who sell dogs for any other purpose.
- The "retail pet store" exemption has been redefined
to include only business establishments that do not import dogs and
cats for resale and which maintain a physical premises that is open
to the public and where pets are sold. Persons who sell exclusively
over the Internet or through mass media advertising and do not maintain
a public retail establishment would be covered under the Act.
- The language is clarified to assure that wholesale, rather than
retail, sellers of animals (as defined in the Act) other than dogs and
cats are classified as dealers. In addition, the small wholesaler exemption
is increased from $500 gross income annually to $2,500 gross income
annually.
- The language regarding the "dealer" exemption for
retail sellers has been clarified:
- If you are not a breeder but are selling at retail, you are exempt
from dealer status if you do not sell more than 25 dogs and cats in
a calendar year.
- If you are a breeder, you are exempt from dealer status if, in a calendar
year you do not sell more than 25 dogs and cats bred or raised on your
own premises, or the dogs and cats from not more than 6 litters born
or raised on your premises, whichever is greater,
and do not sell more than 25 other dogs and cats not bred or raised
on your premises.
- The language pertaining to the source records required to be
maintained by dealers and retail pet stores who acquire dogs or cats
for resale is clarified to make it consistent with the requirements
of state law in states which require such records.
ADDITIONS:
- An explicit exemption is included for animal shelters, rescue
organizations and other persons who do not operate for profit and do
not import dogs or cats for resale.
- A new provision has been added that would exempt all who breed
or sell more than the aforementioned thresholds (as long as they do
not import dogs or cats for resale and sell dogs and cats only at retail),
if they are inspected by a third-party non-profit organization that
has animal care standards and inspection protocols which are as protective
of animal welfare as those promulgated by the USDA under the Act.
- The draft calls for safeguards that protect the privacy of persons
inspected by such not-for-profit organizations who are in compliance
with the organization's standards.
- The USDA would be required to regulate the importation of dogs
and cats for resale, including requiring that dogs and cats imported
for resale be at least six months of age and comply with health and
vaccination requirements.
Further details on this discussion draft are available on Sen.
Santorum's Web site.
The next step in the legislative process is for a new bill containing
these provisions to be introduced or for the discussion draft to be
offered as an amendment to the current bill. In either case, the new
bill will reflect the edits contained in the discussion draft.
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