BREAKING NEWS: SB 1712 has just passed the Oklahoma House of Representatives! This is a tremendous victory for dogs in Oklahoma and sends the message that Oklahomans will not stand for animal cruelty and tax evasion. The vote was 59 – 31. Please see the vote record here. This is the language of the bill [...]
Hello everyone, OK Humane representatives are at the capitol right now (10:30 am on Tuesday) and SB 1712 has just been pulled out of the Appropriations Subcommittee. It will not be heard tomorrow. We are not sure what they are going to do—perhaps put in a new subcommittee. If this is the case, there will [...]
Dear Friends, SB 1712 is a bill that the Central Oklahoma Humane Society is strongly promoting, and we just learned that it is being heard in the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Wednesday, February 3. We do not know what time. Learn more about SB 1712 and read its full text here. We need people in [...]
HB 1332 passed out of the Oklahoma State Senate this afternoon, 30-16! We are overwhelmed by the support from the humane community and the public at large for this bill. We all came together and we have truly made a difference for dogs in Oklahoma. Count yourselves as part of history on this day in [...]
Did you know that more than hundred puppy millers, brokers and breeders showed up at the state Capitol yesterday to influence our State Senators? The scary thing is that it’s working. Please contact the Senators and tell them that you support the Pet Quality Assurance Act!! The vote is today! The following senators are on [...]
House Bill 1332 Oklahoma Pet Quality Assurance and Protection Act, also referred to as the Puppy Mill Bill, passed in a vote of the Oklahoma House of Representative, Wednesday, 74 to 26. After several amendments in committee and on the floor of the House, the bill gained popularity enough for this substantial victory.
The Bill will now go to the State Senate for a vote before being sent to the Governor for his signature. Oklahoma is currently the number two state for the number of puppy mills and this legislation is the first step in ending unlicensed, uninspected puppy mills and stops the suffering for tens of thousands of dogs in Oklahoma.
Thanks to Representative Lee Denney, DVM for her countless hours in writing and amending this bill.
I’d like to address some concerns and incorrect assumptions that people are making about the effect of HB 1332 if it passes.
“I’m an out-of-state rescue that does adoptions to homes in Oklahoma. I use a vet in my own state. Do I have to have a licensed vet in Oklahoma, too? Do I have to be licensed under this bill if I do more than 25 adoptions to Oklahoma homes?”
Out-of-state rescue groups (and in-state groups, too) who do more than 25 adoptions in a year in Oklahoma have to be licensed under this bill. This does not have anything to do with how many animals you take IN from Oklahoma. If your rescue takes in 1,000 Oklahoma dogs, but only adopts out 10 to Oklahoma homes, you don’t have to be licensed here.
If you are an out-of-state rescue and you come to Oklahoma to do adoptions (like at a Petsmart or other location, or just to meet an adoptive family), you would simply have to have a vet of record in your own state. Oklahoma cannot force people to travel over state lines with unvaccinated animals to use an Oklahoma vet. See what I’m saying? If the law required you to have and use an Oklahoma veterinarian, it would be essentially requiring you to transfer an unvaccinated animal over state lines, which it can’t do.
This vet would have to be one that you contract with and pay for. The vet can absolutely be in your home town or home state–he or she DOES NOT have to be licensed in Oklahoma.
What everyone needs to keep in mind, too, is that these services that are required by this bill for minimum standards of care for animals are things that ANY reputable rescue should be already doing and should have a relationship with a vet who provides the care. If you are currently doing adoptions without a vet having seen each pet (and complaints routinely come in about places that are doing just that), then this is one of the things that would be an issue. Obviously, reputable rescues and breeders and humane societies have all their animals examined by a vet (and hopefully altered) before placement, so this wouldn’t be an issue.
A “veterinary protocol” does not mean that the vet has to do all the services, it just means that the rescue or breeder is following advice given by a vet for that particular animal. There are certain things that must legally be done by a veterinarian (i.e., surgery, Rabies vaccine, etc.) but other things that we can do ourselves under the guidance/advice of a veterinarian, such as deworming, vaccinating, etc. This bill does provide that these things must be done under the supervision/auspice of a veterinarian, because there are unsafe and ineffective protocol for vaccinations and deworming, and the adoptive owner/ purchaser can wind up with a sick animal, and no one is accountable for the vaccination or health care history.
I really do see what Sherry means about feeling mad about being treated the same as irreputable breeders/rescues. I think of it like airport security. I don’t like having to take off my shoes and not be able to take a bottle of water on the plane. I didn’t do anything wrong, but I still have to go through that inspection, just like everyone else who wants to get on the plane, because a few “bad apples” ruined it for the rest of us. But I go through it, because in the end, we’re all safer. But they have to make everyone go through the same screening process; it’s only fair. Inconvenient? A pain in the neck? Unjustified if you’re innocent? Maybe, sure. But it’s just the best way they can figure out, for now, to keep us all safer on airplanes.
This law isn’t perfect. But it’s the best thing we have right now to protect animals in Oklahoma. If a few people and rescues get their feathers ruffled, it’s still worth it for the good it can do. All rescues need to come together in support of this bill! Let’s not throw the baby out with the bathwater over our pride or over semantics. Let’s work together to get this bill passed.
Our opponents are working hard to spread rumors to divide us. KNOW THE TRUTH before you believe the hype and hysteria.
by Joe Petz February is Cat Appreciation Month, and in honor of this special time, Fresh Step cat litter will donate a dollar to the American Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals if you just follow a few easy steps. First, go to the Fresh Step Facebook page. Using their “Cat Pride Sweaters” application, [...]