State Legislation

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 2001:
State legislation

Pending in the Oregon legislature is a bill by state senator Ryan Deckert (D-Beaverton) to amend the state anti-cruelty law to give more evidentiary weight to testimony about the behavior of animal victims. The amendment would help in prosecuting cases involving electroshock, improper confinement, and harassment, which may drive an animal insane without leaving physical evidence. Also pending in Oregon is an anti-bestiality bill by state senators Peter Courtney (D-Salem) and John Minnis (R-Wood Village). Minnis unsuccessfully introduced a similar bill in 1995.

Illinois state representative Tom Dart (D-Chicago) on February 5 introduced a bill to allow judges in animal hoarding cases to order psychiatric evaluation of the defendants, and oblige defendants to share the cost of caring for their impounded animals.

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Missouri audit finds flaws in puppy mill inspection

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 2001:

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo.–A Missouri Department of Agriculture audit released on February 15 found major conflicts of interest in the state breeding kennel inspection program.

Editorialized the St. Louis Post Dispatch, “State Auditor Claire McCaskill found that state inspectors did not cite a single breeder for any kind of violation in a two-year period. Worse, two men in the state inspection program,” namely chief inspector G.A. Salmon and deputy Tom Hawley, “had puppy mill money flowing directly into their family coffers from facilities run by their wives.” Hawley doubles as regional president of the Missouri Pet Breeders Association.

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USDA to allow quicker rescue

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 2001:

WASHINGTON D.C.–An amendment to the federal Animal Welfare Act enforcement regulations taking effect on February 2, 2001 allows the USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service to “allow animals confiscated from situations detrimental to their health to be placed with non-USDA licensed persons or facilities,” such as humane societies and sanctuaries which are not under USDA jurisdiction because they are not normally engaged in interstate commerce.

“With this new regulation,” said Cat Fanciers Association legislative coordinator Joan Miller, “APHIS inspectors will be able to move more quickly and efficiently to remove animals [from abusive situations] when necessary for their health, and get them into the hands of shelters and rescue organizations that can care for their needs.

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Farm Bureau kills Arkansas felony cruelty bill–again

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 2001:

AUSTIN, LITTLE ROCK, ST. PAUL–A bill by Arkansas state representative Jim Wood (D-Tupelo) to make Arkansas the 32nd state to punish especially heinous cruelty to animals as a felony cleared the state house judiciary committee 11-7 on January 30, but was killed by the full house on February 2, 21-66. Though Wood himself is a farmer, the bill was vehemently opposed by the Arkansas Farm Bureau Federation.

As with Wood’s first attempt to pass a felony cruelty bill, in 1999, Farm Bureau lobbyists argued that exemptions for “routinely accepted livestock, poultry, or aquaculture management practices or routinely accepted animal husbandry practices” were not strong enough.

Similar bills have been introduced this year in Minnesota, by state senator Don Betold (DFL-Fridley) and Texas, by state representative Manny Najera (D-El Paso).

Dogs, disaster, and ABC

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 2001:

AHMEDABAD, CHENNAI, THIRUVALLUR, VISAKHAPATNAM, India–Rocky the pet Pomeranian of Bhachau bank employee Narsinhbhai Bhati was among the first heroes of the January 26 earthquake that killed as many as 30,000 people in Kutch district, Gujarat state, India.

Away at a Republic Day celebration, Bhati ran back toward his home, but could not identify it among more than 500 rubble heaps where 600 houses had stood. Then he heard Rocky bark. Digging toward the barking, Bhati pulled his wife and two sons out of the debris, unconscious but expected to live. A daughter was dead.

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Human obituaries

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 2001:
Human obituaries

Charles Merieux, 94, died on January 20 in Lyon, France. Founder of the Institute Merieux, acquired by the Rhone-Poulenc drug empire in 1994, the virologist Merieux “had his first success working on an inoculation against foot-and-mouth disease, when he realized that the key was to grow it in a glass container rather than a live animal,” recalled New York Times obituarist Savannah Waring Walker. Merieux markedly improved the quality of vaccines and cut their cost, in monetary terms and in the animal lives needed to produce immunizing cultures. Among his innovations was the now standard human post-exposure rabies vaccine, developed with Hilary Koprowski, M.D. It replaced the vaccine invented by Louis Pasteur, which required 14 injections to the belly to deliver.

Don Richard Eckelberry, 79, died on January 14 from post-surgical respiratory failure. Born in Sebring, Ohio, Eckelberry formed a bird club in his early teens and wrote nature columns for two local newspapers. He met his wife of 54 years, fabric designer and painter Virginia Nepodal Eckelberry, when he took a class from her at the Cleveland Institute of Art. Making optical instruments in California during World War II, Eckelberry met National Audubon Society director John Baker, who in 1946 hired him to illustrate Richard Pough’s Audubon Bird Guide. Eckelberry later managed Audubon sanctuaries in Louisiana, Florida, and New Jersey, and in 1967 cofounded the Asa Wright Nature Center in Trinidad, but his main career for the rest of his life was painting birds for the Audubon magazine and 14 field guides.

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BOOKS: The Shark Almanac

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 2001:

The Shark Almanac, by Thomas B. Allen
The Lyons Press (123 West 18th St., New York, NY 10011), 2000.
274 pages, hardcover; illust. $35.00.

Our review copy of The Shark Almanac was read en route to Hong Kong, and was donated to the Hong Kong SPCA humane education department. One is assailed throughout the Kowloon hotel and restaurant district by the sight and smell of Hong Kong residents and Pacific Rim visitors eating the shark genus toward extinction. Slow to mature and reproduce, mostly living at the apex of the marine food chain, sharks have not evolved to withstand the present pace of predation.

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