[Posted by Brennan Browne on behalf of Daniel Guss]

Regarding AB 1634:

Dear Activists,

Would you please share your thoughts with the Daily News [regarding the 
shelving of AB 1634], which has been very generous in giving me a platform to 
write about animal welfare, at:  [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  
 If and when you do this, please cc the following people:
  
 Assemblyman Lloyd Levine at [EMAIL PROTECTED], 
 his Communications Director,  [EMAIL PROTECTED], 
 and Judie Mancuso at "Judie Mancuso" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, 
  
 If we are to get this desperately needed law, it's critical that these leaders 
know just how many of us are backing their efforts.


Thank you,
Daniel Guss
www.standfoundation.org



 


ARTICLE: http://www.dailynews.com/theiropinion/ci_6353424
   
  Defeat of spay-neuter measure a travesty
  BY DANIEL GUSS, Guest Columnist
  Article Last Updated: 07/11/2007 08:48:58 PM PDT

  
        
      ON Wednesday, state Assemblyman Lloyd Levine, D-Van Nuys, pulled the plug 
on AB 1634, a desperately needed law that would have required mandatory spaying 
or neutering of dogs and cats throughout the state.   The primary culprits for 
its failure are plain and simple: greed and ignorance.   At a meeting last 
month of the Los Angeles Department of Animal Services, dozens of breeders 
showed up to protest the city's role to help pass the statewide law, and to 
discourage a citywide ordinance of equal or greater substance.   The breeders 
defiantly stated that they have a right to run for-profit breeding businesses, 
yet they didn't have any suggestions  on what to do when their dogs end up in a 
shelter. Just a few steps from the new East Valley's meeting room, hundreds 
upon hundreds of animals sat in kennels awaiting two fates: adoption or death.  
 "Let's see whether any of you are going to leave here tonight with just one of 
the animals facing death," exclaimed one rescuer.
 Not one breeder saved a single animal that night; they came to protect their 
profit, not puppies.   An even larger culprit are those known as backyard 
breeders, who fly below the radar, creating mixed and undocumented purebred 
dogs, selling them at discounted prices on Web sites. 

  In short: profit exceeds wisdom, even when the consequence means real-world 
suffering.   The adage is, if you saw how sausage is made, you'd never eat it 
again. If people took a walk through any government animal shelter, few would 
ever buy a dog or cat from a breeder again.   As an animal rescuer, I have 
encountered countless pet owners  who insist that their pet is so wonderful, so 
beautiful, that they simply must create its offspring. When they declare that 
they'll find homes for each one, they fail to recognize that even if they were 
to successfully do this (which is no small feat), each animal they create 
displaces a shelter animal whose life hangs in the balance, and which could 
have been placed in that home.   Some of the blame for Wednesday's failure also 
goes to local governments, like the city and county of Los Angeles, which have 
done nothing to make it more difficult to open retail pet-sales stores in the 
region. Moreover, local shelters still occasionally
 allow unaltered animals out of the shelter, even when there is no 
veterinary-approved reason for doing so.   Last year, shelter operations cost 
Californians hundreds of millions of dollars. And it is widely believed that 
every dollar invested in spay/neuter efforts would ultimately save 18 animals. 
So a mandatory spay/neuter bill,  while snuffing out the greed-driven breeding 
business, would ultimately save the rest of us a mountain of money, and the 
needless suffering of animals on the demise.   Levine, who pulled the plug on 
the bill when he realized that he was close but still didn't have enough votes, 
will work on a revised version that is expected to surface in January, if not 
sooner. Since our shelters are already overflowing, these laws can't come too 
soon.   Greed will be conquered if Levine ensures that the new bill will be 
accompanied by free spay, neuter and microchipping on demand. It will pay off 
in spades.   Daniel Guss is a Sherman Oaks-based writer who
 founded Stop Torture, Abuse & Neglect of Dogs, www.STANDFoundation.org  















     
              
 
                      
                              


          

       
---------------------------------
Moody friends. Drama queens. Your life? Nope! - their life, your story.
 Play Sims Stories at Yahoo! Games. 
       
---------------------------------
Luggage? GPS? Comic books? 
Check out fitting  gifts for grads at Yahoo! Search.

Reply via email to