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BREAKING NEWS – Las Vegas Is Latest City To Ban Retail Sales Of Puppies and Kittens

| January 15, 2016

Sometimes what happens in Vegas…is great news that needs to be shared!

Best Friends Animal Society is pleased to announce that more than 100 communities across the United States have enacted legislation banning the retail sale of commercially bred puppies (from sources known as “puppy mills”) and kittens, with Las Vegas being the most recent city to join this fast-growing trend.

Image source: @JohnMcDonald via Flickr
Image source: @JohnMcDonald via Flickr

Other prominent cities include Los Angeles, Chicago, Beverly Hills, and counties like Salt Lake County (UT), Camden County (NJ), and Ventura County (CA).

Image source: @Smerikal via flickr
Image source: @Smerikal via Flickr

“Best Friends has worked tirelessly for years to create and lobby for humane legislation,” said Elizabeth Oreck, national manager of puppy mill initiatives, Best Friends Animal Society. “Through our puppy mill initiatives, we encourage pet stores to offer shelter and rescue animals for adoption instead of mill-bred pets, and to educate consumers about the link between pet stores, internet pet sales and puppy mills.”

Puppy mills are high-volume dog breeding facilities, like “factory farms” for dogs and supply nearly 100 percent of U.S. pet stores and online puppy retailers. Most of these “factories” have inadequate medical care and human socialization with dogs living in small cages, often in the minimum legal size allowed (only six inches larger than the dog on all sides) and female dogs bred as frequently as possible. Additionally, mills provide inadequate medical care and human socialization.

Dogs seized from a puppy mill in Fort Worth, Texas. Image source: @JoshHenderson via Flickr
Dogs seized from a puppy mill in Fort Worth, Texas. Image source: @JoshHenderson via Flickr

These substandard factories prioritize profit and maximum productivity over the health and welfare of the animals and churn out an estimated two million animals each year. At the same time four million pets are killed in shelters, most simply because they don’t have a safe place to call home.

Even though more and more Americans are taking a stand against them, the U.S. still has an estimated 10,000 licensed and unlicensed puppy mills.

Image source: @FibonacciBlue via Flickr
Image source: @FibonacciBlue via Flickr

“Taking a stand against puppy mills by passing humane laws, and consumers’ decision to avoid pet shops and online retailers will make this inhumane industry a thing of the past,” Oreck added.

Best Friends has a wonderful video to share about why you shouldn’t support pet stores that sell dogs and cats:

Wish your city had this law? You can help your city ban retail sales of dogs and cats too! Learn more about Best Friends puppy mill initiatives here.

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