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Animal sales in pet stores drive need for puppy mills

Adding egulations to the B.C. Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act will not impact a puppy mill operation.

To the Editor,

Re: MLA wants rules to curb puppy mills, April 26.

The private member’s bill introduced by MLA Jane Thornthwaite to add regulations to the B.C. Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act will not impact a puppy mill operation.

The bottom line for these operations is simple economics. Their sales market is pet stores. If you eliminate the market, production will stop.

It is evident that this bill won’t meet the intent when it is reported that the bill is supported by the Pet Industries Joint Advisory Council of Canada, an association of pet store owners.

I applaud Thornthwaite for her interest in curbing puppy mills, but suggest that she should work on the details more thoroughly.

Seek input from the governing body for ethical breeders – the Canadian Kennel Club. Talk with the city councils of those communities that have banned the sale of pets in stores. As long as the public is uneducated that the cute, little doggy in the window at the pet store is from a puppy mill, they will continue to buy them. And as long as pet stores can continue to sell them, the puppy mills will always have a place to move their merchandise.

MLAs should vote no to this bill, and send it back to Thornthwaite’s drawing board to get a bill that will eliminate this problem at the source.

Del Beaulac

Nanaimo