Advocacy Work
Contact Your Lawmakers
You can help put an end to the cruel commercial dog breeding industry by voicing your concerns to your lawmakers.
Putting an end to puppy mills starts with YOU! Starting at the most local level of government, you have the ability to spread this message and raise awareness with those who have the power to create laws. Here’s how to contact them:
First and foremost, contact the members of your State Legislature. Tell them how you feel about puppy mills, provide them links to puppy mill information and photos, and share Harley’s website with them.
Write to your State Governor
Contact your United States Senators and House Representatives
Write to the President
Contact your Mayors – City Council Members – County Executives – Other Local Officials
Please contact the Secretary of Agriculture and remind him that the AWA stands for the Animal Welfare Act and not the Dog Breeders Welfare Act. USDA’s sole focus, as mandated by Congress, should be on the welfare of the dogs and not the welfare of the substandard breeders’ businesses regardless of how the neglect of their animals is hurting them financially.
Contact Secretary Tom Vilsac at AgSec@usda.gov, leave a message at (202) 720-3631 or write him at:
Secretary Tom Vilsac
U. S. Department of Agriculture
Room 200-A
1400 Independence Avenue, SW
Washington, DC 20250
Retail Pet Sales Ordinances
When people purchase puppies from pet stores, they are often unknowingly supporting puppy mills. Puppy mills are large-scale inhumane commercial dog breeding facilities that produce puppies in large volumes. They are designed to maximize profits and commonly disregard the physical, social, and emotional well-being of the breeding dogs and their puppies.
What is a Retail Pet Sales Ordinance? It’s a ban that prohibits pet stores from selling dogs and cats in pet stores. The pet store ban typically includes language that encourages pet stores to work with local shelters and rescues, offering homeless pets for adoption.
Harley’s Dream supports Retail Pet Sales Ordinances at the city, county, and state levels as a critical strategy to help stop the cruel puppy mill industry and to move our country forward toward a more humane future for our canine companions.
Help enact a Retail Pet Sales Ordinance in your community! We can provide materials and guidance. Send us an email at info@harleysdream.org.
IMPORTANT! Your community DOES NOT need to have a pet store selling puppies and kittens in order to establish a Retail Pet Sales Ordinance. Actually, it’s best to have the ordinance in place to prevent an inhumane pet store from moving in. Having a ban in place encourages your community to “Remain Humane”. Learn about preemptive/preventative Retail Pet Sales Ordinances.
Learn more:
- The standards governing the care of dogs and cats in commercial breeding facilities are set forth in the federal Animal Welfare Act (AWA). The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) is the agency responsible for overseeing the commercial dog breeding industry and enforcing the AWA. Any breeder who wishes to sell to a pet store or to consumers over the Internet with five or more breeding females must be licensed with the USDA.
- The AWA and USDA are not sufficient to protect dogs in commercial-breeding facilities:
- The AWA’s standards are too minimal to ensure humane care and treatment.
- The USDA does not effectively enforce the AWA.
- The USDA inspection process is not adequate and inspection records are not available to the public.
- Even if enforced to its fullest extent, the AWA only requires survival-only standards in housing facilities and care, well below what most would consider humane. The AWA allows for significant discretion by puppy mill owners to decide what constitutes an adequate level of care for the dogs with respect to the living environment, cleanliness and sanitation, feeding, welfare, veterinary care, and housing. What is allowed under the AWA?
- There is no limit to the number of dogs on the premises. A puppy mill could have hundreds or thousands of dogs.
- There is no requirement on the number of staff to provide care for the dogs. One person can care for hundreds of dogs.
- Dogs may be kept in stacked cages.
- Mesh or wire flooring is allowed.
- Dogs have no choice but to relieve themselves in their cages.
- Dogs may be confined in spaces only six inches larger than their bodies on each side, not including the tail.
- Dogs may be caged 24/7 for their entire lives, only removed from the cage to be bred.
- There is no exercise requirement if dogs are caged with other dogs and certain minimal size requirements are met for the dog’s enclosure.
- Human interaction is not required.
- Females dogs can be bred at the first heat cycle and every heat cycle thereafter.
- Unwanted dogs may be destroyed or auctioned off.
- Many of the AWA’s requirements are vague and leave it up to the mill owners to determine what is “adequate”.
- Over one million puppies are produced by USDA licensed facilities (supplied to pet stores & online puppy brokers) each year.
- There are an estimated 10,000 puppy mills in the USA.
- Retail Pet Sales Ordinances encourage individuals seriously interested in becoming a pet owner to seek adoption or to seek out responsible breeders where they can visit the facility to meet the parent dogs.
- Adoption from rescues/shelters will help reduce the number of pets being euthanized in local shelters. We believe there would be 75% fewer dogs in shelters and rescues if puppy mills didn’t exist.
- Responsible breeders do exist and DO NOT sell their puppies to pet stores. Retail Pet Sale Ordinances would not affect their ability to humanely breed, raise, and sell their puppies.
- Ordinances do not take away an individual’s right to own animals; they will better regulate and ensure transparency about where those animals are coming from (responsible breeders or adoption from shelter/rescue).
- Pet stores can continue to flourish by switching to a humane model, selling services and products (pet food, toys, grooming, boarding) and collaborating with local shelters/rescues with adoption services.
- Retail Pet Sales Ordinances would prevent the selling of potentially sick pets from out-of-state commercial breeding facilities.
- Americans have made it clear that they do not support puppy mills. That’s why states, cities, and counties have already passed humane ordinances/legislation. In the USA alone:
- 321 Cities
- 28 Counties
- 3 states: California, Maryland, Maine
- Literature published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association supports the fact that dogs sold at pet stores are at a greater risk for behavioral problems than those obtained from noncommercial breeders. Another study in Applied Animal Behavior Science found that breeding dogs at commercial establishments were significantly more likely to have health and behavioral issues.
- Retail Pet Sales Ordinances are designed to protect the public from fraud, with respect to pet origin and health, and deter the sale of commercially bred animals with illnesses, behavioral issues, and genetic problems.
- Americans have made it clear that they do not support puppy mills. That’s why states, cities, and counties have already passed humane ordinances/legislation. In the USA alone:
Help enact a Retail Pet Sales Ordinance in your community! We can provide materials and guidance. Send us an email at info@harleysdream.org.
Preemptive Pet Store Ordinances
- Ensures that the city/county becomes and will ALWAYS remain a humane community.
- Sends a strong message to decision-makers at all levels that constituents will not support the retail sale of commercially-bred pets sourced from mills or unethical backyard breeders.
- Impacts the future puppy/kitten mill economic pipelines; disallowing the future retail sale of commercially bred puppies & kittens from mills.
- Encourages other jurisdictions to choose to become humane and to take similar steps.
- Establishes an ordinance model for other jurisdictions to easily follow.
- Positively supports pet supply stores with a humane business model; stores that sell ONLY pet supplies and offer adoption venues to local rescues or shelters.
- Positively affects the adoption of rescue/shelter animals in a region.
- Eventually helps to reduce the shelter resource needs/costs in a region.
- Eventually drives down shelter euthanasia numbers and expense.
- Provides consumer protection from the tragic and hidden commercial breeding industry.
- Supports responsible and reputable local breeders; those who provide appropriate care for the pets they breed. (Responsible breeders NEVER sell to pet stores.)
- Reaches beyond the jurisdiction, educating residents and others about the puppy and kitten mill / pet store connection.
- Inspires others to get involved in creating humane communities.
- Promotes community awareness about canine welfare issues.
- Positions the community as a champion of animal welfare.
Humane Pet Store Model
A Retail Pet Sales Ordinance is NOT about putting pet stores out of business or preventing businesses from starting up. It is about promoting a humane and successful business model.
- Stores that sell ONLY pet supplies made $157 MORE per square foot of space than stores that sell live animals (refer to chart above).
- The selling of live animals is an outdated, dying business model. According to Pet Business, in 2019 of the Top 25 Retailers, only 1 sold animals. The others succeeded by offering quality products and services.
- As of November 2019, 24 pet stores in 11 states have successfully converted to the humane model and 20,147 shelter/rescue puppies and dogs were adopted.
The Humane Society of the United States provides extensive support to make this conversion:
- Increased name recognition for the store
- Consumer loyalty, financial support, word-of-mouth outreach and repeat visitors
- Stronger community ties thanks to their partnership with local animal shelters
- A free listing for your store on the HSUS Puppy Friendly Pet Stores web page and in other media
- A free listing through the HSUS phone texting application so shoppers can find them from anywhere
- Free, customized guidance through the entire process
- Answers to their questions about the benefits of providing adoptable animals at their store
- Advice from other store owners who have already converted to a more humane model
- Help finding animal shelters in the area to partner with
- Publicity for the conversion via a grand re-opening
More information from HSUS: www.humanesociety.org/resources/puppy-friendly-pet-stores