In June 2003 an amendment to the
animal welfare laws in Virginia went into effect. The amendment
was put forward by the Virginia Federation of Humane Societies
and was supported by the multimillion-dollar animal rights organization,
the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS). The amendment
makes it impossible for national rescue organizations to operate
in Virginia with the certain knowledge that they are obeying the
law. Although some national rescue organizations continue to operate
here, Whippet Rescue And Placement (WRAP) has withdrawn rather
than risk prosecution for operating illegally.
So what is the status of whippet rescue
in Virginia now? Four individuals rescue and place whippets in
Virginia independently. They are all former members of WRAP and
their guidelines for rescue and placement are in line with those
of the organization. When someone in Virginia contacts WRAP about
a whippet in need of rescue, the national coordinator contacts
one of those independent rescuers.
If you need help for a whippet in
Virginia or you are interested in providing a home for one, contact
the rescuer closest to you:
Smithfield (SE Virginia)
Kristen
Frederick
200 River Oaks Lane
Smithfield, VA 23430
757-356-1058
CoFeature@aol.com
Charlottesville
Harriett Lee
Riichmond
Pat Moore
wilsprit@comcast.net
Lexington (Western & SW VA) -
Walt & Sharyn Hutchens
2121 Maury River Road
Lexington, VA 24450
540-464-8046
sharyn@timbreblue.com
The new law that prevents many national
rescues from operating in Virginia is at
http://leg1.state.va.us/cgi-bin/legp504.exe?031+ful+CHAP1007
"Home-based rescue" is defined
as "any person or organization that accepts (i) more than
12 companion animals or (ii) more than nine companion animals
and more than three unweaned litters of companion animals in a
calendar year for the purpose of finding permanent adoptive homes
for the companion animals and houses the companion animals in
a private residential dwelling or uses a system of housing companion
animals in private residential foster homes."
Since it says "person or organization,"
if WRAP officially operates in Virginia, the law would apply to
the organization, as it definitely rescues more than 12 dogs a
year. The law does not apply to the four individual rescuers here
because none of them takes in 12 animals a year individually.
So the rescuers withdrew from WRAP and WRAP withdrew from the
state. Why?
The new law requires that every member
of the organization (more than 100 people all over the United
States) read and sign a statement specifying that he or she has
never been convicted of animal cruelty, neglect, or abandonment;
these statements must be kept updated by WRAP. The statement must
also be signed by anyone to whom WRAP transfers a dog.
The organization must keep detailed
records of each dog received for two years and submit a summary
to the Virginia State Veterinarian annually on a form provided
by the state.
These
records also must be "made available upon request to the
department, animal control officers, and law-enforcement officers
at mutually agreeable times." Since WRAP's records are maintained
by the national coordinator in Dallas, this would be problematical
at best.
The
membership of WRAP changes frequently--rescuers leave and rescuers
join. To collect signed statements from all these people and keep
them updated, on top of insuring that proper records of dogs are
being kept in the format that one state requires is too
much to ask of a volunteer organization that is already stretched
to the limit. This may not seem unreasonable until you consider
the amount of paperwork it requires a volunteer organization to
maintain for one state. There are 49 other states to consider,
and thanks to the intervention of the Humane Society of the United
States, many of them are busy coming up with their own requirements.
Dog rescue is a public service provided
by people who contribute their own time and money. Regulations
of this type are damaging and will eventually either force rescuers
"underground" or end the practice altogether. Laws
protecting rescued dogs are already in place through animal welfare
and anti-cruelty laws...rescuers are covered under them just as
any other dog owner. The Virginia rescue laws are another
example of an animal rights agenda that has as its end goal the
control of all sources of pets and the eventual end of pet ownership.
For more discussion of this, we invite you to join the Pet-Law
list at Yahoogroups.
The HSUS, incidentally, is an animal
rights organization based in Washington, DC. In spite of its
name, it is not connected to local humane societies or associations.
The Internal Revenue Service form 990 (Return of Organization
Exempt from Income Tax) for HSUS in 2000 reports net assets of
$106,840,986. Their top five executives were paid a total of $949,260
in salaries. Last year Worth magazine rated it among the worst-managed
charities in the United States, noting that it took in over $65
million in 2000 and spent over half of that on fundraising.