Thread: The PAWS Bill
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Old 08-23-2005, 03:09 AM   #1
Baron
Senior Yorkie Talker
 
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 216
Default The PAWS Bill

I don't know if anyone has been watching the progress on the PAWS Bill that is in congress, but if it passes it could mean the end to hobby breeders that breed because they love a breed and want to provide puppies to pet owners. Here is some information on one of the lists. It is long, but please read and contact your senator. It tells you where you can find the information to contact your senator.



I just received this from a Collie person who works on the Hill in
Washington, DC. It might pay us all if we did what she suggests...
Peggy
(and feel free to crosspost this)




In a message dated 8/21/05 9:06:45 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
------@aol.com writes:

I have been listening and reading about the PAWS debate since the bill was
reintroduced in this Congress. I agree with most of the advice floating
around on the Internet but I can tell you that the level of opposition
communicated to Senators on the Agriculture Committee is paltry at best.

I work for a Senator serving on the Agriculture Committee and we have had
very few people contact our offices in opposition to the bill. We have had
hundreds of contacts from supporters. (Mostly from people who don't
understand the
PETA agenda but care deeply about animal welfare.) If it were just a
numbers
game--we would be losing. Thankfully, that is not the primary way most
legislators determine their position but it is a factor.

I would like to make a couple of suggestions:

1. Don't get too hung up on national organizations supporting or opposing
the bill--they don't vote.
2. Don't think you have to write a long treatise on why the bill is a bad
idea--all you need to say is "I'm your constituent and I oppose this bill."
3. Most legislators have numerous offices within a state or congressional
district--call them all. If you're shy, call after business hours and
leave a
message on voice mail.
4. The easiest way to contact your Senator is to go to _www.senate.gov_
(_http://www.senate.gov_ (http://www.senate.gov/) ) and look for your
Senator's website. Visit it and leave
an electronic message. Be specific--refer to the bill by name and number
and register your opposition. (S. 1139; Pet Animal Welfare Act)
5. Pass around a letter at your local kennel club meeting or at a dog show
and get folks to sign it with their addresses and mail it to the Washington
office. Thirty original signatures on a letter means a lot more than a
letter
from the club saying they have a hundred members.
6. Be mindful of the timing. This month things are pretty slow because
the
Senate is in recess. Twenty contacts this week would be noticed. Once the
Senate takes up the Supreme Court nomination in September, a thousand
messages will be overshadowed by the tens of thousands of contacts they
will receive
on that issue.
7. Contact your Congressman and the Representatives from other districts
in
your state. That bill number is H.R. 2669.
8. Neither bill has received much attention in Congress. However, Senator
Santorum (the prime sponsor) is up for reelection and it is very common for
the Senate Leadership to suddenly consider a bill to give the Senator
bragging
rights back home.
9. Call your local congressional offices and invite the local staffer to
see your kennel setup. He or she probably won't have time but at least
they
will know you have nothing to hide--which dispels the supporters statements
that all puppies are reared in appalling conditions.
10. Most legislators are traveling their districts and holding town
meetings. Attend and make a VERY brief statement that you oppose this bill
and
think he or she will too once they understand the impact on his/her
constituents.
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