Montcalm County Considers Contract with Animal Dealer
January 23, 2009
JENKINTOWN, PA—The American Anti-Vivisection Society (AAVS) is urging
Montcalm County, Michigan to halt the relinquishment of animals from shelters to
research, a practice called pound seizure. County Commissioners are currently
considering renewing Montcalm County Animal Control’s contract with R&R Research,
a United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) licensed class B dealer. Dogs and
cats given to class B dealers are then sold at high profit to research and educational
facilities. There are no restrictions on the types of procedures they can be used for and
many will be used in invasive and painful experiments.
Through FOIA and state open records requests, AAVS was able to obtain legal records
documenting the plights of animals obtained for experimentation from shelters, including
Cruella, a shepherd mix who was taken from Montcalm County Animal Control by R&R
Research and sold to the University of Florida where she used in several experiments and
eventually killed.
“Cruella was obviously someone’s pet. She was spayed and found wearing a collar,”
said AAVS Executive Director, Tracie Letterman. “She is a real life example of a lost
family pet ending up in a research laboratory. People think this kind of thing does not
happen anymore, but clearly, it does.” Read Cruella's Story.
When animals, like Cruella, are sold into research, it erodes the very core of a shelter’s
purpose, violating the public’s trust. Surveys indicate that if a person knows pound
seizure occurs, they are less likely to utilize the facility or report a stray animal. This
results in increased suffering of animals who should be rescued or removed from their
current situation and exacerbates an overwhelming pet overpopulation crisis.
Montcalm County is one of the four remaining Michigan counties that continues to send
its relinquished or stray animals to research facilities. “We urge Montcalm County
Commissioners to explore more humane options for reducing the number of homeless
animals in need of shelter, including spay and neuter programs and proactive adoption
policies, said AAVS Policy Analyst, Vicki Katrinak. “Sending shelter animals to
research is clearly not the answer.”
Download a pdf of the press release
Media Contact: Vicki Katrinak, 215-887-0816, vkatrinak@aavs.org
The American Anti-Vivisection Society (AAVS) is the oldest animal advocacy and educational
organization in the United States dedicated to ending experiments on animals in research,
testing, and education. Founded in Philadelphia in 1883, AAVS pursues its objectives
through legal and effective advocacy, education, and support of the development of nonanimal
alternative methods. — On the web at aavs.org and BanPoundSeizure.org.
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