Legislation Information
Pending Legislation
Type in the word "equine" in the search box to locate bills, (proposed legislation) relating to horses.
Federal Laws
Proposed regs will legalize every inhumane practice identified in the transport of horses to slaughter!
Doubles will be legal for 5 years AFTER the proposed regs go into effect. It has already been 4 1/2 years, that makes for 10 years of the continued use of doubles after this legislation passed..
EPN's Comments
on Proposed Regulations For the 1996 Commercial Transportation of Horses To Slaughter Act
CA Equine Council's
Comments on the Proposed Regulations For the 1996 Commercial Transportation of Horses To Slaughter Act
State Laws
Proposition 6,
The PROHIBITION of Horse Slaughter and Sale of Horsemeat for Human Consumption Act Of 1998, Does Not Violate The Commerce Clause
Horsemeat Laws
1996 Commercial Transportation Of Horses To Slaughter Act
December 7, 2001
Final Rule Commercial Transportation of Horses to Slaughter Act
American Horse Council, American Horse Protection Association, & Humane Society of US
propose to legalize every inhumane practice identified in the transport of horses to slaughter & put the very people identified as the abusers, the "killer buyers" in charge of the horses!
Proposed Regulations For the 1996 Commercial Transportation of Horses To Slaughter Act
USDA Animal & Plant Health Inspection Service, APHIS
Approval of Livestock Facilities;
Interstate Movement of EIA Reactors
USDA Food Safety Inspection Service, FSIS, Regulations
Biological Residues in Horses;
Slaughter of Foaling Mares;
Slaughter of Sick Horses;
USDA APHIS Humane Slaughter Act
State Horse Transportation Laws
AZ Transport Law
CA Transport Law
CT Transport Law
MA Transport Law
MN Transport Law
NY Transport Law
Ag and Markets, Section 359-a
Horses inside double deck cattle trailer stopped by the NYSP. The owner was later convicted & fined $3000.00.
VA Transport Law
Vermont Transport Law
PA Anti Cruelty Law
Title 18, Section 5511
Sign Posted at PA Horse Auctions is NOT the Law!
Sign outside auctions is incorrect!
Sign posted outside 2 PA horse auctions regarding the PA Anti Cruelty Statute is incorrect! " Maybe the posting of this sign has something to do with "the agreement" that the auctions and the PA SPCA have with each other...
U.S. Anti-Cruelty Statutes
PA Domestic Animal Act
Licensing of Dealers & Haulers
EIA Regulations, Coggins Test
PA Dead Animal Act
Requirements for Removal of Dead Animals
PA Animal Markets
General Provisions
Records
Transactions From Trucks
IL Horsemeat Act
Texas Law
Sale of Horsemeat for Human Consumption
Prohibits Sale of Horsemeat For Human Consumption
Texas Attorney General Cornyn States TX Law
Prohibiting Sale of Horsemeat Applies to the 2 Texas Horse Slaughterhouses!
Links
California Voters "Just Say Neigh" to Horse Slaughter!
HoofPAC
Shop online at IGive.com with over 400 great stores you know & love- including Back In the Saddle! Up to 26% of the purchase price is donated to the EPN!
The EPN gets $5 extra the first time you shop!
PayPal accepts credit cards!
Please send your tax deductible donation to the:
Equine Protection Network, Inc.,
P. O. Box 232, Friedensburg, PA, 17933.
Shop for CD's at CDRush.com & the EPN Benefits!
Put "EPN" in the Coupon Code box when you place your order.
Now you can save money on your favorite music and help the horses at the same time!
HoofPAC is the political action committee that has been formed to end the slaughter of America's horses. Cathleen Doyle, founder of HoofPAC, led the successful Save The Horses campaign in 1998 that made the slaughter of California's horses a felony.
Page last revised on:
2/23/2005
|
Legislation Information
This section of our website has information on action you can take to help the horses; pending legislation; USDA Regulations on the handling and slaughter of horses; individual state transport laws; California's Prop 6 which banned the sale of CA horses to slaughter, (Yes, CA's horse industry is still thriving!) and other related information.
Many states have their laws, (statutes or codes) online. You can check on the status of legislation affecting horses by going to your state legislatures website and doing a search. Type in the word "equine" or "horse". Often you can communicate with your state and or United States Senators and Representatives by e-mail. Remember though to include your full name and address in your e-mail.
Getting Involved
- Learn your state's laws.
- What horse organizations in your state represent the horses industry in the state legislature?
- Do they represent you on horse welfare issues? Many state horse councils are in favor of horse slaughter and do not take a strong stand on the enforcement of anti-cruelty laws as they apply to horses.
- If the horse industry organizations in your state do not represent your views on horse slaughter and horse welfare, write to your state representatives and let them know that these organizations do NOT represent you, a member of the horse industry, on this issue.
- Inform the horse organizations that you are a member of that you are
opposed to the use of double cattle trailers to transport horses & opposed
to the slaughter of horses for human consumption.
State
Statute
New Jersey State Statue Dead Animals
4:5-11. Disposal
of dead or slaughtered animals; disposal for food a misdemeanor
When,
by reason of the locality of an infected animal
or
herd within a city, or by reason of frozen ground or extreme heat,
it is, in the judgment of the department of agriculture, inexpedient
or impossible to bury any such dead animal
or slaughtered animal
on
the premises, the department may authorize any veterinarian acting for
it to slash the skin and cut the flesh of the animal and,
either under his direct oversight, or that of a city board of health,
or contractor for the disposal of dead
carcasses,
to give over the same to the use of a bone-boiling or glue or other
establishment for the disposal of dead animals,
but in no case shall the animal
or any part thereof, be disposed of for food,
and any such disposal of the same shall make the party concerned guilty
of a misdemeanor and punishable by a fine of not more than one hundred dollars,
or imprisonment in the county jail for a period not exceeding six months.
4:5-12. Post-mortem
examination of dead or slaughtered animals
If,
between October first and May first of any year, a veterinarian who has been
regularly graduated in veterinary medicine, desires to make a post-mortem examination
of an animal he has attended or at the request of the owner of an animal
that has died within the city limits, he may do so, if the examination is
made within twenty hours of the death or slaughter of the animal.
In every such case he shall notify the city scavenger,
or remover of carcasses of animals, of the hour of the examination, and
the scavenger shall arrange to remove the carcass in not more than three
hours after the beginning of the examination.
4:5-13. Authority
of department
When
a county, city, township or district is threatened with a contagious
or infectious disease among animals, or poultry, to such an extent
as to seem to require more general precautions, the department
of agriculture may for such time as it shall deem necessary and
proper, quarantine such county, city, township or district and
prohibit the bringing of any animal or poultry, subject to such
contagious or infectious disease, into such county, city, township
or district, or the removal of any such animal, or poultry, out of or from
one place to another within the county, city, township or district without inspection
and a written permit signed by the department or its duly constituted
agent or representative.
|