͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏To prevent cruelty to animals, we promote enacting and enforcing good public policies. To enact good laws, we must elect good lawmakers, and that’s why we remind voters which candidates care about our issues and which ones don’t. If you’d like to unsubscribe, click here. [[link removed]]   
[link removed] [[link removed]]Monthly Accomplishments and Update
Animal Wellness Action
Animal Wellness Action, the Animal Wellness Foundation, and the Center for a Humane Economy
May-June 2024Summary
 * 
   Animal
   advocates
   made
   their
   presence
   known
   at
   Adidas’s
   general
   shareholder
   meeting
   in
   Fürth
   and
   zeroed
   in
   on
   its
   sourcing
   of
   kangaroo
   skins.
   At
   the
   meeting,
   CEO
   Björn
   Gulden
   signaled
   that
   a
   policy
   change
   may
   be
   imminent,
   a
   key
   goal
   of
   our 
   Kangaroos
   Are
   Not
   Shoes 
   campaign.
 * 
   There
   has
   been
   a
   drumbeat
   of
   arrests
   of
   animal
   fighters
   and
   shutdowns
   of
   pits.
   Still,
   more
   enforcement
   is
   required,
   and
   we
   are
   asking
   Congress
   to
   pass
   the
   FIGHT
   Act,
   now
   endorsed
   by
   the
   National
   Sheriffs’
   Association
   and
   the
   National
   District
   Attorneys
   Association,
   together
   representing
   5,000
   elected
   law
   enforcement
   personnel.
 * 
   A
   political
   committee
   formed
   by
   Animal
   Wellness
   Action
   will
   submit
   approximately
   180,000
   signatures
   on
   July
   3
   to
   qualify
   a
   November
   ballot
   measure
   in
   Colorado
   to
   ban
   trophy
   hunting
   of
   mountain
   lions
   and
   bobcats
   and
   commercial
   trapping
   of
   bobcats—the
   first
   statewide
   ballot
   measure
   for
   animals
   since
   Prop
   12
   (farm
   animals)
   and
   Amendment
   13
   (ban
   on
   greyhound
   racing
   in
   Florida)
   in
   2018.
 * 
   Vermont
   banned
   trade
   in
   bear
   bile
   and
   bear
   gallbladders,
   as
   we
   press
   for
   a
   national
   ban
   to
   cover
   outlier
   states
   and
   imports
   and
   exports
   of
   trafficked
   bear
   parts.
 * 
   The
   U.S.
   Supreme
   Court
   declined
   to
   hear
   a
   challenge
   to
   the
   newly
   implemented
   Horse
   Racing
   Integrity
   and
   Safety
   Act,
   allowing
   the
   national
   horse
   safety
   law
   to
   remain
   in
   place
   and
   protect
   horses
   in
   competition
   from
   catastrophic
   injuries
   and
   death.
 * 
   We
   have
   enlisted
   132
   organizations
   and
   the
   Commission
   of
   Public
   Lands
   in
   Washington
   state
   as
   we
   continue
   to
   fight
   a
   plan
   by
   the
   U.S.
   Fish
   and
   Wildlife
   Service
   to
   execute
   an
   inhumane,
   unworkable,
   and
   costly
   proposal
   to
   spend
   nearly
   a
   quarter
   of
   a
   billion
   dollars
   to
   kill
   nearly
   a
   half-million
   barred
   owls
   over
   the
   next
   three
   decades.
KANGAROOS ARE NOT SHOES
Adidas CEO calls kangaroo killing ‘terrible’ and signals that policy change looms
In May, at its general shareholder meeting in Fürth, Germany, Adidas CEO Björn Gulden acknowledged [[link removed]] that the commercial industry of killing kangaroos to make shoes is “terrible” and announced [[link removed]] that the company may “switch faster than you think” toward fabrics not made from kangaroos. Gulden was leading Puma in March 2023 when that company announced it would end its sourcing of kangaroo skins. Nike and then New Balance followed Puma’s pledge. (The Center is cautious about Adidas pledges, since it reneged on a promise 10 years ago to exit the kangaroo-skin trade.
The Center worked with the German-based Animal Rebellion on the disruption, along with organizing questions from shareholders. Meanwhile, the Center underscored with Adidas [[link removed]] that there are very practical consequences of its sourcing policy. We reported that a jogger rescued a 6- month-old joey from inside the pouch of its decapitated mother in Queensland, Australia. The jogger heard cries coming from the remnants of a commercial killing site—where two adult kangaroos and a wallaroo had been beheaded. We’ve long pointed out that the shooting kills hundreds of thousands of lactating females with dependent young, dooming joeys in the pouch or at the feet of their slain mothers.
If you support our work, please consider making a contribution to Animal Wellness Action so we can continue to fight for animals. [[link removed]]
DONATE [[link removed]]   
ANIMAL FIGHTING IS THE PITS
National Sheriffs’ Assoc. and National District Attorneys Assoc. Endorse FIGHT Act
The National Sheriffs’ Association [[link removed]] and the National District Attorneys Association—representing more than 5,000 elected sheriffs and district attorneys in our nation’s 3,100 counties—have endorsed [[link removed]] the FIGHT Act, H.R. 2742 [[link removed]] /S. 1529. Meanwhile, more of their county sheriffs and district attorneys [[link removed]] are busting animal fighting operations, with record numbers of arrests. We continue to point out that trafficking of cockfighting birds is a key feature of America’s border crisis [[link removed]] .
Meanwhile, Animal Wellness Action is active in opposing law enforcement officials protecting animal fighters. After we worked to defeat long-time dogfighter Stoney Greene [[link removed]] , the chairman of the Wilkes County Board of Commissioners, in his run for the Republican nomination for the North Carolina House seat, he’s now resigned from the board altogether. In Oklahoma, voters threw out two pro-cockfighting sheriffs—in Atoka and McCurtain counties. Sadly, Carter County Sheriff Chris Bryant, who has worked diligently to bust illegal cockfighting rings [[link removed]] in his county in Oklahoma, acting in some cases on tips from Animal Wellness Action and our partner SHARK, lost a heartbreaking race. He and his opponent ended in a tie in the Republican primary on June 18—2,569 votes apiece. Bryant lost his post after county election officials pulled one of the two names out of a hat to decide the race.
Also in Oklahoma, we defeated all bills [[link removed]] to overturn Oklahoma’s voter-approved anti-cockfighting law [[link removed]] . Remarkably, the state’s leading cockfighting lawmaker, State Rep. J.J. Humphrey, still had the temerity to issue a welcome video for participants at an annual gathering of the World Association of Cockfighting Breeders [[link removed]] . “I appreciate all that you’re doing worldwide to save this industry,” Humphrey says in the video [[link removed]] .
HALTING TROPHY HUNTING
We’re submitting 180,000 signatures for anti-trophy-hunting ballot measure
Cats Aren’t Trophies (CATs), a political committee that Animal Wellness Action helped form in Colorado, is on the cusp of submitting 180,000 signatures of registered voters to qualify a ballot measure to ban trophy hunting of mountain lions [[link removed]] and commercial trapping of native bobcats [[link removed]] . If this measure qualifies, it will be the first animal welfare ballot measure [[link removed]] to appear on a statewide ballot since Prop 12 (anti-confinement measure in California) and Amendment 13 (greyhound racing ban in Florida) in 2018. A major fight will ensue between our groups and the NRA and Safari Club International.
By creating a law—like statutes to oppose cruelty to animals or animal fighting—we can stop trophy hunters [[link removed]] and commercial trappers [[link removed]] from slaying as many as 2,500 native cats a year in Colorado. If enacted, the policy will spare 25,000 wild cats over the next decade.
PROTECTING BEARS
Vermont bans trade in bear bile and gallbladders
Animal Wellness Action led passage of legislation in Vermont [[link removed]] to prohibit the sale of bear bile and other internal organs used in Traditional Chinese Medicine. The measure aligns Vermont with more than 40 other states to restrict trade in gallbladders and bile to halt poaching.
A key partner organization—Protect Our Wildlife Vermont—documented trafficking of bear gallbladders and bile within the borders of the Green Mountain state, and that revelation motivated the legislative fight. The extraction of these bodily fluids involves killing wild bears or “farming” bears and keeping them in extreme confinement, driving poaching in the wild.
Animal Wellness Action is working on national legislation to forbid any interstate or foreign trade in bear gallbladders and bile. In 2022, the Chinese Ministry of Health controversially endorsed bear bile as a palliative treatment for COVID-19, potentially exacerbating the exploitation of bears worldwide. Bear farms, notorious for their inhumane practices, continue to operate in China and other countries and pose a threat to both captive and wild bear populations.
NO DOPING IN HORSE RACING
SCOTUS lets key federal appellate court ruling stand on national horse safety law
The U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear a challenge [[link removed]] to the Horse Racing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA), rejecting an appeal from horse-racing interests who do not want to submit to comprehensive anti-doping rules. As a result, track safety standards for Thoroughbreds in competition remain in place across most of the nation. The continued implementation of the national law that Animal Wellness Action worked to pass in 2020 is vital for the well-being of horses, jockeys, and drivers. America’s racetracks should not be routine crash sites.
Several horse racing industry groups challenged HISA by filing the appeal that came to SCOTUS from the Sixth Circuit ruling. Since Thoroughbred tracks began complying with HISA, racing-related deaths have declined significantly—by 38 percent according to one metrics report for 2024. Racetracks operating under HISA’s rules and running races in the first quarter reported 0.84 racing-related equine fatalities per 1,000 starts, compared to 1.35 racing-related equine fatalities per 1,000 starts in the first quarter of 2023.
Not all Thoroughbred tracks are under HISA control, however, as racing commissions in several states refuse to comply, including those in Texas, Louisiana [[link removed]] , and West Virginia. In those racing jurisdictions, deaths continue to mount. It’s our goal to see that tracks in those states and the harness-racing industry opt into the track safety program. Nine accidents have occurred at eight harness-racing tracks since May 8, leading to the deaths of seven horses and trips to the hospital for seven drivers.
SPARING OWLS
We stand against a federal plan to kill half-million barred owls
The list of organizations signing our letter in opposition to a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service plan to kill nearly 500,000 barred owls in the Pacific Northwest has now swelled to 132 [[link removed]] and now includes 20 local Audubon society chapters, including several in Washington State. The agency says the goal of the plan is to reduce competition with spotted owls.
In late June, Animal Wellness Action won the support of Hilary S. Franz, Commissioner of Public Lands for Washington state, who planned this impractical idea [[link removed]] . “I don’t believe that a decades-long plan to kill nearly half-a-million barred owls across 14 million acres of land represents a solution that is absolutely viable, affordable or capable,” she said in a video [[link removed]] that was part of a June 20 webinar for Animal Wellness Action.
“How can we prevent the surviving barred owls from simply recolonizing and repopulating the very areas we are trying to preserve?” said Commissioner Franz, who manages three million acres of land in Washington. “I think we can do better, and we have too many questions that need to be answered.” Her letter is posted here [[link removed]] .
Our webinar [[link removed]] also featured former USFWS wildlife biologist Kent Livezey, who pegged the cost of the kill plan at $235 million—making it one of the most expensive endangered-species management projects ever. He noted in one of his dozen peer-reviewed publications that the biggest-ever raptor killing plan by the federal government targeted 40 birds of prey. But that was in 2010, before the Service started killing barred owls. The current plan targeting barred owls is 12,000 times more than that. “To say that this is unprecedented is an understatement,” he said.
UPDATES ON ITEMS FROM PRIOR REPORTS
 * 
   BANNING
   BEAR
   BAITING: 
   The
   Biden
   Administration
   has
   banned
   bear
   baiting
   on
   21
   million
   acres
   of
   national
   preserves
   in
   Alaska–with
   a
   collective
   land
   area
   matching
   the
   size
   of
   South
   Carolina.
   While
   this
   is
   an
   unmistakable
   gain
   that
   we
   advocated
   aggressively
   to
   secure,
   the
   Administration
   stripped
   out
   a
   series
   of
   other
   protective
   measures
   it
   had
   included
   in
   its
   original
   proposed
   rulemaking
   to
   protect
   bears,
   wolves,
   and
   other
   predators
   on
   National
   Park
   Service
   lands
   in
   our
   nation’s
   biggest
   and
   wildest
   state.
   The
   agency
   left
   open
   the
   possibility
   of
   addressing
   other
   issue
   it
   left
   out
   of
   the 
   final
   rule
   [[link removed]] 
   ,
   including
   provisions
   to
   ban
   killing
   wolves
   and
   bears,
   including
   their
   pups
   and
   cubs,
   in
   their
   dens;
   prohibiting
   the
   shooting
   of
   swimming
   caribou;
   and
   halting
   the
   use
   of
   dogs
   in
   hunting
   bears.
   While
   it’s
   a
   moment
   to
   celebrate
   the
   ban
   on
   baiting
   of
   black
   bears
   and
   brown
   bears,
   no
   National
   Park
   Service
   lands
   should
   permit
   other
   extreme
   practices
   targeting
   predators.
 * 
   Cage-Free
   Future. 
   In
   spite
   of
   our
   organizing
   sign-on
   letters
   from
   more
   than
   200
   Democrats
   and
   Republicans
   in
   Congress
   opposing
   the
   EATS
   Act—which
   would
   overturn
   Prop
   12
   and
   other
   state
   farm
   animal
   protection
   laws—the
   House
   Agriculture
   Chairman
   has 
   inserted
   it
   [[link removed]] 
   into
   his
   version
   of
   the
   Farm
   bill.
   That
   Farm
   bill
   will
   have
   a
   tough
   time
   advancing
   with
   our
   opposition
   to
   it,
   along
   with
   opposition
   from
   other
   key
   stakeholders.
 * 
   Protecting
   Wolves. 
   In
   July,
   we’ll
   work
   with
   allies
   in
   Congress
   to
   introduce
   legislation
   to
   ban
   using
   snowmobiles
   and
   other
   ground-
   based
   motor
   vehicles
   to
   run
   down
   wolves
   and
   other
   wildlife
   on
   federal
   lands,
   after
   Cody
   Roberts
   ran
   down
   a
   wolf
   and
   grievously
   wounded
   her
   in
   Daniel,
   Wyo.
   The
   Snowmobiles
   Aren’t
   Weapons
   (SAW)
   Act
   is
   modeled
   on
   a
   prohibition
   in
   place
   in
   Minnesota
   since
   1986
   that
   bans
   the
   horrific
   practices
   of
   “whacking”
   wolves
   and
   coyotes.
   Hunting
   writer
   Ted
   Williams
   has
   already 
   penned
   columns
   [[link removed]] 
   in
   the
   Northern
   Rockies
   noting
   that
   a
   prohibition
   using
   snowmobiles
   and
   trucks
   to
   run
   down
   animals
   is
   overdue.
 * 
   Rescuing
   Dogs. 
   In
   May,
   the
   U.S.
   Centers
   for
   Disease
   Control
   and
   Prevention
   issued
   a 
   final
   rule
   [[link removed]] 
   ,
   tightening
   restrictions
   on
   imports
   of
   dogs.
   The
   final
   rule
   “requires
   for
   all
   dog
   imports:
   a
   microchip,
   six-month
   minimum
   age
   requirement
   for
   admission,
   and
   importer
   submission
   of
   a
   CDC
   import
   form
   ( 
   CDC
   Dog
   Import
   Form 
   ).”
   While
   this
   policy
   brings
   a
   major
   benefit—a
   practical
   ban
   on
   the
   import
   of
   puppy
   mill
   dogs
   from
   foreign
   nations—it
   also 
   imposes
   substantial
   burdens
   on
   charities
   [[link removed]] 
   doing
   international
   dog
   rescue
   and
   seeking
   a
   new
   chance
   for
   dogs
   in
   the
   United
   States.
   In
   addition,
   it
   places 
   a
   burden
   on
   Foreign
   Service
   and
   military
   personnel
   [[link removed]] 
   struggling
   to
   hold
   onto
   their
   pets
   as
   they
   return
   to
   their
   country.
   With
   this
   rulemaking,
   the
   CDC
   has 
   made
   a
   haywire
   risk
   assessment
   [[link removed]] 
   ,
   taking
   a
   hyper-protective
   approach
   to
   the
   low
   risk
   of
   imports
   of
   rabies-infected
   animals
   while
   doing
   virtually
   nothing
   to
   address
   acute
   domestic
   risks
   from
   U.S.-based
   mink
   farms
   and
   illegal
   cockfighting
   farms.
   Mink
   farms
   are
   known
   to
   spread
   SARS-CoV-2
   variants
   and
   H5N1,
   while
   Mexico-based
   cockfighting
   farms
   have
   launched
   10
   documented
   U.S.
   outbreaks
   of
   virulent
   Newcastle
   Disease.
   U.S.-based
   cockfighters
   pose
   a
   threat
   in
   further
   spreading
   H5N1,
   which
   already
   lays
   claims
   as
   costliest
   zoonotic
   disease
   outbreak
   in
   American
   history.
   
   
Wayne Pacelle [[link removed]]   Wayne Pacelle            
                                                                                                        President                
                                                                                                        Animal Wellness Action                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 
[[link removed]] DONATE NOW [[link removed]]                                                                                                                                                     
[[link removed]] WEBSITE [[link removed]]                                                                                                                                                                                                  
[link removed] [[link removed]]   [link removed] [[link removed]]   [link removed] [[link removed]]      
Animal Wellness Action | 611 Pennsylvania Ave SE #136 | Washington, DC 20003                                                                                                                                                                                                     
If you would like to manage your subscription or contribution history, please log into your self-service portal here. [[link removed]]                                                                                                 
If you need to you can unsubscribe here: unsubscribe: [link removed]                                                                                                                                                                                                                      
You can also click here to donate [[link removed]] .