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Pet Store Puppies Targeted By Animal Welfare Groups

By SUE MANNING   12/13/11 04:11 PM ET   AP

LOS ANGELES -- More puppies are sold at pet stores during the holiday season than any other time of year. Now the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and other groups are stepping up efforts to stop these sales, saying many of these dogs come from puppy mills.

Forty billboards in Los Angeles this month encourage people to fight puppy mills by boycotting pet stores and websites that sell puppies. More than 50,000 people have signed a pledge on the ASPCA's website vowing to uphold the boycott, and the ASPCA has an online database of targeted stores at nopetstorepuppies.com encouraging consumers to shop elsewhere. Consumers can also report a store to the ASPCA, and the organization will verify the source of its puppies, Menkin said.

"We are not just saying `Don't buy a puppy,' but `Don't buy anything in a pet store that sells puppies," said Cori Menkin, senior director of the ASPCA's anti-puppy mills campaign. "If pet stores are not able to turn a profit, they will stop selling puppies."

The Humane Society of the United States, Best Friends Animal Society and many other groups are promoting similar initiatives.

As malls and chains drop the commercial sale of puppies, one change for consumers is an increase in convenient locations for shelter adoptions.

In October, Jack's Pets announced they would no longer sell puppies at their 27 stores in Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana. They are working with shelters to offer in-store adoptions instead. Major chains like PetSmart Inc. and Petco Animal Supplies Inc. stopped selling dogs and cats several years ago, partnering with local shelters and rescues on weekend adoption events. Best Friends has helped several traditional pet stores convert to shelter sales.

Macerich Co., a regional shopping mall company, recently announced a ban on traditional pet stores at its 70 malls. Instead, at the company's mall in Lakewood, Calif., shoppers will find a store called Adopt & Shop, which gets its animals from the Southeast Area Animal Control Authority shelter. On Nov. 25, the store celebrated its 500th adoption, said Aimee Gilbreath, executive director of Found Animals, the organization that runs and subsidizes Adopt & Shop.

Some pet store owners say they're being unfairly maligned.

Jens Larsen, who owns Perfect Pets in Littleton, Colo., is on the ASPCA list and says it's not right. He has been in business for 18 years, sold 1,600 puppies last year and has an A-plus rating with the Better Business Bureau. He gets 80 percent of his dogs from commercial breeders in Nebraska, 10 percent from breeders in Kansas and Oklahoma and 10 percent from two Colorado breeders, he said.

Some animal activists are "radical and fanatical and want to put me out of business," he said. "I obey the law. So do my breeders and the kennels I deal with," Larsen said.

Larsen says that when you are selling 100 puppies a month, there will occasionally be a case of kennel cough or a parasite, and every once in a while, something more serious. But he believes if his dogs were continually getting sick, word would spread and he'd be out of business.

About 2 million puppies are sold online and in U.S. pet stores every year, said Menkin.

The ASPCA and other animal welfare groups have popularized a negative image of commercial dog breeders in recent years, claiming that poor breeding practices and substandard conditions leave some animals with chronic physical ailments, genetic defects or fear of humans.

Whether it's the impact of bad publicity or the recession cutting into purebred dog sales, the number of commercial dog breeders licensed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture is declining, from 3,486 in 2009, to 2,904 in 2010 and 2,205 in 2011, according to USDA spokesman Dave Sacks said.

Licenses in Missouri, with three times more breeders than any other state, dropped from 1,221 in 2009 to 745 this year, Sacks said. Iowa, Oklahoma, Kansas, Arkansas, Ohio and Indiana have between 100 and 300 licensed breeders. Sixteen states have none. Sacks says the USDA protects animals by making unannounced inspections of breeding facilities and by regulating food, care and housing for the animals.

Serina Brant believes her golden retriever, Ali, was a puppy mill dog. When Brant bought the 4-month-old pup 10 years ago from Perfect Pets for $400, Ali's papers had numbers instead of names listed for parents. Her first trip to the vet cost $800 to treat giardia, fleas and eye infections, said Brant, of Littleton, Colo.

Two years later, the dog started limping. X-rays showed hip dysplasia. Surgery, at $12,000 for both hips, was an option but came without guarantees, so Brant chose to medicate the dog instead. Then Ali got arthritis.

For the last six years, Ali has to stop every 50 feet to rest. Because of the medication, "we don't think she's in pain," said Brant. But over the years, the medicine has totaled $8,600.

"I am not going to put a dog down just because she's defective. We have the money to provide for her so we will," she said.

But next time she gets a dog, Brant says, she'll adopt one from a shelter.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST GREEN

LOS ANGELES -- More puppies are sold at pet stores during the holiday season than any other time of year. Now the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and other groups are steppin...
LOS ANGELES -- More puppies are sold at pet stores during the holiday season than any other time of year. Now the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and other groups are steppin...
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maddiemom
Retired teacher and ex-corporate wife.
01:14 PM on 03/12/2012
Not only are you better off buying from reputable local breeders (or having them refer you to someone who raises the breed you want), but you will pay far less than in a pet store for a "pet quality" puppy who may not be a potential show dog, but will be healthy and loving. Usually you will be told why the pup isn't up to show quality.
11:20 AM on 12/31/2011
I guess I will have to not agree with this article. We have 2 cats and a dog currently. In my life I've had 6 cats and 2 dogs. 5 cats came from a shelter, 1 from a breeder. 1 dog came from a shelter, 1 from a local pet store that has been in business with the same family for more then 40 years and gets their pups from local breeders. I believe in saving animals but I also believe it is my choice if I want a specific breed of cat our puppy it's my perogative and right to get what I want. All of our cats and dogs have been awesome parts of our family. Our puppy from the pet store is healthy and loving. Target the pet stores that don't care but don't lump all pet stores into one category as bad places if they sell puppies. They are all not the same just as all people are not the same. Don't judge based on preconceived notions, judge as individuals with full knowledge and facts.
11:24 AM on 12/29/2011
My daughter was tricked into purchasing a pet store puppy she was allowed to hold and fall in love with - for over one thousand dollars! She told us the staff promised the dog had been raised in a home, so I went to the store "undercover" the next day and asked about the animals' origins. Yep, my kid was right. "Born and raised by breeders in homes," said the store owner, and after I did further research, it turns out these "homes" are the houses the breeders live in, a good distance away from the cages and horrendous living conditions of these poor animals. "Home breeders" indeed...our puppy had reisistant giardia, toenails that had curled into her footpads and a host of other medical problems. "Sure," the store said..."We'll take her back!" But considering where she'd come from, we had no confidence in what her fate would be if we returned her. Thank goodness, years later, she is healthy, loving, and often part of my FB profile photo. But as this article points out, don't be fooled. There are no "home breeders" in the midwest. Breeders just stop there for coffee and lunch in between loading mistreated animals into trucks headed for both coasts.
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NJBill
I didn't build that!
07:47 PM on 12/26/2011
I usually think these people are nuts (the animal rights people) but in this case they have a point. There are SO many dogs and cats sitting in shelters right now because people got them and didn't want them or can't keep them or what have you. So breeding more of them to sell is only going to put MORE unwanted pets out there that will eventually be destroyed. If someone truly wants a purebred there are people who breed only a few of them to sell - maybe at shows or some such place.
12:53 PM on 12/21/2011
Would have been nice (and important) if the writer had included some more quotes and FACTS from the other side, and not so much from the pet store owner in Colorado with the A-plus rating, who feels "unfairly maligned." Just knowing about the very existence of a commercial breeding dog (which so many are still in the dark about and why pet stores continue to sell dogs in 2011) might have better explained why animal welfare groups have "popularized a negative image of commercial dog breeders (puppy mills) in recent years." Most people who are educated and in the know, regard the breeding dogs that are caged in wire for most or all of their lives churning out pet store puppies (many sickly) in freezing cold or burning heat with no relief, comfort, exercise or human contact...as the ones being treated unfairly...and the "radical, fanatical" animal activists as simply decent human beings that are speaking up for the voiceless and doing the right thing.
11:29 AM on 12/21/2011
I have been working with shelters for years as a volunteer and also as an artist. I have seen so many dogs who have come from puppy mills who are dumped in shelters after they are not productive enough. I have 2 dogs of my own that came from horrid breeders. One has a heart defect and the other was so matted in her own hair, feces and engorged ticks that she had to be sedated to be shaved which took hours... her puppies had just been sold before I saved her.. she was full of worms and has lyme disease as well. I do not understand why people continue to support puppy mills. There is so much information out there showing the truth and I am appalled at how people still buy them. I have been making art about shelter animals for some time now. I see large numbers of purebred animals in shelters- huge amounts. There is no reason to buy them when there are so many needing homes. A quick search on petfinder can give you a better picture of that- simply type in a breed.. you may see a few.. you may see hundreds.. you may see thousands needing homes. I have a blog that I post many pictures of the shelter animals I have met.. please look at them and see the variety.. they die because people continue to support puppy mills. http://projectfifty-two.blogspot.com/
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11:15 AM on 12/21/2011
FINALLY Huffpost does an article on this! Here's a Black Eyed Peas video that says it all! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IQxKqD-QX9M&feature=player_embedded
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kimo32
I am at a loss for words....
09:48 AM on 12/19/2011
I agree with not selling animals that come from so-called puppy mills.....but can there not be a meeting between both...meaning that if a person wants a certain type of dog.....can they not be made available for sale in a location that can bring in those breeds from legitimate, authorized and certified breeders.......if not than people will be going to long distance breeders that are not authorized or monitored. we liscense people to be able to sell medical equipment and hot dogs on the streets...should breeders be liscensed as well.....I work with pet rescue groups...i am a professional pet sitter and I have several animals of my own....honestly.....taking on a rescue dog from a shelter can be very difficult at best.....i just saw two rescues tthat I know will not be placed...breaks my heart........difficult and tragic situation regarding dogs from shelters and rescues.
11:41 AM on 12/21/2011
If someone wants a specific breed of dog, they can get one from a responsible, reputable breeder. This is someone who puts the health and welfare of the parents and puppies above profit. They get health and genetic testing, keep the dogs in their homes, show or compete their dogs, are often active in breed rescue, have a waiting list of potential owners *before puppies are conceived*, require contracts with new owners that the dog will be returned to the breeder if the owner can not keep them, at any time and for any reason... In short, they are responsible for the dogs they bring into the world for their whole life. The clincher here is that often responsible breeders don't charge much more than puppy mills and pet stores.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
10:35 PM on 12/17/2011
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purebred_(dog)#Health_issues

Mutts are better,
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imofanopinion
01:51 AM on 12/26/2011
Mutts are not better...the only reason people think they have less problems then purebred dogs is because NO ONE ever test mutts. You do not know if the parents or littermates had bad hips, were deaf, went blind, had congenital problems affecting body control...etc etc. You know about the problems with purebreds ONLY because those concerned breeders care enough to test their dogs to make sure they DO NOT perpetuate the continuance of the problem by breeding dogs and parents affected.
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bcmom
Stop breeding puppies
10:27 PM on 12/17/2011
Buy them now and get them at a shelter or animal control in January. This is what pet stores depend on impulse buying. Oh, they are so cute. Then you get them home, chew on everything in sight, cry all night, pee and poop every 30 minutes, are not healthy and inbred. Wallah you have a puppy in a shelter. The only one who has benefitted is the pet store owner. The puppy dies.
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03:43 PM on 12/16/2011
You know what?, this is just a stupid topic.
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averagezoe
Don't breed or buy while homeless animals die!
04:33 PM on 12/16/2011
You know what? You are an idiot.
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05:11 PM on 12/16/2011
That may well be.
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Dan Crabtree
01:35 PM on 12/16/2011
Why are liberal actist always right in there frame of mind and tradition is always wrong?Why do we need activist for any anything?
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11:36 AM on 12/21/2011
Well, you might need an activist to help you to spell! (And if you looked at the history of the United States, every great social movement started with activists! If it wasn't for activists, women would not have the vote and African Americans would still have to drink out of separate drinking fountains. You still think they are not necessary?
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01:15 PM on 12/16/2011
Put them all down and end this money drain during an economic crisis. Why do you think the numbers are on the rise, peoples situations change and Fido's gotta go.
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11:38 AM on 12/21/2011
Please don't procreate! Because human overpopulation is the biggest drain on our economic crisis and I can tell by your post that you for sure should not bring any kids into the world! Please, do us all a favor, I beg you!!
01:08 PM on 12/16/2011
How sad!!! The same goes for cats, too. People spend $300 and up on a purebred kitten, when you can get a perfectly loving, adorable kitten at the Humane Society or adoption center. Sure, purebreds are beautiful (well, most of them are), but many purebred cats and dogs have genetic defects and health problems due to inbreeding and a small gene pool. I have two tabbies, the older of which I adopted from the Humane Society about six years ago, when he was just ten months old. He's such a sweet boy who loves cuddles, and adores anyone with hands that are capable of petting and opening cat food (and anyone who has ever met him thinks that he has the most beautiful stripes!). My little guy, who is about three months old, was a stray found underneath a porch with his three sisters. He is one spunky, energetic little fluffball of fun, who will play with anything that isn't nailed down and will chase a laser pointer to the other side of the country. My point here is that you don't need to empty your pocket to get yourself an awesome pet - I've got two! Go to your local pet adoption center and find your pet there. Those places are overrun with amazing cats and dogs who are desperate for someone to love them, and they will beg for someone to take them to a new forever home.
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soapboxguy
01:04 PM on 12/16/2011
The irony for me is that I too refused to go to a pet store -- and thought we were doing the right thing by rescuing a sweet dog from a shelter -- but we've put nearly $10K into our dog's vet bills ever since because of pre-existing problems nobody knew about (apparently). So no matter where you get a pet -- and if you take your caretaking responsibility seriously -- it's still a crap shoot!
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imofanopinion
01:59 AM on 12/26/2011
Sad thing that no one mentions is that many shelter animals come with baggage...not their fault but it happens. There are so many myths about purebreds vs shelters I am amazed. Many animals end up in shelters because they had problems -- either temperament, behavior or health. The past owners did not want to invest their tine and energies so dumped that poor animal at a shelter. Shelters do not have funds to do testings, heck half the time they do not even know the breed they list. I hate that the animals fanatics like PETA tell lies about animal...heck, they never donate part of the millions of dollars they receive to shelters or rescues. The CEOs an upper management live quite well but no monies go to physically helping animals...sad is that