Indiana pet-breeder standards bill moves forward with funding still undetermined

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A controversial bill to establish regular inspections for pet stores, commercial dog breeders or brokers and certain animal rescue operations got the green light from senators on the Committee on Agriculture on Monday, but lawmakers continued to punt on the question of funding.

The bill passed the committee unanimously and advanced to the full Senate for further consideration.

Local elected officials objected to a major provision of the bill that would usurp local control. The bill would void ordinances in 21 communities, including Indianapolis, across the state that ban stores from selling pets from breeders.

Rep. Beau Baird, R-Greencastle, said he authored the bill to raise the standard of care and combat unethical breeding practices.

“I know you’ll probably hear … that House Bill 1412 could inadvertently lead to the creation of puppy mills. However, it is essential to clarify that this bill is, in fact, anti-puppy mill,” Baird said. “… what this bill is attempting to do is reset state standards.”

Cities including Indianapolis, Carmel and Columbus that passed bans on retail sales of pets only shifted that demand to “unregulated areas in Indiana,” Baird said.

One lawmaker said he believed those cities wouldn’t have sought those bans under the stricter standards of this bill. Senators also added in a maximum $10,000 civil penalty for operators who knowingly or intentionally fail to register with the Indiana State Board of Animal Health.

Testimony in support

The bill attracted a bevy of pet store owners, many of them associated with Petland, the nation’s largest chain of stores selling puppies and other pets, alongside a handful of Amish breeders.

Lori Wilson, the vice president of sales with Uncle Bill’s Pet Centers, said the bill “will make Indiana the best place to get a convenient animal of your choice with healthy genetics.”

“If anyone is against House Bill 1412, one should ask why. Why would anyone be against regulations and standards to raise quality puppies people are looking for?” Wilson said. “Taking away regulated business and pushing consumers to a black market to get a puppy makes no sense.”

John Troyer, an Amish puppy breeder in Topeka, Indiana, said “generations before us deserved that (puppy mill) label because they didn’t do it right,” but he intends to change that reputation.

He said he’s received death threats for reporting his fellow Amish community members for animal care violations.

“I’m dedicated to changing animal welfare,” Troyer said. “I encourage you to vote ‘yes’ because we are the ones that deal with those bad actors behind the scenes and this will help us get rid of them.”

Testimony opposed

But several members of the public blasted committee members for not addressing funding, saying the state board isn’t sufficiently staffed to carry out additional duties. Legislators also have neglected to invest in a statewide spay/neuter program.

Cathi Eagen, the founder and director of the CanINE Express Transport Project, said she’s transported more than 13,000 dogs out of south central Indiana shelters to other states because of pet overpopulation. Contrary to committee member comments, she said breeds ran the gamut and many were considered purebred.

“We all know that the breeder and pet store inspections will not be happening on a regular basis. Don’t expect us to believe that,” Eagen said.

Amy-Jo Sites, the director of Fort Wayne Animal Care and Control, said parts of the bill were unenforceable, including a requirement that consumers commit to spaying and neutering recently purchased animals — which she said the state already mandated but couldn’t achieve due to a shortage of veterinarians.

Additionally, breeders frequently placed purebred animals with her shelter as soon as the mothers were too old to breed—sometimes for dogs only a few years old, she said.

Tom Dell, an at-large member of the Columbus City Council, said his city had decided to prohibit the sales of dogs, cats and bunnies due to concerns about bad breeders even though only one sold those pets.

“You’re taking away local control; you’re telling us what we can do and what we can’t do. Our constituents asked us to do something, we responded to them. We didn’t make it up on our own,” Dell said. “A lot of the things in this bill make sense as far as some of the industries that are out there but when you take control away from us, you don’t allow the locals to even have a say.”

Sarah Simpson, the general counsel for the Board of Animal Health, said the agency already has a voluntary registry for animal shelters with a high adoption rate. In 2023, she said that the board used a $25,000 dedicated fund to conduct 15 inspections for breeders or brokers, all of which were at new or relocated facilities.

“If you look at the inspection section (of the bill), it provides discretion … for our board to determine the frequency. There’s no required amount,” Simpson said, who didn’t testify either way on the bill.

She said there are four animal health specialists who would be conducting the inspections across the state “if we have sufficient funding to do that” but said the agency didn’t currently know how many pet stores were located in Indiana.

“Without a fee at this point, that’s a little bit of an unknown,” Simpson said. “If there (are) fees to support in that ($25,000) dedicated fund moving forward, that would be our staff doing that.”

Lawmakers didn’t rule out revisiting funding next year but didn’t make any commitments.

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9 thoughts on “Indiana pet-breeder standards bill moves forward with funding still undetermined

  1. As much as I despise the autocratic excesses of the modern neo-Dixiecrat party and its bevy of sycophants that comment here routinely on IBJ, I can at least step away from my own prejudices enough to state–without having read the full article this time around (I did read the one from about 10 days ago), that this seems every bit like another example of the state overstepping its authority, treading on municipalities’ rights to manage affairs that are supposed to be municipal in nature. I can say this as well about the special tax district for downtown Indy–or any other downtown-centric legislation–which yields results to which I’m ambivalent (no right turns on red) or deeply opposed (the “no barrier shelter” junkie haven).

    These are still aspects of governance which a city should be allowed to engage in. The State should butt out.

    Would that the aforementioned sycophants would be able to speak with similar moderation when it comes to principles rather than the “by any means necessary” approach favored by today’s left. They won’t show such moderation. But then, they’re much more extreme and hyperpartisan than a classical liberal like me.

    1. Give us those Indiana example, Lauren. The only notable left … left in Indiana is the four corners of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

    2. so basically the state is run by idiots who only pass laws that benefit them and their cronies who buy them IU/Purdue tickets…. but the left is worse?

    3. JJ, the problem is the left in Portland.

      Not Portland Indiana, county seat of Jay County … Portland Oregon.

      That’s what we are supposed to be commenting on … on the website … of the Indianapolis Business Journal. Portland, Oregon.

    4. Frankie, Joe, sweet children everywhere:

      In 2024, of course the left is worse. And I can say this while having broadly supported Dems about 60-70% of the time as recently as the mid 2010s, and while intensely disliking a huge portion of the Indiana GOP. Republicans take a hammer to their genitals repeatedly and then look up with an imploring wince: “Why did that hurt so bad?” And I’ll say it once again: The. State. Should. Butt. Out.

      Beyond that, your reflexive defensiveness proves my point. My entire basis of writing here was to criticize what the Indiana GOP is doing, even though half the bobbleheads here brand me as “far right”.

      But I dedicate even a modicum of criticism to the donkeys, and they get fired up like their President Joe in one of his rare lucid moments. Not a breath to criticize their own party, whose massive shortcomings explain why–even amidst their obvious efforts to rig elections like they always so (Jim Crow habits die hard, or never die)–may still usher in a Grover Cleveland presidency for #45/#47.

      Yet again Joe predictably hides behind the Portland allegations, as though they’re baseless. All you have to do is see the press releases from Boss Hogsett’s toadies; they WANT Indy to be more like Portland OR. And they’re getting their wish. They can’t see the junkie-tent squalor, the tolerance for open human excrement that gives Bangalore a run for its money. The yawning vacancies downtown. Three businesses close and one opens; all the donkeys do is bray: “See? A new business opening! Downtown is coming back!”

      Given that the communitarian orientation of leftism encourages this hivemindedness and punishing people who step out of line, it’s no surprise that the chattering classes on IBJ are just as blind to these third-world conditions as they are in Portland.

    5. That’s never your basis for criticism, Lauren, and it wasn’t in the above either.

      You can’t comment on anything without dragging Democrats into it. A simple story about what happens in Indiana – the uniparty punching down on local governments, both Republicans and Democrats alike, because they’ve got nothing else to offer voters.

      Focus and stay on topic once in a while. And go on being the biggest enabler for the uniparty around while claiming you hate them, just like Beau Baird claiming that this is really an anti-puppy mill bill.

  2. One of the opponents of the bill who testified against it lambasted committee members for playing on their phones during testimony. A rare moment of honestly coming from an Indiana resident delivered to the people in power.

    IMO if a legislator wants to play on their phone, they can stay home and not show up. Or preferably, not hold office, resign, and let someone motivate who wants to do the job into the seat.

    1. Those same legislatures likely spend hours a year on their pedestals lambasting school age children for being on their phone….

      Outrage is usually masked projection when it comes to politicians

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