ACTION ALERT:
Contact:
Dr. Robert Gibbens
Director, Animal Welfare Operations, USDA-APHIS
[email protected]
[email protected]
Please levy the MAXIMUM FINE against Envigo RMS LLC for their blatant
disregard of the Animal Welfare Act when their negligence allowed hundreds
of puppies to die without discovering a cause of death. Many of the puppies
bodies could not be examined by a veterinarian because they had begun to
decompose. Adult dogs were injured in fights due to faulty enclosures. Their
behavior should NOT be tolerated and MUST be punished to the fullest extent
of the law.
Envigo's Breeder license must be revoked and this company must also receive
the maximum fine allowable under the Animal Welfare Act $10,000 per
infraction/per animal.
Warner, Kaine: Revoke Va. breeder's license for 'horrific' abuse of dogs
From Andrew Cain, Richmond.com, March 31, 2022
Sens. Mark Warner and Tim Kaine are urging a federal agency to suspend
and move to revoke the license of Envigo’s Cumberland County facility,
condemning its “continued horrific mistreatment” of beagle dogs and puppies
it breeds for research.
The senators said that under federal law, the U.S. Department of
Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service could seek up to
$730,000 in penalties from Envigo “for its repeated noncompliance” with the
Animal Welfare Act.
The senators, both Virginia Democrats, are urging the agency to act after
multiple federal inspections found more than 70 animal welfare violations at
the Cumberland site, including instances of puppies being euthanized without
anesthesia.
Four federal inspections have resulted in dozens of reported violations at
the site.
Mortality records at the facility showed that from Jan. 1, 2021, to July 22,
“over 300 puppy deaths were attributed to unknown causes, however, the
facility has not taken additional steps to determine the causes of death in
order to prevent similar deaths of other puppies in the future,” according
to a July inspection report by the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service.
A November inspection report on the facility found that “many young puppies
are not receiving anesthesia” before being euthanized. The report also found
that euthanasia injections without proper veterinary care “have been found
to be painful, stressful, and uncomfortable” and frequently have caused
“unnecessary pain and distress.”
The report found that 30 beagles between ages 2 and 7 showed signs of severe
dental disease, and assorted others had problems with their feet, eyes and
skin.
An inspection report on the facility released in March found that dozens of
dogs were injured in fights, several got their feet stuck in the flooring of
kennels, and inspectors noted instances of “wet food with varying amounts of
mold.”
“It is clear to us that Envigo has been derelict in its duty to provide for
the humane care of its dogs, and is unable to abide by the basic standards
set forth by the Animal Welfare Act,” Warner and Kaine wrote to Kevin Shea,
administrator of the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.
On its website, Envigo tells researchers that it is important to partner
with “a supplier whose social housing solutions nurture and promote healthy,
well-socialized animals.” It asserts that “the purebred beagles at our
Cumberland, Virginia location develop in a dynamic social housing
environment.”
Envigo said in a statement that more than 480 of its dogs are finding homes
through partnerships with adoption agencies. It said that over the past four
months, it has reduced the number of older, non-breeding dogs on-site by
more 1,300, and its goal is to have fewer than 100 at any time. Envigo also
said it has improved the ratio of caretakers to dogs and expects to achieve
its goal of 100:1 in the second quarter of 2022.
A group called Stop Animal Exploitation Now has lodged multiple federal
complaints against Envigo with the USDA’s director of animal care
operations. It has called for the confiscation of all dogs in need of
veterinary care, license revocation and for fines that it says could reach
“$10,000 per infraction/per animal.”