ACTION ALERT:
Dr. Robert Gibbens
Director, Animal Welfare Operations, USDA-APHIS
[email protected]
[email protected]
Please levy the MAXIMUM FINE against Colorado State University for their
blatant disregard of the Animal Welfare Act which led to the deaths of 12
rabbits. Their behavior should NOT be tolerated and MUST be punished to the
fullest extent of the law.
CSU’s animal research receives critical violation from USDA
From Piper Russell and Allie Seibel, Collegian.com, May 4, 2023
Colorado State University was charged with breaking federal laws in the negligent treatment of animals in its research program. According to the university, the citations are both associated with a study evaluating a vaccine to prevent hemorrhagic diseases in rabbits. This disease cannot be contracted by humans, but it can by animals found in Colorado.
According to the Colorado Department of Agriculture, this disease is
extremely contagious and fatal, oftentimes without visible symptoms in
rabbits. According to the United States Department of Agriculture, a rabbit
hemorrhagic disease virus serotype 2 vaccine is currently not licensed in
the United States.
Stop Animal Exploitation NOW!, a national research watchdog, filed an
official complaint against CSU April 25 for violations against the Animal
Welfare Act. The USDA cited CSU with two violations, one of which was a rare
critical violation, in their inspection report Feb. 7.
CSU was cited for violating Section 2.31 Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee. The report from the USDAstates that 12 rabbits reached temperatures over the humane endpoint of 41 degrees Celsius, the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee-approved protocol for rabbits. Six of the rabbits were found dead, and the others were euthanized.
“Failure of the research personnel to adhere to the humane endpoints in the IACUC-approved protocol resulted in these animals experiencing unnecessary unrelieved pain and distress and constitutes a significant change that was not reviewed or approved by the committee,” the report reads.
The report explains CSU also violated Section 2.36 Annual Report for not reporting 26 animals “used in research involving accompanying pain or distress to the animals for which the use of appropriate anesthetics and analgesics were withheld.”
“They didn’t report what they were supposed to report because they withheld adequate pain relief and things for a study that involved at least 26 rabbits, and they reported that zero animals underwent unnecessary pain and distress,” said Stacey Ellison, a research analyst for SAEN.
After learning of violations, the USDA will conduct an investigation and either give CSU an official warning or fine the university, Ellison said. The maximum penalty can be a fine of $12,722 per animal.
“Now Colorado State has two (critical violations), which (are) killing animals and leaving six rabbits to die and then the other six animals that had to be killed,” Ellison said. “The severity of it is pretty severe; action (will have to be taken) on these because they were labeled as critical.”
SAEN monitors animal laboratories for animal abuse violations and cites individual laboratories for their wrongdoings.
“Measuring temperature in rabbits can be difficult as handling them can create stress, which can lead to a temporary increase in temperature,” said Nik Olsen, CSU director for integrative communications, in an email. “Knowing this, research staff used their best judgment to try to avoid false positives and unnecessary euthanasias. Unfortunately, this did lead to some rabbits over the course of the study dying from the virus versus being euthanized.”
Olsen said CSU must file the second citation related to the animal census
report with the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service. He said
the study did not properly reflect the numbers reported, and CSU rectified
the error.
“Colorado State University takes seriously its commitment (to) care for all
animals under its care and to ensure adherence to approved research protocol
established by its Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee and is
reviewing the APHIS report,” Olsen said.
“This law is the only way that legal action can be taken against (the university) for breaking the law,” Ellison said. “As for how effective it really is, they were just fined $5,800 and then a month later killed 20 animals. So there you go for (lack of) effectiveness.”
See also: