tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3410142.post-809421432002-08-30T19:13:00.000-07:002002-09-06T18:12:11.000-07:00<FONT SIZE=2 COLOR=993300 FACE="Verdana">Ban Interstate Shipment of Big Cats and Bears as Pets</FONT><FONT SIZE=1 COLOR=000000 FACE="Verdana"><BR>In July 2002, Rep. George Miller (D-Calif.-7th) introduced H.R. 5226, the Captive Wildlife Safety Act, to ban interstate commerce of lions, tigers, leopards, cougars, and bears for the pet trade. H.R. 5226 will help curtail the practice of keeping these large, dangerous animals as “pets” by private owners. More often than not, owners are unequipped to deal with the demands of caring for them, and the animals typically end up neglected and suffering terribly. Many states have laws prohibiting the private ownership of large, exotic animals as pets, but no such federal law currently exists. As a result, the wild exotic pet trade is burgeoning at an alarming rate; an estimated 5,000 tigers are currently in private hands in the U.S., more than are thought to exist in the wild. As these numbers grow, so will the risks of related injuries and deaths—both human and animal.<BR><BR></FONT><FONT SIZE=2 COLOR=993300 FACE="Verdana">Please call:</FONT><B><FONT SIZE=1 COLOR=000000 FACE="Verdana"><BR>Sen. Chuck Hagel at (202) 224-4224<BR>Sen. Ben Nelson at (202) 224-6551<BR>Rep. Doug Bereuter at (202) 225-4806</B>
<br /><BR>Ask to speak with the staffer who deals with animal legislation. If he or she is not available, please leave a detailed and polite message.</FONT>knoreply@blogger.com