APHIS Updates its Animal Welfare Regulations to Provide Certain Small Scale Dealers and Exhibitors with Additional Exemptions from Licensing Requirements

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APHIS Updates its Animal Welfare Regulations to Provide Certain Small Scale Dealers and Exhibitors with Additional Exemptions from Licensing Requirements

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The following Stakeholder Announcement was published by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service on June 1, 2018. It is reproduced in full below.

Specifically, exhibitors with eight (8) or fewer pet animals, small exotic or wild mammals, and domesticated farm-type animals are exempt from AWA licensing. In addition, APHIS expanded the list of animals eligible for an existing exemption for dealers who maintain four (4) or fewer breeding females and sells only the offspring of those animals born and raised on his or her premises, for pets or exhibition. This exemption now applies to dealers of pet animals, small exotic and wild mammals, and domesticated farm-type animals.Individuals and businesses already exempt under current licensing exemptions will not be affected by these new exemptions. Individuals and businesses with animals considered to be dangerous, including elephants and big cats, will not be eligible for the new exemptions.Passed by Congress in 1966, the AWA seeks to ensure the humane treatment of certain animals that are sold for use as pets, exhibited to the public, used in research, or transported commercially. The AWA does not apply to coldblooded animals, or to farm animals used in traditional agricultural practices. Individuals and businesses licensed under the AWA must provide their animals with adequate housing, sanitation, nutrition, water, and veterinary care. They also must protect their animals from extreme weather and temperatures.This final rule is on display in today’s Federal Register at: https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2018/06/04/2018-11892/thresholds-for-de-minimis-activity-and-exemptions-from-licensing-under-the-animal-welfare-act.

Source: U.S. Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service

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