Former Pets End Up Dead in University Teaching Labs
May 8, 2009
Investigation Reveals Supply Line of Dogs and Cats in Higher Education
Jenkintown, PA (RPRN) 05/08/09-– A new report, “
Dying to Learn: Exposing the Supply and Use of Dogs and Cats to Higher Education,” documents the hidden practices of higher education, proving that science lab students are using former pets at major colleges and universities. It traces the route that brings dogs like Cruella, a shepherd-mix from Michigan, to an unhappy end, a victim of dissection, live surgeries and other procedures, at college and university teaching labs.
“Dying to Learn: Exposing the Supply and Use of Dogs and Cats in Higher Education”
is the result of a two-year investigation of animal acquisition and use from 92 public
colleges and universities in the U.S. It presents evidence of unnecessary use of animals,
and unethical sources.
A comprehensive review of official documents reveals that 52% of the colleges and
universities examined are using live and dead dogs and cats for teaching and training
purposes in life science, veterinary, and medical education, in spite of viable alternatives
available that are being used by other schools.
All categories of animal dealers supplying dogs and cats to public colleges and
universities have track records of violations of the federal Animal Welfare Act (AWA),
which regulates the care and use of animals supplied and used in laboratories and other
industries. These violations include inhumane treatment.
Of particular concern are the cats and dogs purchased from random source Class B
animal dealers who collect animals from shelters and pounds, misleading ads, auctions,
and other sources. The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) admitted in
its 2007 Animal Welfare Report that “some of these dealers may be trafficking in stolen
animals.”
Tracie Letterman, Esq., Executive Director of the American Anti-Vivisection Society
(AAVS), commented, “Congress should act to cut off the supply of pets to labs by
banning random source Class B dealers and the use of random source animals in general.
Immediate action could be taken by USDA, which has the discretion not to renew licenses
for those random source Class B dealers who are consistently violating the AWA.”
Animalearn Director Laura Ducceschi also expressed concern about those colleges and
universities that obtain cats and dogs directly from local pounds and shelters. “With the
current economic and foreclosure crisis causing homeowners across the country to lose
their homes, the numbers of pets being relinquished to shelters is drastically increasing.
This puts an ever increasing number of former pets at risk of ending up in labs. That
kind of fate is completely at odds with recent studies showing that 65% of Americans
consider the welfare of pets ‘very important’.”
Dying to Learn, which was released today by Animalearn, the education division of
AAVS, also documents problems with other sources of dogs and cats, such as biological
supply companies, who sell preserved animals, and Class A dealers, who breed animals
on their premises.
The report has some good news however. Because Animalearn’s expertise is humane
alternatives, the report offers its extensive resources, including studies showing that
students learn as well or better with cost-effective humane alternatives and/or therapeutic
uses of animals. These include beneficial shelter medicine programs for veterinary
students, ethically sourced animal cadavers, virtual dissection, and technologically
advanced surgical simulations.
Dying to Learn commends the many colleges and universities that have implemented
alternatives and recognizes the pivotal role students have played in adoption of Student
Choice Policies which allow students the right to choose a humane alternative to harmful
animal use. The report includes ‘how-to’s and samples, including a sample No Random
Source Animals Policies that would prohibit an institution from acquiring animals from
Class B dealers.
To learn more, please visit
www.DyingToLearn.org .
Animalearn, the educational division of the American Anti-Vivisection Society (AAVS),
works with educators, students and others to achieve quality humane science education
without harmful use of animals. Visit
www.animalearn.org
The American Anti-Vivisection Society has monitored the use of animals in science since it was founded in 1883.
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