Page 8 - Sonoma County Gazette - May 2019
P. 8

 OPINION: Humans Do Not Need to Wear Animal Fur: CA AB-44
By Eric G. Young, Esq.*
All Californians should reflect on the important role animals play in our
To do your part, I encourage all Sonoma County voters who love animals and wildlife to contact your legislators and encourage them to support AB44. Below are contact addresses and phone numbers for Sonoma County’s state legislators. You can also email them at their official websites.
Jim Wood (District 2) https://a02.asmdc.org/ 50 “D” Street, Suite 450, Santa Rosa, CA 95404 Tel: (707) 576-2526 Fax: (707) 576-2297
Cecelia Aguiar-Curry (District 4) https://a04.asmdc.org/ 2721 Napa Valley Corporate Dr. , Napa, CA 94558
Tel: (707) 224-0440 Fax: (707) 224-0430
Marc Levine (District 10) https://a10.asmdc.org/ Petaluma City Hall, 11 English Street, Petaluma, CA 94952 Tel: (707) 576-2631 Fax: (707) 576-2735
INFO: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billTextClient. xhtml?bill_id=201920200AB44
*Mr. Young is a civil litigation attorney in Santa Rosa, CA. For more information on how you can help with passing AB44, please contact Mr. Young at eyoung@younglawca.com.
INFO: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fur_farming . Fur farming is banned in Austria, Croatia, the United Kingdom, the Czech Republic (effective in 2019) and Norway. In Germanyand Switzerland, the regulations for fur farming are very strict, with the result that there are no fur farms. Some other countries have a ban on fur farming of certain types of animals.
lives and our environment. Whether they are wild or domesticated, ours is
a state that cares about animal rights and well-being. In 2018, Californians overwhelmingly voted, for the second time, to protect farm animals from cruel and inhumane conditions. Numerous pieces of legislation have been passed at both the state and local level to protect companion animals from mistreatment and discrimination.
On December 3, 2018, Assemblywoman Laura Friedman (D-Glendale) took a bold step and introduced AB44 which would make it unlawful to manufacture, sell, offer for sale, display for sale, trade, give donate or otherwise distribute a fur product in California. AB44 follows historic moves by several California cities to ban fur, including Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Berkeley.
On March 12, 2019, AB44 passed its first major hurdle. The legislation was approved 10-4 by the Water, Parks & Wildlife Committee. Two, Sonoma County representatives voted to advance the legislation: Assemblyman Marc Levine, who represents the Petaluma area, and Assemblyman Jim Wood, who represents north Santa Rosa and northern Sonoma County. The legislation is now winding its way through other committees with a minor change on April 2nd. If AB44 passes a full Assembly vote, California will become the first state in the U.S. to ban fur products.
 The fur industry treats animals with extreme cruelty.
Most animals killed for fur are raised on farms in deplorable conditions
of confinement. For example, wild mink instinctively range a territory of approximately 741 acres. In contrast, ranch-raised mink are confined to a 12” by 18” cage, about the length of the animals’ bodies. Severely constrained conditions cause these
animals to engage in self-
mutilation, cannibalize
their young, and
experience profound stress
where they literally bounce
off the cage walls. When
they are finally killed for
their fur, mink are often
skinned while alive, their
bodies discarded in piles
like trash. It can take as many as 60 minks to make one full-length fur coat.
  Mink are just one of many species killed for their fur. Throughout the world, each year, more than 1 billion rabbits and 50 million other animals -- including foxes, seals, and even dogs -- are raised on fur farms or trapped in the wild solely for their fur. While much of this trade originates in China or other countries, the fur is marketed and sold right here in California, often falsely labeled as “faux.”
SHEBOYGAN FALLS, WI — Zimbal family operates the nation’s largest mink farm
 Unfortunately, fur sales in the U.S. are on the rise.
After experiencing a decline due to animals rights work and public education, fur sales in the U.S. grew by approximately 50% from 1990-2015. Global fur sales from 2011-2013 jumped by more than 50% from $16 billion to $36 billion. According to the Fur Information Council of America (FICA), the largest U.S. fur industry association, the number of designers who use fur has also dramatically increased, climbing from 42 in 1985 to about 500 today.
Laws like the Marine Mammal Protection Act, the Fur Seal Act, and the Endangered Species Act do not concern fur farms or the fur trade. The Fur Products Labeling Act only mandates that fur garments be properly labeled. Similarly, most U.S. states have few, if any, legal protections for animals raised or trapped for their fur.
 Few federal laws or regulations restrict the fur industry.
If passed into law in the state with the 5th largest economy in the world, AB44 would be a significant leap forward for animal protection. Confining, trapping, and killing animals solely so humans can wear their fur as a fashion statement is completely at odds with California values. In the 21st century, it is also not necessary that we wear fur to keep ourselves warm. The time has come to ban this cruel industry in California.
8 - www.sonomacountygazette.com - 5/19
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