NAIA Trust
{{#badges: Front groups}} NAIA Trust is an affiliated 501(c)(4) "legislative branch" of the National Animal Interest Alliance (NAIA), a front group and industry funded lobbying organization for animal commerce and agriculture based in Portland, Oregon.
Contents
Overview
Agendas include financial interests, legislation and public perception related to animal agribusiness, commercial breeding, hunting, fishing, trapping, fur ranching, animal testing and animals in entertainment. [1] The NAIA Trust appears to be primarily focused on legislative opposition to humane welfare laws and regulations concerning breeders, pet stores and research facilities.
Lobbying against humane legislation
According to its website, the NAIA Trusts' mission includes promoting "animal welfare" and "safeguarding the rights of responsible animal owners". This includes "sounding the alarm" about threats to the "human-animal bond" by "people who mistreat animals and by animal rights and environmental zealots." The NAIA Trust counters "misinformation" of the environmental and animal rights movement. [2] In fact, NAIA keeps careful track of humane animal welfare legislation being proposed across the country at all jurisdictions (federal, state, city and county). [3], [4] The NAIA lobbies in the interests of its "members" in industry and commerce. [5] It opposes progressive legislation such as spay/neuter, breeding restrictions and humane standards. The NAIA endorses inhumane and unnecessary surgical procedures such as tail docking, ear cropping, debarking and declawing. It also supports horse slaughter, factory farming, pound seizure and puppy mills. See also National Animal Interest Alliance, sections 2 through 6.
Action Alerts
NAIA Trust reliably opposes or severely curtails humane and progressive welfare legislation, particularly legislation designed to address pet overpopulation. [6] Opposition falls neatly into the category of "extremism". For example, a mandatory spay/neuter ordinance for Austin Texas (requiring a yearly licensing fee for breeders) is referred to as a "radical anti-breeder ordinance". [7]
Pet Animal Welfare Statute S1139/H2669 (PAWS) (not passed)
Introduced by Senator Richard Santorum of Pennylvania, a state long plagued with the problem of unregulated breeding operations (puppy mills); this reasonable bill classifies home breeders as dog and cat dealers if they produce more than six litters and sell more than 25 animals in a calendar year and "require hobby breeders to meet standards of housing and care". [8] Further criticisms about this bill are failure to "exempt individuals and organizations that rescue dogs and place them in new homes". [9] Incredibly, this "animal welfare trust" makes no distinctions between rescued animals and profitable breeding operations. In fact, many commercial breeders are home-based and operate under no supervision or standards. Backyard breeders often keep their animals in cages, pens or on chains 24/7, exposed to the elements with no socialization or medical care. [10] This bill never became law. [11] See also puppy mills.
Helms amendment to S. 1731 USDA Farm Bill Amendment, 107th Congress, 2001-02 (passed in May 2002)
Over 90% of the animals used in experimentation are purposely excluded from protection under the Animal Welfare Act (AWA), the only federal law which over sees animal testing. Rats, mice, birds, reptiles, amphibians and fish are not covered and expressly eliminated from all safeguards. Species not covered under the AWA do not even have to be reported. [12] The Senate accepted an amendment introduced by the late Jesse Helms, a republican senator from North Carolina, to bar the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) from including these animals under the AWA. [13] See also animal testing, section 2.1.
NAIA Trust proposed to "protect the biomedical research community" from the USDA and its "unwarranted and cost prohibitive oversight". According to the NAIA Trust:
- "Failure to include the Helms amendment in the final version of the bill will force the USDA to propose a rule by which rats, mice and birds will be brought under the agency of the AWA, a costly endeavor for taxpayers and a regulation nightmare for scientists." [14]
The NAIA Trust does not elaborate on why humane standards should be a "regulation nightmare" nor their uncharacteristic concern for taxpayers. The NAIA lobbies aggressively against spay/neuter, breeding restrictions and licensing fees; all of which ease tax burdens. Every year, communities spend millions of dollars and vast amounts of volunteer hours coping with surplus pets. [15] Industries represented by the NAIA include factory farming, rodeos, foie gras, hunting, fur ranching, trapping and animal testing; all tax payer subsidized. [16] Tragically, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) spends hundreds of millions of dollars every year funding a bottomless pit of animal research duplication, that accomplishes nothing more than funneling tax dollars into nationally known laboratories. In fact, many research facilities receive well over $100 million yearly and some laboratories approach $200 million in grants from the NIH, the primary funder for animal research in the U.S. A 2001 audit for 30 facilities revealed that approximately 56% received over 100 million per year from the NIH for animal research. [17] See also U.S. Government's War on Animals, section 4.
See also National Animal Interest Alliance, section 2, on Lobbying against humane legislation & animal advocacy groups.
Personnel
- Patti Strand, National Director
Contact
NAIA
11402 Se Flavel St
Portland, OR 97290-6579
503-761-1139
mailing address:
NAIA
PO Box 66579
Portland, OR 97290-6579
Website:
http://www.naiatrust.org/index.htm
Articles & resources
SourceWatch articles
- American Kennel Club
- American Veterinary Medical Association
- Animal testing
- Animal Welfare Council
- Astroturf
- Conservatives target the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals
- Criminalising civil disobedience
- Intimidating democracy
- Intimidating foundations
- Intimidating public interest groups
- Meat & Dairy industry
- National Animal Interest Alliance
- Patti Strand
- Puppy Mills
- U.S. animal rights legislation
- War on Animals
References
- ↑ Sites of interest, National Animal Interest Alliance, accessed January 2009
- ↑ Welcome to NAIA Trust, NAIA Trust, accessed February 2009
- ↑ Legislative Corner, NAIA Trust, accessed February 2009
- ↑ State, County, Municipal Bills Pending: Listed by State, NAIA Trust, accessed Febrary 2009
- ↑ NAIA Sites of Interest, accessed December 2008
- ↑ Legislative Corner: NAIA Trust Action Alerts - Archives, NAIA Trust, accessed February 2009
- ↑ Action Alert: Austin Texas dog and cat owners need to attend May 17 meeting!,NAIA Trust, accessed February 2009
- ↑ Text of S. 1139, 109th: Pet Animal Welfare Statute of 2005, govtrack.us, accessed January 2009
- ↑ Action Alert: NAIA Trust opposes (PAWS) S 1139/H 2669, NAIA Trust, accessed January 2009
- ↑ Jane Seymour That Bulldog in the Window, Friends of Animals, accessed January 2009
- ↑ govtrack.us 1139: 109th Congress Pet Animal Welfare Statute of 2005, accessed January 2009
- ↑ The Animal Care Program and the USDA's Authority Under the AWA: Q & A, U.S. Department of Agriculture, APHIS Fact Sheet, July 2005, page 2
- ↑ U.S. Senate Passes Farm Bill Addressing Animal Fighting, Puppy Mills, Farm Animals and Bears, Humane Society of the United States, February 2002
- ↑ Action Alert: Amendment to the Farm Bill: Support the Helms Amendment to the Farm Bill and protect biomedical research involving rats, mice, and birds, NAIA Trust, accessed February 2009
- ↑ The Crisis of Pet Overpopulation, HSUS, May 2007
- ↑ Mark Hawthorn, Spoiler Alert: 10 Things Animal Exploiters Do Not Want You to Know, Oped News, pg 2, February 2008
- ↑ Micheal A. Budkie The Animal Experimentation Scandal: An Audit of the NIH: Funding of Animal Experimentation: Audit Findings, Stop Animal Exploitation NOW!, 2001