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Legislature considers bill to ban fur farms, production, sale in Washington

Jan 14, 2022, 5:09 PM | Updated: Jan 15, 2022, 8:01 am

Mink, fur farming...

(Getty Images)

(Getty Images)

A bill in the state House of Representatives would outlaw the farming of foxes, minks, and other animals for fur in Washington.

If passes, the production and sale of fox, mink, marten, and chinchilla fur would be illegal, beginning next year. Each violation would be considered a misdemeanor.

Exceptions would be made for religious and tribal purposes, as well as products made from used fur.

Those in favor of the bill say it is needed to stop an industry centered on the inhumane treatment of animals.

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“Everything about fur farming is rooted in animal cruelty — from the breeding process to a brutal death, an animal’s entire life is spent in a cage,” said Hannah Thompson-Garner, director of policy and legislative affairs with the Northwest Animal Rights Network, during a hearing for the bill this week.

Wendy Linton, another commenter, said the minks and foxes spend their lives trapped in small cages that hurt their paws.

“Fashion is a terrible excuse for animal exploitation,” Linton said.

Proponents of the bill also pointed out that fur farming can lead to the spread of zoonotic pandemics. COVID-19 .

“These farms are a public health threat,” Linton said.

Those against the bill said it was a violation of individual liberty, claiming that the government would be telling people what they could and could not wear.

“We should not go down this slippery road of inserting the government into people’s closets,” said Mike Brown, head of sustainability and communications with the Natural Fibers Alliance.

He worried that the fur ban could lead to bans on other animal products like leather, and even products that do not require killing the animal, such as wool.

Other opponents, like Challis Hobbs, said stopping the industry would be a hardship for fur farmers.

“This bill does create more stress and mental health issues for small, family-owned farms,” said Hobbs, director of Fur Commission USA.

That is why some of the bill’s supporters are asking for an addition to the bill that would provide government subsidies for farmers to help them transition out of fur farming.

The bill is currently sitting in the House Committee on Rural Development, Agriculture & Natural Resources. To be passed this session, bills must pass out of committee by Feb. 7.

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Legislature considers bill to ban fur farms, production, sale in Washington