HR-3246-119
Referred to the House Committee on Agriculture.
Sponsored by Nancy Mace (R-SC)
What it does
Violet's Law would amend the Animal Welfare Act to require all federal research facilities to develop and implement standards — within one year of enactment — for placing eligible animals (dogs, cats, nonhuman primates, guinea pigs, hamsters, and rabbits) into adoption or non-laboratory settings once they are no longer needed for research. Animals would need to be certified by a licensed veterinarian as free of infectious disease or physical abnormality before release. Eligible placement destinations would include nonprofit animal rescue organizations, registered animal sanctuaries, animal shelters, or private individuals.
Who benefits
Research animals (dogs, cats, nonhuman primates, guinea pigs, hamsters, and rabbits) that would otherwise be euthanized after federal studies conclude. Individuals and families who adopt former research animals. Nonprofit animal rescue organizations, sanctuaries, and shelters that would receive animals and potentially associated resources. Animal welfare advocates who have long sought post-research placement requirements. Taxpayers who may view humane treatment of publicly funded research animals as a public good.
Who is hurt
Federal agencies and research facilities that would bear administrative costs of developing placement standards, conducting veterinary evaluations, and coordinating transfers within the one-year deadline. Taxpayers who fund those administrative and compliance costs. Researchers who may face additional procedural requirements at the end of studies. Facilities with limited staff capacity may find compliance burdensome. Euthanasia service providers who currently handle end-of-study animals may see reduced demand.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that tens of thousands of animals used in federally funded research are euthanized each year despite being healthy enough for adoption, and that the federal government has a responsibility to provide humane outcomes for animals used in publicly funded studies. They contend that several federal agencies — including the NIH and VA — have already voluntarily adopted similar placement policies with demonstrated success, proving the model is operationally feasible. The bill's bipartisan sponsorship across more than 25 members reflects broad consensus that post-research placement is both practical and consistent with existing Animal Welfare Act principles.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that mandating placement standards across all federal research facilities imposes a one-size-fits-all administrative burden that may be difficult to meet within the one-year deadline, particularly for smaller or specialized agencies with limited animal care infrastructure. They contend that some research animals — especially nonhuman primates — may have behavioral or health profiles that make safe public placement genuinely difficult, and that the bill's "suitable for release" standard, while requiring veterinary certification, may not fully account for long-term behavioral risks. Critics may also argue that placement logistics could delay or complicate the conclusion of research protocols, adding indirect costs to federally funded science.