S-4437-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry.
Sponsored by Richard Durbin (D-IL)
What it does
This bill would amend the Animal Welfare Act to impose specific housing, feeding, exercise, socialization, veterinary care, and breeding requirements on federally licensed dog dealers. It would require dealers to provide solid-floor enclosures with minimum square footage per dog, daily outdoor exercise access, at least 30 minutes of human socialization per day, annual veterinary exams, and core vaccinations. It would also limit how often and at what ages female dogs may be bred, require pre-breeding health screenings, and direct the Secretary of Agriculture to issue implementing regulations within 18 months of enactment.
Who benefits
Dogs held by federally licensed dealers, who would receive stronger baseline protections. Consumers who purchase dogs from licensed dealers, who may receive healthier animals with documented veterinary histories. Animal welfare organizations that have long advocated for stricter commercial breeding standards. Veterinarians, who would see increased demand for annual exams, screenings, and certifications. Responsible small-scale breeders already meeting these standards, who may gain a competitive advantage over lower-cost operations that currently do not.
Who is hurt
Large-scale commercial dog breeders (sometimes called "puppy mills") that currently operate below these standards and would face significant capital and operational costs to comply — including facility upgrades, additional staffing, and veterinary fees. Licensed dealers with thin profit margins who may exit the market rather than absorb compliance costs. Pet stores that source from high-volume dealers and may face reduced supply or higher wholesale prices. Consumers who prefer to purchase from pet stores and may face higher prices or reduced availability. USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS), which would bear new regulatory and enforcement burdens.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that current Animal Welfare Act standards for commercial dog dealers are outdated and permit conditions — such as wire-floored stacked cages, minimal exercise, and unlimited breeding cycles — that cause documented physical and psychological harm to dogs. They contend that the bill's specific, measurable requirements (minimum floor space, daily socialization, litter limits, age-based breeding restrictions) close loopholes that have allowed substandard operations to remain federally licensed for decades, and that healthier breeding stock produces healthier puppies, reducing veterinary costs for consumers downstream.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill imposes prescriptive, one-size-fits-all mandates that do not account for the wide variation in breeds, facility sizes, and regional operating costs, and that compliance expenses would force many small, licensed breeders out of business — potentially shifting demand toward unlicensed, unregulated sellers who face no federal oversight at all. They contend that the USDA already has authority to set humane care standards through existing Animal Welfare Act rulemaking, and that Congress should allow the agency to tailor regulations through notice-and-comment rather than locking specific numerical thresholds into statute.