Controversial ‘animal cruelty’ bill criminalizing hunting and fishing moves forward in Oregon

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A wild new “animal cruelty” ballot proposal would put hunters and fishermen on the hook.

Controversial legislation that would outlaw killing or “injuring” any animal — even while shooting or catching your dinner — is one step closer to landing on the ballot in Oregon, officials said Wednesday.

The measure, Initiative Petition 28, has garnered 120,000 signatures, more than the roughly 117,000 it needs to go to vote in November, The Oregonian reported. 

Along with banning hunting and fishing, the legislation would also prohibit slaughtering livestock and using animals in rodeos and for scientific research.

It would also prohibit operating a commercial poultry business and castrating or neutering livestock, among other practices.


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Hunting would be banned under the bill. Europa Press via Getty Images

Hunting advocates said the legislation misses the mark — by a mile.

“[It’s] an all out assault on Oregonians’ way of life,” gubernatorial candidate Sen. Christine Drazan (R-Canby) told the Statesman Journal.

“It criminalizes ranchers, farmers, meat producers and threatens to kill thousands of jobs. It would mean the end of hunting and fishing in Oregon, killing not only traditions and ending access to an essential source of food, but butchering natural resource-based industries that support hunting and fishing,” she said.

Farmers, meanwhile, said the bill would hurt local ranchers and be a shot to the state’s economy.

“This would expose farmers, ranchers, veterinarians, breeders and animal owners to criminal liability for standard, humane practices that are essential to animal health, food production and genetic management,” Oregon Farm Bureau said on its website.

A portion of the signatures collected for the initiative will likely be ruled ineligible, such as any from individuals who are not registered voters — but organizers have until July 2 to submit enough valid signatures.


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Fishing would be banned under the legislation. UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

“We want people to actually recognize that is a choice that we could make to shift away from killing animals, to treat all those other animals the same way we treat our companion animals,” David Michelson, leader of the campaign, told the Oregonian Tuesday.

“I think that it is definitely possible that we could qualify, that we could turn in enough signatures, but we will be using every day before the deadline to collect signatures,” he said.

The initiative, which has failed to make it onto the ballot in the past, aims to push the state towards more plant-based food.

“We believe it is possible to meet all of our needs as human beings while simultaneously meeting the needs of the animals we inhabit this state with,” the measure’s website states.

  “Using the killing of animals as a strategy to meet our needs is a choice, and our campaign wants to propose making a different one. Whether that looks like greater investment in plant agriculture, utilizing non-lethal wildlife management practices, or implementing non-animal methods for research, many alternative strategies already exist to choose from,” it reads.

The measure would have narrow exemptions for self-defense and veterinary practices, adocates said.

The Oregon Hunters Association, which opposes the bill, estimates more than 1 million people in the state would be impacted by the ban on hunting, fishing and farming.

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