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COPS Announces Public Safety Opposition to AB 1634 is Growing
Loss of K9 Dogs and Costs to Cities and Counties Cited
SACRAMENTO, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The California Organization of
Police and Sheriffs (COPS) announced growing opposition to AB 1634,
The Pet Extinction Act
(Levine, D-Van Nuys) because it will decimate police dogs, dogs for the
blind, hearing impaired and disabled and is an unfunded state mandate
threatening local public safety budgets.
The newest opposition comes from the 25,000 members of the National
Coalition of Public Safety Officers (NCPSO) CWA/AFL-CIO along with the
California Rescue Dog Association, the largest K9 search-and-rescue
organization, the United States Police Canine Association, Western
States Police Canine Association, Manteca Police Officers Association,
Manteca Police Employees Association, Canine Specialized Search Team,
and John Riboni, K9 Training Director for Placer County Sheriffs
Department, Roseville Police Department, Lincoln Police Department, and
Rocklin Police Department.
AB 1634 will decimate law enforcement K-9 departments. At a time when we
need more dogs, especially for bomb detection, this bill calls for the
extinction of the mixed breed dogs used as working dogs for these
duties. In addition, the bills requirements
to receive a government-issued exemption permit to raise intact police
dogs are arbitrary and illogical. As a result, the number of police dogs
available for crime prevention, bomb searches, drug detection and search
and rescue operations will be greatly reduced.
COPS Executive Director Monty Holden said, In
addition to eliminating dogs for law enforcement, the blind, hearing
impaired and disabled, AB 1634 is an unfunded state mandate costing
cities and counties over $1 billion annually. Local public safety
funding is put at risk because of the unfunded state mandate in AB 1634.
Over 50% of cities and counties general fund revenues are budgeted for
public safety. AB 1634 will be a financial drain
on cities and counties. Mandatory/spay neuter policies previously
enacted have seen animal services budgets skyrocket. Law enforcement
costs alone will increase by over $42 million if AB 1634 is passed into
law.
All of the major organizations involved with providing K9 dogs to law
enforcement officers and blind, hearing impaired and disabled citizens
are opposed to this bill because they understand the next generation of
dogs will be decimated. AB 1634 will leave our law enforcement officers
and blind, hearing impaired and disabled citizens vulnerable to great
harm without the assistance of their dogs,
Holden added.
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