Legislature(2001 - 2002)

04/02/2002 01:50 PM Senate L&C

Audio Topic
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
             HB 306-EUTHANASIA FOR DOMESTIC ANIMALS                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
CHAIRMAN STEVENS announced HB 306 to be up for consideration.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE LANCASTER,  sponsor of  HB 306, said in  Alaska the                                                              
animal control  agencies do  not have  the authority to  purchase,                                                              
possess or use certain drugs to perform  the most humane method of                                                              
euthanasia for domestic  animals. Right now a  veterinarian has to                                                              
be called  to do this or  the animal would  have to be taken  to a                                                              
veterinarian  facility.  If an  animal  is brought  in  suffering,                                                              
nothing can be done  until the vet gets there and  this could take                                                              
hours. If HB 306  were to pass, injured animals would  not have to                                                              
suffer these  hours and the process  would be more  humane. During                                                              
business hours  a veterinarian  might be  busy with other  animals                                                              
and unable  to respond  immediately or  sometimes there  isn't one                                                              
available in  small villages, which  have access  to veterinarians                                                              
only  occasionally  and  have  to resort  to  harsher  methods  of                                                              
euthanasia.  If an  animal  is brought  in  in the  middle of  the                                                              
night,  it would  take longer  for a  vet to  respond. Pet  owners                                                              
would still have the option of bringing their animals to a vet.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     The goal  of HB 306  is not to  take business  away from                                                                   
     veterinarians,  but  to  provide  a  more  humane  cost-                                                                   
     effective  method to  treat sick  or abandoned  animals.                                                                   
     Not only would it be more efficient  and humane, it will                                                                   
     also   save  municipalities   money.  With  the   fiscal                                                                   
     situation the  state is in, finding areas  to save money                                                                   
     is essential.  In the Mat-Su  alone, the animal  shelter                                                                   
     is spending $34,000 and up per  year to contract for the                                                                   
     service with the local veterinarian.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
In Fairbanks, it  costs up to $85 per case. He  said that agencies                                                              
in this program  will be under  the self sufficiency act,  so this                                                              
would not cost the state of Alaska  any money. Agencies wishing to                                                              
apply will  have certain guidelines  to follow in order  to obtain                                                              
and  keep these  permits. Those  who will  be administering  these                                                              
drugs will  have completed  a euthanasia technician  certification                                                              
course   that  is  approved   by  the   National  Animal   Control                                                              
Association,  the American Humane  Association, and  Public Humane                                                              
Society of the United States.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Testimony  in the  House revealed  that there  were concerns  that                                                              
drugs would be available to untrained  individuals, but any agency                                                              
that  applies for  the permit  will have  to follow  the rules  in                                                              
effect for possession  of drugs for veterinarians.  They will have                                                              
to be kept  under lock and  key and licensed supervision.  The DEA                                                              
has  indicated there  has been  very few  investigations of  these                                                              
drugs  and those  were  because  of improper  storage.  Thirty-one                                                              
other states have laws allowing animal  control leagues to use the                                                              
right to  apply for a  permit to purchase,  possess and  use drugs                                                              
for euthanasia of domestic animals.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS. SHANA  ANDERSON said she has  been the animal  control officer                                                              
in Valdez  for almost 13  years and she  is also the  president of                                                              
the  Alaska Animal  Control  Association.  She supported  HB  306,                                                              
explaining   that  right  now   she  has   a  very  good   working                                                              
relationship with a veterinarian,  but that isn't always the case.                                                              
Other agencies  have had  problems being  able to purchase  drugs.                                                              
"Anyone  in this field  who performs  euthanasia are  professional                                                              
people, they're compassionate peopleā€¦"                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MS.  ANDERSON  said  that she  wished  she  could  be put  out  of                                                              
business  and that  euthanasia  wasn't needed.  Many  times it  is                                                              
necessary because animals don't have homes.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS. LAURA  HOOD, Manager, Fairbanks  North Star Borough,  Division                                                              
of Animal Control, supported HB 306.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     Unfortunately,  thousands of  animals are euthanised  in                                                                   
     shelters  in the state  of Alaska  each year. This  bill                                                                   
     allows  animal  shelter  workers  to  legally  purchase,                                                                   
     maintain and use the drug which  is accepted as the best                                                                   
     euthanasia  method that  we have available  to us.  This                                                                   
     bill will save municipalities  money as they become able                                                                   
     to   purchase    these   drugs    directly   from    the                                                                   
     manufacturers. They  will no longer have to  rely on the                                                                   
     services  of a  veterinarian to  purchase or  administer                                                                   
     the drug,  which can cause the municipalities  thousands                                                                   
     of dollars  each year. It will protect  veterinarians by                                                                   
     removing  responsibility  of these  drugs  when used  in                                                                   
     animal shelters  from the  veterinarians and placing  it                                                                   
     with  the  animal  sheltering agencies.  It  will  allow                                                                   
     communities  without veterinarians  to practice  modern,                                                                   
     safe  and humane animal  control. It  will allow  humane                                                                   
     euthanasia  for injured  pets  in emergencies  that  may                                                                   
     occur   day   or  night.   The   euthanasia   technician                                                                   
     certification   requirement  will   set  a  state   wide                                                                   
     standard  for the  level of  care that  pets receive  in                                                                   
     their last moments  of life and will raise  the level of                                                                   
     professionalism  in  animal  control  workers  providing                                                                   
     this service.  I really urge  you to support  this bill.                                                                   
     Thanks.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. BRETT REID, Kenai Animal Shelter,  supported HB 306. He wanted                                                              
to clarify  that the  "tool" they  need to  conduct euthanasia  is                                                              
basically a controlled  overdose that does require  some training.                                                              
The course  for using it  is offered 20  times in the  coming year                                                              
and  will probably  be offered  in  Juneau, as  well. The  federal                                                              
record keeping  is pretty well  established, so the  wheel doesn't                                                              
have to be  reinvented on that issue.  This is not a  blank ticket                                                              
to buy drugs as the bill lists specific ones that can be used.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS. MARIANNE CLARK, Soldotna Animal  Shelter, said she had been in                                                              
this field  for over  25 years and  supported HB  306. "This  is a                                                              
very important  tool for us to use.  It is the most  humane method                                                              
of euthanising the animalsā€¦"                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. NANCY BUCKMASTER, Sitka Animal  Control Officer, said she runs                                                              
the animal shelter and is the euthanasia  technician. She has been                                                              
certified  for   almost  four  years   and  has  a   good  working                                                              
relationship  with  the two  veterinarians  that  work there.  She                                                              
supported  this bill. She  said it's  more of  a timing  issue for                                                              
those that have good working relationships  with veterinarians. If                                                              
she is not able to get drugs when  she needs them, the process has                                                              
to wait.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     Anyone  who  performs  euthanasia   usually  has  to  be                                                                   
     mentally ready  and when those  tools are not  available                                                                   
     for us, we then again have to  redo our mental state and                                                                   
     get prepared  again to euthanise an animal.  It's not an                                                                   
     easy process,  but the timing  has to be there.  I would                                                                   
     ask that you support this bill  for not only us, but all                                                                   
     the smaller communities that are in the Alaska area.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS.  HAVA  LEE,   Executive  Director,  Juneau   Gastineau  Humane                                                              
Society,  supported  HB  306.  She  said  that  everyone  in  this                                                              
business knows  that euthanasia  is a difficult  topic, but  it is                                                              
part of their  job and there is training available.  The procedure                                                              
is not  to be  taken lightly. There  is nothing  in the  bill that                                                              
says  that  organizations  would   have  to  discontinue  using  a                                                              
veterinarian for  this service and  probably in Juneau  they would                                                              
continue.  This   bill  provides  options  that   allow  qualified                                                              
individuals  to  have access  to  euthanasia drugs.  In  instances                                                              
where  a  veterinarian  is  not available,  this  could  mean  the                                                              
difference  between  a humane  death  or  hours  or even  days  of                                                              
endless agony  for an  animal. Supporters  of this bill  including                                                              
humane societies  and animal shelters and animal  control officers                                                              
throughout  the state  do not  see  this bill  as a  cheap way  to                                                              
reduce  the  animal  populations.  Animal  organizations  have  an                                                              
aggressive spay  and neuter program.  Humane societies  and animal                                                              
shelters do  not create  domestic over  populations, but  they are                                                              
responsible  for  dealing with  the  problems  of pets  when  they                                                              
populate too much.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     In  Juneau,  as in  most  if  not all  animal  shelters,                                                                   
     animals are  euthanised if there is no  possibility that                                                                   
     they will be  adopted. We do euthanise animals  that are                                                                   
     severely  injured, old  and too sick  to recover  and/or                                                                   
     vicious and  like most animal welfare  organizations, we                                                                   
     go out of  our way to find homes for  adoptable animals.                                                                   
     We do not have a list of people  who want to adopt a 17-                                                                   
     year old cat  that sprays and has diabetes.  That's just                                                                   
     the reality.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
TAPE 02-17, SIDE B                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                              
MS.  CATHERINE   REARDON,  Director,   Division  of   Occupational                                                              
Licensing, said her division staffs  the Veterinary Board. She has                                                              
reviewed  and worked with  the sponsor  so they  would be  able to                                                              
administer  the  bill  if  it  passes  and  she  didn't  have  any                                                              
technical problems with it.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS.  REARDON  said  that  the  Veterinary  Board  is  not  totally                                                              
comfortable  with  the  bill, because  they  are  concerned  about                                                              
whether there  would be sufficient  insurance that  the euthanasia                                                              
drugs would  be kept secure in  community settings. They  are also                                                              
concerned about  "pre-medication," meaning that  sometimes animals                                                              
need to  be given a  soothing drug before  they can  be euthanised                                                              
because they are  agitated by their situation.  They are concerned                                                              
about those drugs having potentials to become street drugs.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DAVIS asked if the Board  of Veterinarians brought this up                                                              
on the House side.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MS. REARDON  replied that  she thought it  was mentioned  in House                                                              
Labor and Commerce.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR AUSTERMAN asked  if the concern of the Board  was that the                                                              
control of the drug was not going to be tight enough.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS. REARDON replied yes.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  AUSTERMAN  asked  if  it   was  true  that  veterinarians                                                              
controlled the drug now and there is no problem.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MS. REARDON  replied yes. DEA has  rules about tracking  the drugs                                                              
and locking them  up and things like that. The  veterinarians' DEA                                                              
permits  are   on  the  line  if   they  don't  adhere   to  those                                                              
regulations.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR AUSTERMAN  said he assumed that municipalities  would fall                                                              
under those same rules.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS. REARDON  said she  thought the  concern was  with the  smaller                                                              
communities who  might not have the  resources or staff  to adhere                                                              
to all the requirements.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR TORGERSON  moved to pass  CSHB 306 (L&C) out  of committee                                                              
with  individual  recommendations  and accompanying  fiscal  note.                                                              
There were no objections and it was so ordered.                                                                                 

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