World Animal News (WAN) | We Are One
Today's Breaking News!
World Animal News (WAN) | We Are One
Today's Breaking News!

How The Refuge From Cruel Trapping Act Aims To Protect Wildlife & Pets In The U.S.

The Refuge from Cruel Trapping Act was reintroduced today in the U.S. House of Representatives by Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-NY). This bill would prohibit the use of archaic body-gripping traps within the National Wildlife Refuge System (NWRS), with limited exceptions. Body-gripping traps include steel-jaw leghold traps, Conibear traps, and snares.

“Why should anyone—people, companion animals, or wildlife—have to fear stepping into a bone-crushing trap while enjoying our nation’s beautiful wildlife refuge system?” said Susan Millward, Animal Welfare Institute’s executive director and CEO. “Public lands belong to all of us—not just the select few who wish to set traps that smash limbs or agonizingly strangle airways. Thank you to Representative Nadler for your commitment to ending the use of cruel traps in our country’s refuges.”

“When Americans visit their local National Wildlife Refuges, most expect to enjoy nature without worrying that they—or their pets—will fall victim to a dangerous trap,” Nadler said. “However, trapping is still allowed in many of the more than 570 refuges across the country, putting people, pets, and endangered species in danger of serious injury. These cruel devices have no place on protected public lands, and my bill will make sure our refuges are safe from this inhumane practice.”

The purpose of these protected lands is clear: to be a refuge where native wildlife can thrive and all Americans can enjoy our great outdoors. The NWRS contains one of the most diverse collections of fish and wildlife habitats in the world and provides a home for more than 380 endangered species. Yet, nearly half of these refuges allow trapping. Body-gripping traps are inhumane and inherently nonselective, meaning they indiscriminately injure and kill nontarget animals.

These dangerous traps pose a threat not only to wild animals but also to the pets of countless visitors who frequent the nation’s refuges each year. Numerous incidents have occurred where pets have been fatally harmed. For example, in December 2022, a three-year-old Shetland sheepdog tragically lost her life after a Conibear trap closed around her neck near a wooded trail in Vermont. This marked the state’s 13th pet-related trapping incident of the year.

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