Breeder withdraws proposal for controversial Victorian puppy farm
An application for a proposed puppy farm in central Victoria has been withdrawn after lobbying by nearby residents and animal activists.
Residents and animal activists want loopholes in anti-puppy farm laws to be tightened. (Supplied: RSPCA)
A dog breeder who was seeking approval for a 150-puppy farm near Bendigo in Central Victoria has withdrawn their application.
Nearby farmers and animal activists say the "extraordinary" proposal would have been unethical.
The breeder would have required a ministerial exemption to have more than 10 breeding dogs.
An application for a proposed dog breeding facility in Elphinstone in Central Victoria has been withdrawn following lobbying from residents and animal activists.
The puppy farm had planned to operate 24 hours a day and house up to 150 dogs including corgis, golden retrievers and Cavalier King Charles spaniels.
The application for the facility, lodged with Mount Alexander Shire Council in April, stated it "mandates scheduled caesarean sections at specialised veterinary clinics".
Animal Justice MP and Member for Northern Victoria Georgie Purcell said it would have been an "extraordinary" first.
Georgie Purcell wants the government to clamp down on exemptions handed to dog breeders. (ABC News: Tyrone Dalton)
"It's incredibly intrusive and invasive on these animals to have continuous C-sections," she said.
"The recovery period is long and it's going to have a detrimental impact on their bodies.
"It's clear this is an economic decision to ensure all of those puppies survive and can be sold for profit."
The application also proposed using artificial insemination, which Deb Tranter, founder of anti-puppy farm organisation Oscar's Law, said was invasive.
"In my 34 years of investigating puppy farms, I've never come across such invasive surgical intervention before," she said.
Mount Alexander Shire confirmed to the ABC on Wednesday afternoon that the application had been withdrawn.
In 2017, the Victorian government introduced laws it claimed stamped out puppy farms.
However, the minister for agriculture can grant an exemption for breeders to keep more than 10 and up to 50 female dogs.
Georgie Purcell with dogs she rescued from a puppy farm after tighter laws came into force. (Supplied: Georgie Purcell)
Ms Purcell said exemptions had become too easy to get and she was aware of 10 puppy farms with more than 10 female dogs operating in Victoria.
"The exemption allows them to say they [breeders] are state government-approved … it creates this sense of legitimacy when it's actually the absolute opposite," she said.
Ms Purcell wants the government to change its legislation and cap the maximum breeding dogs at 10, and says consumers can be
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