Las Vegas Officials to Consider Ordinance Limiting Pet Store Sales Amid “Puppy Mill Pipeline” Concerns

The ongoing debate within Las Vegas city limits has reached a critical juncture as city officials prepare to deliberate over a proposed ordinance that aims to limit the retail sale of pets. The advocates urging for a change argue that the city’s complicity with the “puppy mill to pet store pipeline” needs to be addressed immediately, with Rebecca Goff, state director for Humane World for Animals, pointing out the alarming number of pet stores in Vegas. “Currently, there are 13 pet stores in the city of Las Vegas alone, which is more than 37 other states,” Goff said in an interview with 8 News Now.

Further heightening the sense of immediacy for proponents of the ordinance, the death of a dog by the name of Cindy Lou due to purportedly poor conditions has injected an emotional plea right before the 2025 legislative session. The advocates have not let defeat at the state level deter them, as Goff mentioned the shift of efforts towards municipalities. According to a Nevada Current report, the proposal supported by Mayor Shelley Berkley and Councilwoman Nancy Brune would phase out the sales in existing pet shops over a three-year period while immediately banning new stores from selling pets.

Despite the advocacy and clear support from several city officials, opposition stands firm. Alyssa Miller-Hurley, lobbyist for the Pet Advocacy Network, believes such ordinances don’t reach their intended goals. “These kinds of ordinances do not achieve what they set out to do,” Miller-Hurley said in the Nevada Current-reported Recommending Committee meeting, referencing a Los Angeles Times investigation that uncovered continued pet sales through middlemen following a statewide ban in California…

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