Adequate safety precautions must be used for
disposing of animal carcasses and tissue specimens; Disposal must be according to federal, state, local, and provincial regulations.
The owner was charged with 39 misdemeanor counts of animal abuse, animal neglect and failure to
dispose of animal carcasses.
Not exact matches
September 23, 2008 — Eastern Arizona's Apache - Sitgreaves National Forest, key Mexican gray wolf habitat, proposed a new policy requiring livestock owners to
dispose of their own
animals»
carcasses when those
animals died from causes unrelated to wolves.
Smith describes how
carcasses of zoo
animals and «thousands
of dead dogs, cats, raccoons, possums, deer, foxes, snakes, and the rest that local
animal shelters and roadkill patrols must
dispose of each month» are rendered.
If these operations are even regulated, which many are not, APHIS or a state agency or law enforcement typically turn a blind eye, dithering over their authority to shut them down, pretending these are somehow legitimate «businesses» that should be supported, ignoring that these sleazy operators make their money from
animal cruelty and leave communities with unwanted dogs in their shelters, environmental and health hazards from improperly
disposed of carcasses and waste, infestation, and wastewater and other sewage problems.
(b) If prompt disposal
of an
animal carcass is not possible, it shall be contained in a freezer or stored in a sanitary, non-offensive manner until such time as it can be
disposed of as provided in (1)(a) above.