March 9, 2020 - Issue: Vol. 166, No. 45 — Daily Edition116th Congress (2019 - 2020) - 2nd Session
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PETITIONS AND MEMORIALS; Congressional Record Vol. 166, No. 45
(Senate - March 09, 2020)
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[Pages S1624-S1625] From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov] PETITIONS AND MEMORIALS The following petition or memorial was laid before the Senate and was referred or ordered to lie on the table as indicated: POM-187. A joint resolution adopted by the Senate of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico urging the United States Congress to enact legislation providing for a five year transition period to enforce the provisions of the Farm Bill through which the Animal Welfare Act (7 U.S.C. section 2156) is applied to Puerto Rico, banning any type of animal fighting venture; to the Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry. Joint Resolution No. 126 The United States Congress passed the H.R. 2 Conference Report, known as the Farm Bill, which included an amendment to the Animal Welfare Act (7 U.S.C. 2156) extending the application thereof to Puerto Rico. The aforementioned statute bans all animal fighting ventures including cockfights. Cockfighting is considered a traditional sport in Puerto Rico which has been deeply rooted in our culture and history for over five hundred years. Cockfights in Puerto Rico are regulated by Act No. 98-2007, as amended, known as the ``Puerto Rico Gamecocks of the New Millennium Act,'' and by Regulation No. 7424. Both the Act and the regulations in effect, which stem from our extensive experience holding cockfights officially overseen by the State, regulate, control, oversee, and promote all the activities related to this sport. In Puerto Rico there are over seventy (70) cockpits distributed among forty-five ( 45) municipalities throughout the Island. This industry creates a total of eleven thousand one hundred and thirty-four (11,134) direct, indirect, and induced jobs. The cockfighting industry injects $65 million annually into Puerto Rico's economy mainly from the consumption of agricultural products, gamecock farms, medications, vitamins, services, tourism, establishment operations, attendee consumption, permits, and licenses. Just in one year, a total of eighty-eight thousand three hundred (88,300) cockfights were held for a total three hundred and forty-four thousand (344,000) attendees. The one (1)-year transition period provided by this Act is not enough to mitigate the economic impact it shall have on the Island, nor does it provide enough time for the federal law enforcement agencies to implement it. Therefore, it would promote the proliferation of underground cockfights. Thus, it is essential to allow for a five (5)-year transition process. It is very important [[Page S1625]] to provide the people employed by this industry with a reasonable amount of time to transition to other industries so that our economic recovery is not affected by the sudden blow of the cockfighting ban. The adoption of this federal statute shall affect the resources of the United States and Puerto Rico governments on several fronts on account of: (i) the need for resources and personnel to seize 176,000 gamecocks without having any place for them or management protocols; (ii) the federal Government has not determined whether having gamecocks shall be illegal or whether the owners shall have to maintain them; (iii) having to train personnel to handle gamecocks: (iv) the closing of seventy (70) establishments that pay license fees, water and electric power bills, municipal license fees, and other utilities; and (v) job retraining assistance for 11,134 employees; (vi) the loss of $65 million for the Island's economy which includes taxes, excise taxes, product consumption, tourism, and bird feed, among others. In addition, the direct revenues from the gamecock industry, not counting licenses, taxes, and others, go to sports programs for Puerto Rican children through the Sports and Recreation Department. For all of the foregoing, this Legislative Assembly deems it pertinent to request the Governor of Puerto Rico, the Hon. Wanda Vazquez-Garced, and the Resident Commissioner of Puerto Rico in Washington, the Hon. Jenniffer Gonzalez-Colon, to take the necessary steps to urge the Congress of the United States of America to enact legislation providing for a five (5)-year transition period to enforce the provisions of the Farm Bill through which the Animal Welfare Act (7 U.S.C. Sec. 2156) is applied to Puerto Rico banning any type of animal fighting venture, including cockfights; and direct the development of five (5)-year transition program. Likewise, the transition period should allow for the development of economic studies as are necessary; the establishment of protocols for the transition, and management and disposal of gamecocks; as well as the retraining and reemployment programs for persons who were part of the Puerto Rico cockfighting sport and industry. Be it resolved by the Legislative Assembly of Puerto Rico: Section 1.--To request the Governor of Puerto Rico, the Hon. Wanda Vazquez-Garced, and the Resident Commissioner of Puerto Rico in Washington, the Hon. Jenniffer Gonzalez-Colon, to take the necessary steps to urge the Congress of the United States of America to enact legislation providing for a five (5)-year transition period to enforce the provisions of the Farm Bill through which the Animal Welfare Act (7 U.S.C. Sec. 2156) is applied to Puerto Rico banning any type of animal fighting venture, including cockfights. Section 2.--To request the Governor of Puerto Rico, the Hon. Wanda Vazquez-Garced, and the Resident Commissioner of Puerto Rico in Washington, the Hon. Jenniffer Gonzalez-Colon to jointly develop a work plan for a five (5)-year transition period that allows for the development of economic studies as are necessary; the establishment of protocols for the transition, and management and disposal of gamecocks; as well as the retraining and reemployment programs for persons who were part of the Puerto Rico cockfighting sport and industry. Said plan shall be included in the presentations given to the United States Congress and the Legislative Assembly of Puerto Rico. This work plan shall be drafted within one hundred and eighty (180) days as of the approval of this Joint Resolution. Section 3.--A copy of this Joint Resolution translated into English shall be delivered to the Speaker of the United States House of Representatives; the President Pro Tempore of the Senate; and to the party leaders of the United States House of Representatives and Senate. Section 4.--This Joint Resolution shall take effect immediately after its approval. ____________________
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