Op-Ed: How one puppy mill-teliant retailer is preempting local laws

Op-Ed: How one puppy mill-teliant retailer is preempting local laws

Spread the love

One of the most overlooked threats to community-based control in America isn’t coming from Washington politicians or even state government officials, but from a corporation that is using state power to override local regulations. This national retailer sources many of the puppies it sells from cramped and unhealthy large-scale commercial breeding operations. To preserve its business model, it’s employing a brute-force legal and lobbying strategy that should concern anyone who believes in limited government and the right of towns, cities, and counties to govern themselves.

A quick internet search of the corporate retail chain in question, Petland, yields a plethora of news stories documenting instances of puppy mistreatment and buyers scammed into purchasing sick dogs at steep prices.

In Georgia and Virginia, dead puppies were discovered in Petland store freezers. In Ohio, one family was infected after unknowingly buying a sick puppy from Petland, and other buyers saw their new pets die shortly after bringing them home. One couple in Iowa owed thousands of dollars on a puppy even after it died. In Michigan, more than a dozen buyers filed a lawsuit alleging a Petland store sold them sick, worm-infested puppies.

This evidence is the result of puppies bred at mass-production facilities, then funneled through Petland stores to unsuspecting buyers. And it’s why cities and counties – blue and red alike – have passed ordinances to keep unethically bred puppies out of storefronts. These weren’t sweeping mandates. They didn’t target responsible breeders, who sell directly to people they meet in person and provide proper care and living conditions to their dogs. The regulations were local decisions made by elected officials who listened to their residents and wanted to counter a puppy mill pipeline that relies on animal cruelty to fuel corporate profits.

Petland’s answer has been to go over the heads of those communities and deploy armies of lobbyists into state legislatures, where they incentivize and pressure lawmakers to preempt local, anti-puppy mill ordinances. In some states, this strong-armed tactic worked. City and county decisions were invalidated with one stroke of a governor’s pen. With local voices silenced, pet buyers and puppies continue to be victimized.

Illinois shows how far Petland’s playbook of preemption can go. After the state enacted a law designed to end the retail sales of mill-bred puppies, ethical breeding advocates breathed a sigh of relief. Then, Petland found a workaround. State regulators granted the company a license anyway, effectively gutting the law without ever having to challenge it in court. The lesson: even when legislatures act, corporate lobbying of unelected bureaucrats can undo the will of voters and lawmakers alike.

Petland’s fight to preserve its puppy mill pipeline is not simply a fight over animal welfare. It is also about whether local communities get to govern themselves at all.

Of course, preemption itself isn’t always inappropriate. There are legitimate reasons for consistent statewide policies in some areas. But Petland isn’t seeking uniformity, it’s seeking immunity – from accountability, from public sentiment, and from local leaders who know their communities better than any lobbyist in a statehouse hallway.

Petland’s push to invalidate local ordinances that threaten its cruelty-based business model is a ruthless shortcut. It ignores the public outcry and debate over the conditions inside puppy mills. Instead of winning hearts and minds, it makes them irrelevant by convincing a few select lawmakers or regulators that local democracy is a nuisance.

When it comes to protecting consumers from a retailer’s deceptive sales practices, and protecting puppies from being commercially farmed in deplorable conditions, local communities should be able to apply their values to the businesses that operate there.

The relationship between an owner and their pet is special, and the process of selecting that puppy should be just as personal. Petland’s puppy mill pipeline is coldhearted, as anyone who has seen the photos or read the news coverage immediately understands. Adopting from a shelter or buying from a small breeder who obviously loves and cares for their dogs is good for puppies and good for families, and public policy should reflect that fact.

Kudos to states and localities that are doing the right thing – and shame on the stores and lobbyists trying to rig the system in favor of corporate cruelty.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

23 state AGs demand top ratings agencies explain ESG-driven downgrades

23 state AGs demand top ratings agencies explain ESG-driven downgrades

By Tate MillerThe Center Square Nearly two dozen state attorneys general are asking the three top ratings agencies to explain their “ESG-driven” downgrades of fossil-fuel companies. In a letter to...
Bacon says Pentagon raided housing fund for troop bonuses, demands repayment

Bacon says Pentagon raided housing fund for troop bonuses, demands repayment

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square A retiring Republican congressman plans to confront Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth this week over how $2.6 billion appropriated by Congress for military housing assistance was...
Will County Board Graphic.02

Will County Passes Comprehensive Adult Entertainment Ordinance

Will County Board Meeting | April 16, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Board passed Ordinance 26-133, enacting Chapter 119 of the Business Regulations to establish rigorous licensing, operational, and...
Correspondents' dinner attacker detained with multiple weapons

Correspondents’ dinner attacker detained with multiple weapons

By Jon StyfThe Center Square A California man charged security with multiple weapons at a magnetometer screening area outside the White House Correspondents’ Dinner on Saturday night before he shot...
BREAKING: Trump, cabinet OK after shots fired at White House Correspondents dinner

BREAKING: Trump, cabinet OK after shots fired at White House Correspondents dinner

By Dan McCalebThe Center Square President Donald Trump, First Lady Melania Trump, and members of Trump's cabinet are OK after being rushed out of the White House Correspondents' Association dinner...
frankfort township graphic

Frankfort Township Board Approves Highway Salt Purchase, Restructures Financial Signers

Frankfort Township Board Meeting | March 9, 2026 Article Summary: The Frankfort Township Board unanimously approved a resolution updating its Illinois Fund authorized signers and greenlit the Highway Department's 2026-2027 salt...
U.S. House Republicans face jam-packed week ahead

U.S. House Republicans face jam-packed week ahead

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square U.S. House Republicans face a daunting legislative to-do list for the week ahead. The Department of Homeland Security has been shut down for more than...
Trump again scraps peace talks with Iran

Trump again scraps peace talks with Iran

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump called off a planned diplomatic mission to Pakistan on Saturday, refusing to send his team on what he described as an unproductive...
U.S. Supreme Court to hear TPS for Haiti, Syria Wednesday

U.S. Supreme Court to hear TPS for Haiti, Syria Wednesday

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments on Wednesday in two cases that could determine the temporary protected status for Haitian and Syrian immigrants. Justices...
Fifth Circuit hands Texas another win on border security law

Fifth Circuit hands Texas another win on border security law

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals handed Texas its third win Friday on border security. As the border crisis escalated during the Biden administration, Gov....
Illinois Rep faces investigation over sexual harassment

Illinois Rep faces investigation over sexual harassment

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A state representative embattled with allegations of sexual harassment returned to Springfield this week after being stripped...
Screenshot 2026-05-09 at 4.13.15 PM

Frankfort Amends Zoning Code to Update Special Use Permits and Downtown Residential Materials

Frankfort Village Board Meeting | April 20, 2026 Article Summary: The Village Board approved a package of text amendments that untether Special Use Permits from the land and establish strict...
Talks with Iran to resume

Talks with Iran to resume

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square Middle East Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner will head back to Pakistan over the weekend to resume talks, as Vice President JD Vance...
Return on investment questioned as Chicago Red Line construction begins

Return on investment questioned as Chicago Red Line construction begins

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Taxpayers are facing a hefty price tag as construction begins on a long-anticipated Chicago Transit Authority project...

WATCH: WA Democrat income tax supporter questions ‘necessity clause’ nixing public vote

By Carleen JohnsonThe Center Square A Democratic lawmaker who voted in support of Washington’s new income tax said he didn't see anything scandalous in this week’s revelation of emails showing...