Representative John Spratt, Proudly serving the People of the 5th District of South Carolina image of Capitol

News Release

09/23/05
 
Spratt Hails Senate Passage of Amendment to End Horse Slaughter
 

WASHINGTON - U.S. Rep. John Spratt (D-SC) hailed Senate passage this week of an amendment to bar federal funds from being used to facilitate the slaughter of horses for human consumption.

Spratt supported the amendment in the House, where it was approved on June 8.  The measure now moves to a House-Senate conference committee, where approval is also expected.

"If you've grown up with horses, you find that they're as close to human as you can get,” Spratt said.

The amendment to the Agriculture Appropriations Act for Fiscal Year 2006 would eliminate funding for federal inspection of horse meat.  Without inspection, it is unlikely that slaughterhouses, operating in Texas and Illinois, could continue to sell horse meat to customers at meat markets and restaurants in Europe and Asia.

Because the Agriculture Appropriations Act is an annual spending bill, the amendment will only halt horse slaughter for one fiscal year, beginning in October.  “However,” said Spratt, “passage of this amendment suggests that support for a permanent ban is solid.”

Spratt introduced the American Horse Slaughter Prevention Act in the House this year and last. It has won public support and the co-sponsorship of over half the House.  The bill will prohibit the slaughter of horses for human consumption and stop the sale, possession, and trade of horsemeat.  It will also impose penalties on violators.  The bill does not prohibit euthanasia, or putting down old, sick, and disabled horses.

Spratt said that an estimated 65,000 horses are slaughtered each year, many at slaughterhouses where they are sent without food or water, and killed without sedation. 

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