WHAT IS A PUPPYMILL

What Is a Puppy Mill

A puppy mill is a large-scale commercial dog breeding operation where profit is given priority over the well-
being of the dogs. Unlike responsible breeders, who place the utmost importance on producing the
healthiest puppies possible, breeding at puppy mills is performed without consideration of genetic quality.
This results in generations of dogs with unchecked hereditary defects.

Puppy mill puppies are typically sold to pet shops—usually through a broker, or middleman—and marketed
as young as eight weeks of age. The lineage records of puppy mill dogs are often falsified.

What Problems Are Common to Puppy Mill Dogs?
Illness, disease, fearful behavior and lack of socialization with humans and other animals are common
characteristics of dogs from puppy mills. Because puppy mill operators fail to apply proper husbandry
practices that would remove sick dogs from their breeding pools, puppies from puppy mills are prone to
congenital and hereditary conditions. These can include:


Epilepsy
Heart disease
Kidney disease
Musculoskeletal disorders (hip dysplasia, luxating patellas, etc.)
Endocrine disorders (diabetes, hyperthyroidism)
Blood disorders (anemia, Von Willebrand disease)
Deafness
Eye problems (cataracts, glaucoma, progressive retinal atrophy, etc.)
Respiratory disorders
On top of that, puppies often arrive in pet stores—and their new homes—with diseases or infirmities.
These can include:

Giardia
Parvovirus
Distemper
Upper respiratory infections
Kennel cough
Pneumonia
Mange
Fleas
Ticks
Intestinal parasites
Heartworm
Chronic diarrhea
How Are Animals Treated at Puppy Mills?
Puppy mills usually house dogs in overcrowded and unsanitary conditions, without adequate veterinary
care, food, water and socialization. Puppy mill dogs do not get to experience treats, toys, exercise or basic
grooming. To minimize waste cleanup, dogs are often kept in cages with wire flooring that injures their
paws and legs—and it is not unusual for cages to be stacked up in columns. Breeder dogs at mills might
spend their entire lives outdoors, exposed to the elements—or crammed inside filthy structures where
they never get the chance to feel the sun or a gust of fresh air on their faces.

How Often Are Dogs Bred in Puppy Mills?
In order to maximize profits, female dogs are bred at every opportunity with little to no recovery time
between litters. When, after a few years, they are physically depleted to the point that they no longer can
reproduce, breeding females are often killed. The mom and dad of the puppy in the pet store window are
unlikely to make it out of the mill alive—and neither will the many puppies born with overt physical
problems that make them unsalable to pet stores.

When and Why Did Puppy Mills Begin?
Puppy mills began sprouting up after World War II. In response to widespread crop failures in the Midwest,
the United States Department of Agriculture began promoting purebred puppies as a fool-proof “cash”
crop. It is easy to see why this might have appealed to farmers facing hard times—breeding dogs does not
require the intense physical labor that it takes to produce edible crops, nor are dogs as vulnerable to
unfavorable weather. Chicken coops and rabbit hutches were repurposed for dogs, and the retail pet
industry—pet stores large and small—boomed with the increasing supply of puppies from the new "mills."
Today, Missouri is considered the largest puppy mill state in the country.

Seeking a puppy supply source on the East Coast, puppy brokers—the middlemen who deliver the dogs
from mills to pet stores—convinced many of Pennsylvania’s Amish farmers in the 1970s that puppies were
the cash crop of the future. Brokers conducted seminars to teach farmers how to operate their own
breeding facilities. Thirty years later, Lancaster County, PA, has the highest concentration of puppy mills of
any county in the nation and has earned the dubious nickname of “Puppy Mill Capital of the East.”

How Can I Help Fight Puppy Mills?
There are many ways you can fight puppy mills, starting with refusing to patronize the stores and websites
that sell their dogs.

Do not buy a puppy from a pet store—in fact, do not buy a puppy from any place that does not allow you to
see its entire facility and meet the mother dog. This includes websites that sell pets online. Anyone can put
up a great-looking website boasting the highest standards of breeding and care, but you really have no
way of knowing if such businesses are what they claim. Truly responsible breeders want to meet you
before selling you one of their prized pups to be sure that he or she is going to a good home.

**ASPCA