Taxpayer, thank you to everyone who donated and emailed their members of Congress urging them to make adoption an option for lab animals by including Violet’s Law in the 2023 Farm Bill.
Your donations will help us reach even more taxpayers via email, text, and social media to contact lawmakers in support of our #GiveThemBack campaign.
And Taxpayer, I have more good news:
Lawsuit Progress: WCW v. NIH: A federal judge just REJECTED the National Institutes of Health’s (NIH) attempt to throw out our lawsuit to close its Foreign Lab Loophole!
In case you missed it, WCW’s Worldwide Waste investigation uncovered how the NIH ships our tax dollars to labs in other countries, and then illegally exempts them from complying with U.S. animal welfare laws.
In other words, NIH white coats are conducting cruel animal experiments overseas because they are getting away with animal torture that is ILLEGAL at home in the United States!
So we sued NIH on your behalf. The case has been wending its way through the federal courts, and the NIH filed a motion to have the case thrown out. But because of your support, we were able to fight back.
A federal judge has just sided with us and rejected the NIH’s attempt to have the case thrown out, meaning it will now proceed to court!
Taxpayer, I’ve enclosed our blog with more details about our lawsuit and why it’s so important. Please read and share.
Stop the Money. Stop the Madness!
Justin Goodman Senior Vice President White Coat Waste Project |
P.S. Congress just re-introduced the AFAR Act – a WCW-backed bill that would permanently cut funding for animal experiments in countries like China, Iran, and North Korea, which are home to some of the cruelest labs in the world.
After you read our blog below, please take a moment to send a pre-written email to Congress demanding they vote YES on this life-saving bill.
New WCW Lawsuit: Close NIH's Foreign Animal Lab Loophole! [UPDATED]
UPDATE (8/3/23): VICTORY! A federal judge rejected the NIH’s attempt to have our lawsuit dismissed, and the case will proceed!
UPDATE (3/30/23): A new U.S. Government Accountability Office report cites WCW’s lawsuit and confirms the existence of the foreign animal lab loophole.
Original Post (January 4, 2022)
To: NIH
From: WCW
Re: We’ll see you in court!
With 2021 behind us, we’re eager to hit the ground running in 2022, and get started on our New Year’s resolutions. On the top of that list: we resolve to keep fighting the War on Waste…because taxpayers shouldn’t be forced to pay $20 billion for wasteful government animal experiments.
While other groups were still recovering from New Year’s festivities, WCW decided to ring in 2022 by suing the National Institutes of Health for illegally exempting foreign animal labs from oversight that protects animals and taxpayers.
Although the law is sometimes murky, and often frustrating, at least one part of the law governing animal experimentation is clear. Federal law states that any lab that conducts experiments on animals using American taxpayer funds via the NIH must have an animal care committee.
These oversight committees — while far from perfect — are charged with reviewing, approving, or withholding approval for proposed animal experiments. They inspect animal laboratories, address concerns about animal welfare and lab safety, and report deficiencies. They ensure that animal experiments are not duplicative, that non-animal test methods are considered, and they have the power to suspend non-compliant animal experiments.
Sounds pretty important for preventing wasteful spending on animal experiments, right? That’s why WCW investigators were alarmed to discover how NIH illegally exempts foreign white coats from oversight.
We call this the Foreign Animal Lab Loophole.
Can the NIH do that? Can an agency create rules that directly contradict longstanding federal law?
No, it can’t. That’s why we’re suing.
Our lawsuit was filed on our behalf by the non-profit Advancing Law for Animals.
In addition to allowing taxpayer-funded foreign labs to horrifically abuse animals and leak dangerous pathogens and not even report it, the illegal loophole also gives foreign animal experimenters a competitive advantage because they don’t have to bear the costs of compliance that US labs are required to. It also means that taxpayer-funded animal experiments that would not get approved in the US could more easily be conducted overseas.
Outsourcing is bad for American experimenters — but we’re not shedding too many tears for taxpayer-funded white coats. We’re concerned because the Foreign Animal Lab Loophole is VERY bad for animals and taxpayers.
As we exposed last year with our Worldwide Waste investigation, 353 labs in 57 countries are eligible to receive American tax dollars for animal experiments. Many foreign countries, like Tunisia, have no lab animal protection laws at all. None. Zero. Zip. Zilch. And because of the NIH’s Foreign Animal Lab Loophole, animals in some foreign labs (funded by US taxpayers) may have no protections at all.
A recent poll of a thousand taxpayers, conducted by Lincoln Park Strategies, found that a supermajority of Republicans AND Democrats believe taxpayer-funded foreign animal labs should be required to adhere to US standards.
This isn’t the first animal issue with wide, bipartisan agreement. In fact, most WCW issues transcend political ideology.
Thanks for reading, Taxpayer! Please take a moment to email your members of Congress and demand they vote YES on the AFAR Act to cut taxpayer-funding for dangerous and cruel animal tests abroad!
You are receiving this email at [email protected]
UNSUBSCRIBE
Paid for by |