Posadas bans the sale of pets: end of breeding and sale of dogs and cats

Posadas bans the commercialization of pets in a legislative shift that redefines the relationship between citizens and domestic animals.

During the last ordinary session of the year, held this Thursday, the Deliberative Council of Posadas, the capital of Misiones, gave the green light to a regulation that bans the installation, operation, and advertising of breeding facilities for profit, making the city the second in the country to adopt a measure of this magnitude.

The initiative, promoted by councilor Laura Traid, directly targets the market logic applied to sentient beings. The approved text legally prohibits any economic transaction involving dogs and cats, dismantling both established businesses and informal domestic breeding facilities that, according to authorities, proliferate without sanitary or genetic control.

“Animals are not furniture or appliances; they cannot be bought or sold,” emphasized those in the chamber, marking a clear departure from the view of animals as objects of consumption.

The scope of the regulation is comprehensive. Not only is direct sale in veterinary clinics or stores penalized, but the promotion of these activities in any medium is also prohibited. The measure arises as a response to a growing issue in Posadas: the abandonment of “discarded” purebred animals after their reproductive stage and the exploitation of females in private homes for quick economic benefits.

Although the ordinance has generated resistance in sectors dedicated to breeding specific breeds, the regulation includes clear exceptions. The reproduction of animals is not prohibited per se if it has therapeutic, assistance (such as guide dogs), or work purposes, as long as there is no commercial transaction involved. The goal is not the extinction of breeds, but the elimination of profit as the driving force of reproduction.

To ensure compliance, the municipality will provide control mechanisms that will allow intervention and sanction those detected engaging in monetary exchanges for animals, whether in physical locations or in agreed transactions. With this sanction, Posadas closes its legislative year by sending a strong message about animal welfare and joining a protectionist trend that is gaining ground in the national public agenda.

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