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Senate committee hears H.841; pauses rabies‑vaccinator provision and seeks clearer registration language for shelters and rescues

Senate Committee on Government Operations · April 16, 2026

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Summary

On April 15, 2026 the Senate Committee on Government Operations heard testimony on H.841 (miscellaneous animal welfare procedures); witnesses supported a statewide registry for shelters, rescues and pet dealers but urged wording changes so it covers organizations whether or not they 'import' animals. The committee agreed to remove or pause the bill's rabies‑vaccinator subsection pending coordination with the Secretary of State and Agency of Agriculture.

The Senate Committee on Government Operations convened April 15 to consider H.841, a bill that would create a registration framework for animal shelters, rescue organizations, pet dealers and other persons involved in domestic pet transfers and care.

Erica Holm, co‑executive director of the Vermont Humane Society and chair of the Animal Cruelty Investigation Advisory Board (ACIAB), told the committee she supports the bill but asked for clearer language so that registration covers all organizations doing animal welfare work in Vermont — not only entities that import animals. "We want everybody to register whether you bring animals into the state or not," Holm said, arguing that a complete registry would help the state understand who is operating in Vermont and allow consistent standards and investigation when problems arise.

Committee members and staff focused on a drafting problem in the bill's page‑5 language (subsection f1) that could be read to require registration only for importers. The chair said the wording should be restructured to ensure the obligation covers shelters, rescues, breeders and individual actors regardless of whether animals are transported across state lines. Holm offered to provide revised language through her director.

The chair also reported written guidance from the Secretary of State's office that raised a separate concern: "Rabies vaccine is a prescription drug. Only veterinarians can prescribe to animal patients," the chair said, summarizing the office's advice. Because the provision in H.841 would have allowed a new vaccinator pathway, members agreed to remove or pause that subsection (section 2, lines 1–16 on page 5) and coordinate with the Secretary of State and the Agency of Agriculture to craft language that respects veterinary prescription rules and the state's existing rulemaking authority.

Several committee members emphasized that the committee's intent at this stage is to collect low‑burden registration data rather than impose immediate licensing and inspection. The agency representative explained the bill was designed as an initial registry (no fee) so the state can learn the scale of rescue and shelter activity and determine later whether licensing, inspections or standards of care are warranted.

Witnesses representing shelter and veterinary groups underscored capacity constraints and standards. Pamela Krause, executive director of the Vermont Companion Animal Neuter Clinic and a Vermont Humane Federation board member, said the federation "absolutely support[s] this bill," while noting concerns about requiring owner names and addresses at intake. Dr. Sarah White, a veterinarian on the executive board of the Vermont Veterinary Medical Association, pointed committee members to existing "Guidelines for Standards of Care in Animal Shelters" as a likely reference point if the committee moves from registration to regulatory standards.

On advertising and transparency, members proposed tightening language on page 16 so advertisements specify the municipality and state where a pet is located when an ad is placed, where transfer will occur, and when the animal is expected to arrive — changes intended to prevent adopters from assuming an animal is local when it is coming from another state.

The committee did not vote on H.841. Members instructed staff and sponsors to rework the drafting in several places (notably the registration sentence on page 5 and the intake/advertising provisions) and said they will continue coordinating with the Secretary of State and the Agency of Agriculture on the rabies‑vaccinator language before considering those sections again.