In Defense of Hayden's Law: An Appeal for Enforcement and Accountability
White Paper: Ensuring Justice for California's Companion Animals Through Accountability and Reform
Introduction
Hayden's Law, enacted in 1998, represents a seminal moment in California's efforts to protect companion animals entrusted to public shelters. The law codified our moral and legal obligations to treat animals not as mere property but as sentient beings deserving of protection and a reasonable opportunity for redemption. Despite its clear intent, the persistent arguments of unenforceability, combined with policy trends undermining its provisions, have imperiled the very purpose of Hayden’s Law. This paper addresses the ongoing challenges, dispels erroneous claims, and proposes actionable solutions to ensure its enduring efficacy.
Legal Obligations and Misconceptions
Hayden’s Law was designed to transform California’s shelter system by rejecting convenience euthanasia and establishing foundational protections for companion animals. Its key mandates include:
Requiring public shelters to hold stray animals for a minimum of 4 days—or 6 days when weekends or holidays fall within that period—before euthanasia, ensuring ample opportunity for reclaiming, rescue, and adoption.
Mandating that shelters allow animal rescue organizations the opportunity to save animals scheduled for euthanasia.
Elevating the treatment of animals to a matter of public trust.
In 2001, the California Commission on State Mandates (CSM) ruled that some provisions, notably extended holding periods, constituted an unfunded mandate requiring state reimbursement. This decision addressed funding, not the legality or enforceability of the law itself. The ruling did not invalidate Hayden’s Law. The law remains a legally binding obligation for public shelters, irrespective of funding challenges.
By framing these unfunded costs as grounds for non-compliance, some shelters misrepresent the CSM’s decision and undermine the law’s intent. Hayden’s Law stands as both a legal requirement and a moral commitment to protect California’s most vulnerable animals.
The Impact of Reduced Holding Periods
One of the most alarming trends in recent years is the reduction of mandatory holding periods for stray animals—particularly cats—from 4-6 days to a mere 72 hours. These reductions are a direct affront to the intent of Hayden’s Law. The purpose of the holding period is threefold:
Reuniting Lost Pets with Owners: Holding periods provide critical time for families to reclaim lost companions.
Facilitating Rescue and Adoption: It provides time for nonprofit rescue organizations and the public to intervene and save animals scheduled for euthanasia, ensuring more animals have a chance to find new homes.
Ensuring Due Process for Animals: The holding period ensures that animals are not euthanized prematurely, giving them a fair opportunity for redemption or placement in a suitable environment.
The trend to truncate holding periods disproportionately affects companion cats, who are less likely to be reclaimed immediately and more dependent on rescue and adoption pathways. This systemic failure denies these animals the protections enshrined in Hayden’s Law and contravenes the legislative intent behind mandatory holding periods. While funding challenges exist, these holding periods are not optional; they remain a fundamental obligation of public shelters.
Enforcing Hayden’s Law: A Public Trust Obligation
Despite the clarity of Hayden’s Law, its enforcement has been undermined by policies and practices that flout its provisions. These include:
Shelter Policies Reducing Intake: Under the guise of managing shelter capacity, some agencies turn away animals, leaving them abandoned in the community or at risk of harm. Reduced intake is not a solution; it is an abdication of responsibility.
Lack of Accountability: Shelters operate with little to no oversight regarding compliance with Hayden’s mandates, enabling systemic non-compliance to persist unchecked.
California’s public shelters are agents of the public trust. To disregard Hayden’s Law is to violate that trust. Animals are not burdens; they are vulnerable members of our shared community deserving of humane treatment and meaningful protections.
Practical Solutions to Uphold Hayden’s Law
To preserve Hayden’s Law and honor its intent, the following solutions must be implemented:
Legislative Clarification and Enforcement
The California Legislature should enact amendments similar to the language proposed in AB 2265, which requires transparency and public oversight when shelters adopt policies that undermine Hayden’s Law. Such legislation must:Prohibit practices that shorten holding periods below the statutory minimum.
Mandate reporting of shelter compliance with intake, holding, and rescue provisions.
Empower independent oversight bodies to investigate and enforce shelter compliance.
Restoration of Minimum Holding Periods
The holding period must be restored to the original 4-6 days, ensuring that animals are provided ample opportunity for reclaim, rescue, and adoption. Exceptions must be limited to extreme circumstances (e.g., animals with irremediable suffering).Accountability for Shelters and Public Agencies
Public shelters must be held accountable to Hayden’s Law through:Annual audits of compliance.
Penalties for agencies that violate holding periods or refuse to work with rescue organizations.
Funding tied to demonstrated adherence to the law’s requirements.
Ending Harmful Reduced Intake Policies
The growing trend of reduced (or managed) shelter intake must be reversed. Shelters exist to serve as safe havens for animals in need. Policies that close doors to these animals fail the public and violate the spirit of Hayden’s Law.
Conclusion: Upholding Our Moral and Legal Duty
The arguments against Hayden’s Law—whether framed as unfunded mandates or matters of shelter convenience—are without merit. While some provisions requiring state reimbursement face funding challenges, Hayden’s Law remains enforceable, indispensable, and aligned with California’s commitment to humane treatment for all animals.
The erosion of holding periods, reduction of shelter intake, and pervasive non-compliance represent a dereliction of duty. As stewards of justice, we must ensure that the protections Hayden’s Law established are upheld and strengthened. Animals, as sentient beings, are entitled to our care, compassion, and vigilance.
Hayden’s law is not negotiable. It is a moral and legal obligation that must be defended and enforced. California must rise to this challenge—because the lives and dignity of countless animals depend on it.
Ed Boks is a former Executive Director of the New York City, Los Angeles, and Maricopa County Animal Care & Control Departments, and a former Board Director of the National Animal Control Association. His work has been published in the LA Times, New York Times, Newsweek, Real Clear Policy, Sentient Media, and now on Animal Politics with Ed Boks.
I hope that all Calif directors and managers read this fine article and grasp the clarification it provides. Both Best Friends as well as Cal Animals (and Koret’s legal) instruct the shelters that the totality of Hayden’s Law has been “completely repealed and is inapplicable today in shelter operations”. Trying to straighten out this fallacy is tiresome for myself and other legal animal advocates. The directors come home from the BF seminars/conferences seemingly brainwashed. They need a refresher in civics. Hayden’s IS the law. When you read …“enacted 1998” after an animal/shelter statute, it signifies Hayden’s and is STILL VALID. Codes containing these statutes are republished annually to verify statutory validity.
The only true way to change Hayden’s is through the legislature. And BF, Cal Animals, Koret, Maddies, et al, all realize they LACK the public sentiment and support to do it. In fact they run from public engagement of their “progressive” directives. So instead they literally aid and abet cheating….they facilitate, encourage, promote, and directly cause violations of state law.