The bill prohibits a person from exporting a horse by air unless they have provided the Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food with a written attestation that, to the best of their knowledge, the horse is not being exported for slaughter or fattened for slaughter.
As well, it creates an offence to make a false or misleading statement on this subject.
Contravention of the new act would be subject to similar penalties as those found in the Health of Animals Act, a federal statute for regulating livestock in place since 1990.
However, Bill C-355 is written as a stand-alone bill specific to the practice we’re trying to ban.
Furthermore, Bill C-355 will come into force 18 months after Royal Assent to allow horses currently being raised for food to work through the system.
The intent is to strike a balance between practical considerations and ending this practice as soon as possible.
In the other place, the Standing Committee on Agriculture and Agri-Food amended the bill to remove any administrative burdens on pilots and Canada Border Services Agency, or CBSA, officials as well as to prevent adding red tape for other sectors of the equine industry, such as horses travelling for sport.
I now move to my third point — the strong support of Canadians for ending the live export of horses for slaughter overseas.
A key factor in the bill’s origins is determined grassroots support.
Last year, singer-songwriter Jann Arden, patron of the Canadian Horse Defence Coalition, said:
“Since 2006, tens of thousands of terrified horses have been crammed into shoddy wooden crates and flown 8,000 km to their demise, enduring turbulence, thirst and hunger, and abject fear.”
To say this practice is inhumane would be an understatement. Canadians want this to end.
Ms. Arden has a good read of Canadians’ feelings about it.
For example, on June 22, 2021, MP Nathaniel Erskine-Smith presented a [member of Parliament sponsored] petition to the House of Commons on this subject with over 77,000 signatures.
On February 13, 2023, MP Alistair MacGregor presented another such petition to the other place with over 36,000 signatures. Those petitions indicate the importance to Canadians of banning live exports of horses overseas for slaughter.
Moreover, opinion polls also confirm this fact.
An online survey conducted in 2021 by Research Co. revealed that 54% of Canadians then strongly opposed the export of Canadian horses for slaughter abroad and another 13% moderately opposed.
Only 22% strongly or moderately supported this practice.
The highest level of strong opposition was in Alberta, with 61% strongly opposed plus 13% moderately opposed.
Like Albertans, I love horses.