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Agriculture Secretary Reminds Dog Owners To License Their Pets By January — ‘Love Your Dog. License Your Dog.’

Agriculture Secretary Russell Redding reminded Pennsylvania dog owners to purchase a 2024 license from their county treasurer by January 1, 2024. Licenses are not just a legal responsibility of owning a dog, they protect all Pennsylvania dogs and are the best way to bring your pet home quickly if it's lost.

"If you love your dog, license your dog," said Secretary Redding. "It's simple. The best way to protect the dogs we love is with a license. Even if a dog has a chip, a license on their collar is clearly visible and helps ensure they will be brought home rather than ending up in a shelter."

All dogs three months of age and older are required to be licensed in Pennsylvania. An annual license is $8.70, and a lifetime license is $51.70. If the animal is spayed or neutered, the annual fee is $6.70, and lifetime is $31.70. Lifetime licenses require that the dog have a microchip or tattoo. Discounts are available to older adults and people with disabilities.

Your dog license purchase keeps all PA dogs and communities safe by funding the Bureau of Dog Law Enforcement's work:

  • Inspecting Pennsylvania's boarding and breeding kennels and ensuring the health and wellbeing of dogs housed there;
  • Investigating and prosecuting illegal kennel operators;
  • Ensuring that dogs in breeding operations don't go without veterinary care;
  • Protecting the public by monitoring dangerous dogs, investigating dog bites, and holding owners responsible;
  • Reuniting licensed lost dogs with their families; and
  • Helping unlicensed lost dogs find shelter.

Fines for unlicensed dogs range from $50 to $300, plus court costs – far more than the cost of a license.

Licenses can be purchased through Pennsylvania's county treasurers.

Source : pa.gov

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Regulations help markets and industry exist on level playing fields, keeping consumers safe and innovation from going too far. However, incredibly strict regulations can stunt innovation and cause entire industries to wither away. Dr. Peter James Facchini brings his perspective on how existing regulations have slowed the advancement of medical developments within Canada. Given the international concern of opium poppy’s illicit potential, Health Canada must abide by this global policy. But with modern technology pushing the development of many pharmaceuticals to being grown via fermentation, is it time to reconsider the rules?

Dr. Peter James Facchini leads research into the metabolic biochemistry in opium poppy at the University of Calgary. For more than 30 years, his work has contributed to the increased availability of benzylisoquinoline alkaloid biosynthetic genes to assist in the creation of morphine for pharmaceutical use. Dr. Facchini completed his B.Sc. and Ph.D. in Biological Sciences at the University of Toronto before completing Postdoctoral Fellowships in Biochemistry at the University of Kentucky in 1992 & Université de Montréal in 1995.