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LEFT WING LOONS Title: VA AG Fears DC Law May Relocate Rehabilitated Rat Families To Virginia (CNSNews.com) -- Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli says he is worried that a new District of Columbia law that governs how pest control operators must handle rats may result in entire rodent families being relocated across the Potomac River into Virginia by D.C. pest control personnel. Lately, there have been reports of growing rat infestations around the Occupy DC protests at Freedom Plaza and McPherson Square. Cuccinelli said D.C.'s new rat law--the Wildlife Protection Act of 2010 (Wildlife Protection Act of 2010.pdf) --is crazier than fiction because it requires that rats and other vermin not be killed but captured, preferably in families; no glue or snap traps can be utilized; the rodents must be relocated from where they are captured; and some of these animals may need to be transferred to a wildlife rehabilitator as part of their relocation process. The law does not allow pest control professionals to kill the dang rats, Cuccinelli told CNSNews.com. They have to capture them--then capture them in families. [Not sure] how youre going to figure that out with rats. And then you have to relocate them. That brings us to Virginia. Now, if you dont relocate them about 25 miles away, according to experts, rodents will find their way back. Well, an easy way to solve that problem is to cross a river, and whats on the other side of the river? Virginia. So we have real concerns about this ridiculous--ridiculous!--law and weve been pretty genial about dealing with D.C. on it, said Cuccinelli. But when you see an article like the Rats Occupy Occupy DC, it points up the problem that were going to have in Virginia because of that--and because D.Cs really outrageous--outrageous!--treatment of these varmints who, for those who dont remember their history, carried things like bubonic plague. I mean, these are true vermin. While the law exempts commensal rodents--varieties of which most people know (or have seen) as common rats or house mice--the rice rat and deer mouse, which are found in the District, are not defined as commensal and apparently are not exempt from the law. In addition, the new law expands the definition of wildlife and sets the rules for handling it to include raccoons, squirrels, skunks, and other animals that can carry disease, such as rabies. The law applies to trained animal control officers, not to homeowners. The law (Wildlife Protection Act of 2010.pdf) specifically says that wildlife shall include any free-roaming wild animal, but shall not include: (A) Domestic animals; (B) Commensal rodents; (C) Invertebrates; and (D) Fish." Commensal rats include the House mouse (Mus musculus), the Norway rat (Rattus norvegicus), and the Roof rat (Rattus rattus). In an e-mail to CNSNews.com, Brian Gottstein, communications director for Attorney General Cuccinelli, said, While certain commensal rodents are exempted from the law, the rice rat and the deer mouse are species that wildlife control experts note are within the District that are NOT defined as commensal rodents, so they would appear not to be exempt from the law. In addition to these particular rats and mice, raccoons, squirrels, skunks and other animals known to carry rabies, Lyme disease, and other diseases are not exempt from the law, said Gottstein. Gene Harrington, governmental affairs director for... Click for Full Text!
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