The Animal Advocate
Philadelphia just did something New York still won't: it banned horse-drawn carriages. Earlier this month, Philadelphia banned horse-drawn carriages for good. Penny helped get that bill passed, and in this episode she tells the inside story of how it got done, then turns to the harder question: why New York, where a young man just died, still hasn't acted, and what advocates there have to do before this moment slips away. In this episode, you'll learn: * Why the Philadelphia companies closing was in part luck, not strategy, and what the real strategy was * How to foresee loopholes while there is still time to close them * Why banning an entire use of animals is hard but CAN get done if public opinion supports it * How to spot the substitute "reform" bill that gets passed instead of a ban, and quietly kills it Key Takeaway: Law doesn't create public opinion, it follows it, so the advocate's job is to build the record, watch for the opening, and when the moment comes, ask for the law that prevents the harm instead of the smallest fix you think you can get. If you want to move policy in your own community, or build the skills to do it well, you can access the free private audio series on the Four C's of Legislative Advocacy for Animals here: AnimalAdvocacyAcademy.com/fourcs
49 episodes
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