New York considers banning sale of fur
A BURGEONING movement to outlaw fur is seeking to make its biggest statement yet in the fashion mecca of New York City.
Lawmakers are pushing a measure that would ban the sale of all new fur products in the city where such garments were once common and style-setters including Marilyn Monroe, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, Joe Namath and Sean 鈥淒iddy鈥 Combs have all rocked furs over the years.
A similar measure in the state Capitol in Albany would impose a statewide ban on the sale of any items made with farmed fur and ban the manufacture of products made from trapped fur.
Whether this is good or bad depends on which side of the pelt you鈥檙e on. Members of the fur industry say such bans could put 1,100 people out of a job in the city alone. Supporters dismiss that and emphasize that the wearing of fur is barbaric and inhumane.
鈥淐ruelty should not be confused with economic development,鈥 said state Assemblywoman Linda Rosenthal, a Democrat from Manhattan, who is sponsoring the state legislation. 鈥淔ur relies on violence to innocent animals. That should be no one鈥檚 business.鈥
Fur proposals
The fate of the proposals could be decided in the coming months, though supporters acknowledge New York City鈥檚 measure has a better chance of passage than the state legislation.
The fur trade is considered so important to New York鈥檚 development that two beavers adorn the city鈥檚 official seal, a reference to early Dutch and English settlers who traded in beaver pelts.
At the height of the fur business in the last century, New York City manufactured 80 percent of the fur coats made in the US, according to FUR NYC, a group representing 130 retailers and manufacturers in the city. The group says New York City remains the largest market for fur products in the country, with real fur still frequently used as trim on coats, jackets and other items.
If passed, New York would become the third major American city with such a ban, following San Francisco, where a ban takes effect this year, and Los Angeles, where a ban passed this year will take effect in 2021.
Elsewhere, Sao Paulo, Brazil, began its ban on the import and sale of fur in 2015.
Fur farming was banned in the United Kingdom nearly 20 years ago, and last year London Fashion Week became the first major fashion event to go entirely fur-free.
Fur industry leaders warn that if the ban passes in New York, emboldened animal rights activists will want more.
鈥淓veryone is watching this,鈥 said Nancy Daigneault, vice president of the International Fur Federation, an industry group based in London. 鈥淚f it starts here with fur, it鈥檚 going to go to wool, to leather, to meat.鈥
New Yorkers asked about the ban this week came down on both sides, with some questioning if a law was really needed.
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