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Los Angeles to become biggest U.S. city to ban fur sales in ’21

- By Emily Alpert Reyes Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles will become the biggest city in the country to ban the sale of animal fur under a new law backed Tuesday by the City Council.

The ordinance, which will go into effect in 2021, makes it illegal to sell, manufactur­e or trade furs or fur clothing and accessorie­s such as coats, handbags and key chains in L.A. city limits.

The ban includes a number of exemptions: Used furs can still be sold at secondhand shops. People can still sell or trade the pelts of dead animals preserved through taxidermy. And the city will not prohibit fur produced from animals taken lawfully under a trapping license. Animal rights activists hailed the decision, denouncing the fur business as barbaric and unnecessar­y.

“Animals are not fabric — they are sentient beings who suffer terribly,” said Patty Shenker, a member of Animal Defenders Internatio­nal. “And we must include them in our moral compass.”

Fur sellers and manufactur­ers, in turn, said their industry was being unfairly singled out and smeared, and warned that legal action could be next.

Because the Tuesday vote was not unanimous, the proposed law will come back to the council for a second, procedural vote before going to Mayor Eric Garcetti for his signature. The sole councilman to oppose the law was Greig Smith, who was recently appointed to fill the seat vacated by Councilman Mitchell Englander.

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