
I agree if breeders are being unethical it is their own peer group that their reputation matters, unless of course they are basically a puppy farmer where they care not a jot of anyones opinion, but as I often say that kind of breeder is worth reporting to breed clubs as not only can breed clubs steer you towards good breeders but in this way they are aware of the bad so called breeders and when asked can steer people away from known bad sources. The only thing that hurts that kind of person is hitting them in the pocket as they have no reputation to worry about.
Sadly the Kennel Clubs Accredited breeder scheme has been shown not to work, as they are taking people on trust rather than checking on their background, and only remove people once they have already abused the system.
I think if the ABS were to work when each person applies the KC should send a letter to the breed clubs asking their opinion of the person and confirm their standing in breed circles. Even with the inevitable differences between people in a breed club no breed club committee would defame a good breeder purely on personality differences. It is pretty bad when a breed club sends in details of how a breeder is unethical,complaints they have had from puppy buyers, and still the person got onto the scheme.
Of course what puppy buyers still have to understand is that not all things can be foreseen and that there will always be sadly some pups born that are not completely health, despite a breeders best efforts. Problems with complicated inheritance like Liver shunt would be one such. Of course a breeder breeding from an affected animal or repeating the same mating that produced one would be unethical, but using siblings parent etc mated to different lines would not be. If every dog was removed from the gene pool because it had a relative with a problem there soon would be no gene pool and no healthy dogs.
Certainly the basic tests should be carried out for all breeds (Hips and eyes) then those more breed specific, elbows hearts, hormonal (thyroid etc), DNA and so on.
The Kennel Club asked all breed clubs some years ago to draw up breed specific codes of ethics, and preferably to have one breed wide agreed by the breed council where there are more clubs. For those breeds who have not agreed a code the KC should insist that one is drawn up, and this should form the basis for inclusion on the ABS, so that the requirements were appropriate to the breed.
I have been listening to the adverts on Crufts FM about getting pups from breeders on the ABS, because they will be sure of getting one without problems. From a legal standpoint I think the KC could be in very hot water if people who are assuming this get a sick pup from the ABS and decide to take action against the KC. The advert doesn't even say have the best chance of getting a problem free pup, but are quite definite that they will, most misleading at the present time.
To be honest the KC should simply take the bull by the horns and not register puppies from volume breeders that do not health test as do other Kennel clubs.
They would probably have to sell the London place because of the loss of revenue, but then they would be doing what they are supposed to be, in all ways improving pedigree dogs. They can't continue to pretend not to realise that people breeding hundreds of pups a year are actually contributing anything to the quality of their breeds, they are in fact cutting off their own noses as the general public are becoming increasingly aware that KC registration is no mark of quality and are just as prepared to pay almost the same prices for unregistered pedigree and cross bred pups, and alternatively papered ones.
KC registration really has to stand for what people think it stands for proof of breed and parentage and some mark of quality.