New York – Fashion Capital New York Considers Banning Sale Of Fur

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    Illustrative photo of a man trying on a shtreimel in the ultra-Orthodox neighborhood of Mea Shearim, Jerusalem. (photo credit: Nati Shohat/Flash90)New York – A burgeoning movement to outlaw fur is seeking to make its biggest statement yet in the fashion mecca of New York City.

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    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 “Diddy” 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’re 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.

    “Cruelty should not be confused with economic development,” said state Assemblywoman Linda Rosenthal, a Democrat from Manhattan, who is sponsoring the state legislation. “Fur relies on violence to innocent animals. That should be no one’s business.”

    The fate of the proposals could be decided in the coming months, though supporters acknowledge New York City’s measure has a better chance of passage than the state legislation.

    The fur trade is considered so important to New York’s development that two beavers adorn the city’s 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% of the fur coats made in the U.S, 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.
    This April 10, 2019, photo shows a sign by furnyc.org in the window of Victoria Stass Collection in New York's fur district.  (AP Photo/Richard Drew)
    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.

    “Everyone is watching this,” said Nancy Daigneault, vice president at the International Fur Federation, an industry group based in London. “If it starts here with fur, it’s going to go to wool, to leather, to meat.”

    When asked what a fur ban would mean for him, Nick Pologeorgis was blunt: “I’m out of business.”

    Pologeorgis’ father, who emigrated from Greece, started the fur design and sales business in the city’s “Fur District” nearly 60 years ago.

    “My employees are nervous,” he said. “If you’re 55 or 50 and all you’ve trained to do is be a fur worker, what are you going to do?”

    Supporters of the ban contend those employees could find jobs that don’t involve animal fur, noting that an increasing number of fashion designers and retailers now refuse to sell animal fur and that synthetic substitutes are every bit as convincing as the real thing.

    They also argue that fur retailers and manufacturers represent just a small fraction of an estimated 180,000 people who work in the city’s fashion industry and that their skills can readily be transferred.
    In this April 10, 2019, photo, master furrier Yanni Hilas makes a fur coat at Pologeorgis Furs in New York. A burgeoning movement to outlaw fur is seeking to make its biggest statement yet in the fashion mecca of New York City. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)
    “There is a lot of room for job growth developing ethically and environmentally friendly materials,” said City Council Speaker Corey Johnson, who introduced the city measure.

    New Yorkers asked about the ban this week came down on both sides, with some questioning if a law was really needed.

    “It is a matter of personal choice. I don’t think it’s something that needs to be legislated,” said 44-year-old Janet Thompson. “There are lots of people wearing leather and suede and other animal hides out there. To pick on fur seems a little one-sided.”

    Joshua Katcher, a Manhattan designer and author who has taught at the Parsons School of Design, says he believes the proposed bans reflect an increased desire to know where our products come from and for them to be ethical and sustainable.

    “Fur is a relic,” he said.


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    19 Comments
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    PaulinSaudi
    PaulinSaudi
    5 years ago

    Fur is a sustainable, natural product.

    AmYisroel
    AmYisroel
    5 years ago

    Only fascists ban things like bags and fur.

    5 years ago

    The sale of fur should be banned, worldwide; in other to get fur, the fur bearing animals are clubbed to death. There is no halachic requirement for a streimel to be made out of fur, or to even wear one.

    MyThreeCents
    MyThreeCents
    5 years ago

    Hashem put animals on earth to serve man. it’s perfectly all right to use animal fur for clothing. It’s been done for thousands of years. Killing animals just for sport is cruel, but for food or fur for humans as long as done humanely is okay. I like animals and wouldn’t want to cause them pain but it is not a contradiction to use them for our needs.

    anon6
    Trusted Member
    anon6
    5 years ago

    Fur is a luxury item unless you live in Siberia. Time to get with the times and be more humane. The fur trade today is not.

    5 years ago

    I don’t wear fur, I don’t own fur but why do I need to be in your business if you want to wear. I would like to ask every person who is against the fur trade how is the feeling about abortion including late term abortion. I am sick and tired of liberal trying to control other people’s life. You don’t like it don’t buy it and advertise but not stop my rights.Notice all this crap start at the liberal cities, LA, SF and NYC

    5 years ago

    To #11 -The fur animals are not slaughtered humanely. They are beaten to death. This is not a matter of a hunter killing an animal for food. Fur is a luxury item, only; fur poachers are no different than elephant ivory tusk poachers. People don’t need to wear fur to keep warm, as there are numerous synthetic materials on the market, for that purpose. Incidentally, to compare an animal being beaten to death or being skinned alive for its fur, to one (i.e. a mink), which dies of natural causes us stupid, and asinine!

    5 years ago

    To #15 -Halacha commands us to be kind to animals. Fur is not needed for food, but is a luxury item, which is not needed to sustain life. Therefore, it is you who doesn’t have any seichel or common sense. Incidentally, what kind of a ridiculous title to you use for your pen name?

    yosher
    yosher
    5 years ago

    Next let’s ban leather…..would it not make sense to regulate the industry to encourage humane treatment of the animals? #7 ’s comments about liberals and abortion are quite appropriate….same re regulating the lives of others. Liberals have trouble with consistency: I guess when you”re too open minded your brains fall out!

    PaulinSaudi
    PaulinSaudi
    5 years ago

    Just by the way, I would very much like to know more about the fur hats as shown in the photo. How much do they cost? Where are they sold? I suppose there are special shops. (I have checked Amazon.)