Frannie Greenberg

As Executive Director of Millstone Wildlife Center, a home-based Wildlife Rehabilitation facility that served 1,474 mammals in 2025, we are seeing a yearly increase in the number of cases of suspected rodenticide poisonings. This increase was noted most significantly in the eastern chipmunk. We are currently not in the position to be able to afford laboratory testing for the animals that exhibit signs, therefore scientific data is not available. A noted increase in animals that exhibit symptoms of secondary rodenticide poisoning is also present. The primary species presenting with these symptoms are red foxes, skunks, and raccoons. This organization is emphatically in support of this bill.