Pancho, our beloved dog who inspired this work

In memory of Pancho · 2018–2021

A promise kept.

Pancho's Law is now the law of Texas.

On September 1, 2025, HB 285 — Pancho's Law — took effect. For the first time, Texas can prosecute trainers, boarders, groomers, and daycares whose criminal negligence kills or injures a pet. A loophole closed. A promise kept.

Signed into law · 89th Texas Legislature

Texas HB 285 passed the House 125–5 and the Senate unanimously.

Authored by Rep. Claudia Ordaz with Reps. Leach, Meyer, Moody, and Cook, sponsored in the Senate by Sen. Royce West, and effective September 1, 2025. Pancho's Law adds criminal negligence to Texas's animal cruelty statute — finally giving families a path to justice when a pet service business kills or injures the dog they love.

What the law changes House: 125–5 · Senate: unanimous
Effective Sept. 1, 2025
Paul and Maria Mecca with Ashley Morgan of THLN and Senator Royce West at the Texas Capitol
Paul and Maria Mecca with Ashley Morgan (Texas Humane Legislation Network) and Sen. Royce West, who sponsored HB 285 in the Texas Senate.
Paul and Maria Mecca with Rep. Claudia Ordaz, lead author of HB 285, at the Texas State Capitol
Paul and Maria Mecca with Rep. Claudia Ordaz at the Texas State Capitol.

The author of HB 285

Rep. Claudia Ordaz carried Pancho's Law.

Pancho's Law is law today because of her. As lead author, Rep. Ordaz filed HB 285, recruited co-authors across the aisle, and carried the bill through every reading on the Texas House floor — finally passing on third reading 125 to 5.

Representing Texas House District 79, Rep. Ordaz turned a Dallas family's loss into a statewide law that protects every Texan with a dog. To Paul and Maria — and to every family that ever lost a pet to negligence and was told there was nothing they could do — thank you, Representative.

Texas Capitol · HB 285

Watch the moment Pancho's Law passed.

A four-year fight, two chambers, two roll calls. Watch the Texas House and Senate close the loophole that took Pancho.

Texas House — 125 to 5 Under Texas legislative rules, a bill must be read and voted on three separate times before it can leave a chamber. HB 285 cleared its second reading in the House 123–19, then passed on the final (third) reading by a vote of 125 to 5 — the count that sent the bill to the Senate.
Texas Senate — Unanimous The Senate follows the same three-reading rule as the House. Sponsored by Sen. Royce West, HB 285 cleared every reading without a single vote against it and passed the Senate unanimously — sending Pancho's Law to the Governor's desk.
Pancho with Maria and Paul Mecca

Our story

Pancho was family. Then he was gone.

In 2021, Paul and Maria Mecca's dog Pancho died while in the care of a Dallas dog daycare. The business lied about what happened — to Maria and Paul, to law enforcement, and to other customers — even with video evidence to the contrary.

What they discovered next was harder than the loss itself: under Texas law, all those businesses had to do was claim it was an accident. Four years later, that loophole is closed.

Read the full story

The path

From a tragedy in Dallas to a law in Texas

How a family's loss became one of the most significant Texas animal-welfare wins of the 89th Legislature — and why the work isn't over yet.

"My husband and I quickly learned there is a loophole in Texas law that allows pet service businesses to act with impunity by simply claiming negligence. All they have to do is say 'I didn't mean to kill your dog.'"
Maria Mecca, testifying before a Texas Senate committee — as reported by KXAN, May 2025

The work continues

Has a dog care business hurt your family?

HB 285 only matters if it's used. We're collecting stories to support enforcement, raise awareness, and push for similar laws in other states. If something has happened to your dog, your story still matters.