The Welsh government has intended to ban Greyhound racing between 2027 and 2030 as per the newly released schemes.
Ministers have published a draft law that will make it a crime to become an operator of a track for sports, or will involve it in organizing it.
The law will make it illegal to own a Greyhound Racing Stadium or a similar site.
Welsh government ministers agreed to ban the game as part of one deal Welsh Liberal Democrats to pass their expenses plans earlier this year with Jane Dods.
Wales has only one dog-racing track: Ystrad Mynach, Valley Stadium in Caerphilly County.
In a statement on Thursday, Deputy Minister Huw Irranca-Davies said he was “publishing the laws to give Sendd politicians” and to give an opportunity to see the proposed scope to interested stakeholders and the opportunity to see the direction of the bill “.
He said that it would formally introduce Sendd to the Bill in the autumn, where it would need to be passed by politicians before the law is enacted, and there is a possibility of changes before then.
Advocates of a restriction say that the game is dangerous and the dogs involved get hurt.
The proposals followed a government consultation, a petition attracting cross-party calls and 35,000 signatures to ban the game.
Earlier Greyhound Board of Great Britain stated that the ban had “nothing with Greyhound Kalyan and do everything with pressure from extreme animal rights movement”.
The law says that the ban may not be implemented soon compared to 1 April 2027, and not since 1 April 2030.
A person will crime if they are operators of a stadium or similar site and deliberately allow it to be used for Grehend racing.
Greyhound racing is defined to run around a track in search of active greed by mechanical means by setting Greyhounds.
Dods said she was happy to see progress with the bill: “Finally, it was always about the safety and good of dogs before party politics.”