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‘Oreo’s Law’ Would Give Dogs a Second Chance at Life

Posted by homefurever on November 21, 2009

A story has been drawing alot of attention on the Internet recently.  It’s about a long-abused animal who was ultimately thrown off a 6th floor roof by his abusive owner.  Miraculously, the dog named Oreo survived and was taken in by the ASPCA.  The animal received 5 months worth of life-saving medical treatment and presumably social interaction and affection.  However, recently, the head of the ASPCA made a decision to euthanize the dog, presumably because he had incurable aggression issues.  This decision was in spite of the fact that an animal sanctuary had begged to be allowed to take possession of the animal to care for him and re-train him.  The ASPCA leader’s decision has caused the organization to have to take a defensive position in the face of animal lover’s nationwide who are vocally outraged.  Now, politician’s in New York, the state where this incident took place, have proposed legislation to insure that a similar situation can never again occur in their State.

Read the details of the case below and let us know what you think.

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by Nathan Winogard

MANHATTAN — A bill to allow animal welfare organizations the right to request animals be given to their care when a shelter is planning to euthanize them will be introduced in the State Legislature this week by Assembly Member Micah Z. Kellner and State Senator Thomas K. Duane.

The bill is named Oreo’s Law in memory of a pit bull mix who became well-known after she survived abuse at the hands of her former owner, including a fall from a six-story building, but was eventually euthanized after the ASPCA determined she was untreatably aggressive. Pets Alive Animal Sanctuary, a no-kill animal shelter located in the foothills of the Catskill Mountains, specializing in the rehabilitation and care of abused animals, offered to take Oreo, but the ASPCA refused the request.

“As a dog owner and a foster parent for an animal rescue group, I was heartbroken to learn that Oreo was euthanized. When a humane organization volunteers their expertise in difficult cases, a shelter should work with them to the fullest extent possible.” said Assembly Member Micah Z. Kellner. “I am hopeful that Oreo’s Law will ensure that no animal is ever put to death if there is a responsible alternative.”

“The humane treatment of animals in the care of shelters is an issue about which I feel very strongly,” said Senator Thomas K. Duane, who will introduce Oreo’s Law legislation in the New York State Senate. “No animal should be put down by a shelter if a reputable humane or rescue organization is willing to assume responsibility for its well being. Oreo’s Law would make sure that in instances where animals aren’t rabid or physically suffering, such organizations have the authority to take possession with the payment of the normal adoption fee, and that Oreo’s sad plight will not be repeated.”

“We are deeply moved that Assembly Member Kellner and Senator Duane have taken up Oreo’s cause. We all need to be the voice for these innocent animals,” said Kerry Clair and Matt DeAngelis, Executive Co-Directors of Pets Alive Animal Sanctuary. “We have asked our local legislators to support the bill and we hope that Oreo’s tragic and unnecessary death will offer life to thousands of others.”

Oreo’s Law is modeled after a provision in California state law, adopted there in 1998 as part of a general animal welfare reform package known as the Hayden Law (named after the Senator who authored it).

“Oreo’s Law” would prevent shelters like the ASPCA from killing dogs that legitimate rescue groups are willing to save. It is named after the dog Oreo who was killed by the ASPCA despite a No Kill shelter/sanctuary’s offer to provide her lifetime care.
 

The Meaning of Oreo

Over the last several days, the ASPCA’s killing of a dog named Oreo has ignited a furor among animal lovers nationwide. They tried to justify it by claiming she was aggressive. But the question of whether or not Oreo was beyond rehabilitation is merely a side story to the most significant issues raised by Oreo’s execution. And while Oreo’s killing by those who were supposed to be her protectors has left too many questions unanswered, what has emerged as the most significant one is why did Ed Sayres, the President of the ASPCA, rush to kill an abused dog when the public demanded that she be saved and a sanctuary had offered her lifetime care?

Last June, a one-year old dog named Oreo was intentionally thrown off a sixth floor Brooklyn roof top by her abuser. Oreo sustained two broken legs and a fractured rib. Although the facts are sketchy, Oreo also appears to have been beaten in the past—several of the neighbors in the building where Oreo lived reported hearing the sounds of the dog being hit. The ASPCA nursed her back to health and arrested the perpetrator. They also dubbed her the “miracle dog.”

The miracle was short-lived. According to Ed Sayres, the President of the ASPCA, when Oreo recovered from her injuries, she started to show aggression. After a series of temperament tests, Ed Sayres says he made the decision to kill her. The New York Times reported the story the day before Oreo’s scheduled execution. Despite the best efforts of Sayres to spin the outcome, the furor and condemnation by dog lovers all over the country was immediate.

In an attempt to contain the wrath of the animal-loving community against him, Sayres issued a press release replete with crocodile tears (“We are all upset by this”), saying that she was truly vicious, and arguing that lifetime care in a sanctuary would have meant no quality of life. Sometimes, Sayres said, there are no happy endings. Early on Friday morning, Oreo laid dead, the victim not of her former abuser, but of an overdose of poison from a bottle marked “Fatal-Plus,” at the hands of a shelter bureaucrat.

 

Refusing a Lifesaving Alternative

Facts are troubling things. Facts get in the way of a contrived story. And there is one troubling fact that all of Ed Sayres’ double-speak simply cannot overcome. Try as the ASPCA might to argue that Oreo’s death was unavoidable, Sayres’ misrepresentation has one fundamental obstacle: Oreo had a place to go. The issue doesn’t turn on the real extent of Oreo’s aggression. The real issue is that a No Kill shelter and sanctuary, with experience rehabilitating aggression in dogs, which works with area shelters that could have vouched for their credibility, which enjoys wide community esteem, and which is only a short drive outside of New York City, offered to give her lifetime sanctuary, and was refused.

They called and left a voice mail message on Sayres’ telephone. They called his secretary. They called the ASPCA Press Office. They contacted everyone on the ASPCA website contact page. And they were ignored, hung up on and lied to.

Pets Alive in Middletown, New York, is not only a member of the Mayor’s Alliance for New York City animals, of which the ASPCA is also a member, they are not only an Alliance-approved rescue partner, they not only have had experience with aggressive dogs, but they agreed to take responsibility for a dog the ASPCA was committed to putting in a body bag and then dumping in a landfill. Even though Pets Alive is already an approved rescue partner, the fact that Oreo may have presented a special case didn’t mean the offer should have been rejected out of hand. The ASPCA could have visited Pets Alive; they could have checked veterinary references, community references, could have insisted on specific precautions and liability waivers. But instead, early that morning, before the “media circus got out of hand,” Ed Sayres, willfully, neglectfully, cruelly, and dishonestly, chose to kill Oreo instead. That is the true face of the ASPCA. And that is intolerable.

 

Lowering the Bar

Ironically, had these events taken place in California, it would have been illegal for the ASPCA to kill Oreo instead of giving her to Pets Alive. In 1998, the California legislature overwhelming and bipartisanly passed a law making it illegal for a shelter to kill a dog if a No Kill shelter or rescue group is willing to save that dog—even in cases where the shelter says the dog is aggressive. Having worked in San Francisco, Sayres should be sensitive to the fact that the ASPCA, which claims a leadership position in this movement, should not have a more regressive policy than one approved by an overwhelming number of politicians on both sides of the political spectrum and the State’s Republican governor.

And yet the ASPCA, under Sayres, proves once again that the large national organizations have no vision, no desire to truly raise the status of animals in society, and despite claiming they are setting the bar on how society should relate to animals, that they are in reality staffed by those who would rather perpetuate the violence and betrayal Oreo already experienced by killing her—even as true animals lovers offered them a simple, life-affirming alternative, and the second chance at life Oreo so richly deserved.

And as an agency which claims to be the leading voice of animals, the ASPCA has a duty to continually push the envelope and raise the bar on these issues: to ask the tough questions, to give the issue the time it needs to arrive at a just and thoughtful resolution. Instead, the ASPCA rushed to kill Oreo and permanently closed the door to an animal that needed the full force of the ASPCA’s compassion—and vast resources—the most.

 

Ignoring the Public

A few short years ago, this case would have had the same tragic ending, with the majority of the dog loving public angry that Oreo’s life had come to this short end. But their anger would have been directed only at her former abuser. Today, that anger is still strong, but it is also being directed at the agency which was supposed to protect her from that ultimate harm and fundamentally failed. This is the same anger that forced Humane Society of the United States CEO Wayne Pacelle—like Sayres, another stalwart defender of killing—to stop pursuing the automatic destruction of abuse victims. Today, despite the claims of aggression which would have ended the dialog in the past, people want, deserve, and believe the dogs deserve the happy endings to which they are not only entitled, but which are readily available if men like Sayres and Pacelle would only give it to them. But time and time again, they choose not to.

That Oreo may not have been an immediate adoption candidate due to aggression issues is therefore secondary to the will of the people who wanted Oreo saved, who demanded that Oreo be saved, who were not swayed by false calculations of quality of life, of talk of being traumatized, of any other rationale that would have allowed Sayres and Pacelle to kill dogs without public condemnation. People are tired of the excuses, they are tired of the justifications, and they are tired of the killing.

Because I was quoted in the New York Times article (a bit misquoted actually as I would never call a dog an “it.” I was referring to the testing, not the dog), I was flooded by e-mails and telephone calls. The anger at Sayres was resolute. As one of those individuals noted,

Missing completely from the ASPCA’s response is any acknowledgment whatsoever of the concerns and outrage of the public who fund their work. The public was disrespected; their concerns guided by compassion disregarded.

The gulf between what the public expects from a humane society and the conduct of the ASPCA and others in their league is so at odds with humanity, a gulf so wide, it cannot be crossed. Instead of building a bridge to create needed dialog, Ed Sayres mounted a barricade from which he ran a self-serving propaganda campaign to force his views. He forgot that the ASPCA is publicly funded. He behaved like a dictator, not a leader.

 

Set Up to Fail?

No analysis on Oreo’s death would be complete without an evaluation of how the ASPCA determined that she was aggressive: Did the ASPCA evaluate her fairly? Given the abuse she suffered, how painful was she? Did they give her enough time to learn to trust again? Critics have charged that the ASPCA set her up for failure. That is an important issue and one that cannot be left to the often self-serving claims that have defined the ASPCA over the years.

As in many of these cases, people are questioning whether she was truly as aggressive as Sayres is trying to make out. There have been unconfirmed reports that staff and volunteers have claimed the ASPCA is exaggerating, and the ASPCA has not yet released any videotapes of her which would shed light on the real extent of her alleged aggression. According to unconfirmed reports, two staff members indicated that while the dog did show aggression, she could also be very affectionate, and as a result, they felt she was treatable. Unconfirmed reports also indicate that staff members asked Sayres for a reprieve so she could be placed in a sanctuary. And finally, unconfirmed reports indicate that a volunteer was able to go in and handle Oreo, despite some aggression issues. I have not been able to verify the veracity of these claims, but since this is secondary to the main issues above, their resolution would not alter what should have been the outcome.

On top of these nagging issues, there is the question of whether Ed Sayres is fit to make the final determination. I worked very closely with Sayres at the San Francisco SPCA. It was Sayres who was responsible for the decline and eventual abandonment of the No Kill goal in San Francisco. It was Sayres who embarked on the boondoggle of building a $20 million specialty hospital despite other specialty veterinary hospitals in that city and surrounding areas; and projections that it was not needed, would ultimately harm the San Francisco SPCA’s finances without meeting an unmet need, and cause programs for homeless animals to be curtailed. It is no surprise that those predictions have come to pass: The SPCA is now losing $3,000,000 every year, has eliminated 25% of its staff, has cut lifesaving programs, and appears to be racing toward financial oblivion, all due to the legacy of Sayres’ catastrophic leadership. As I wrote in Redemption about his tenure in San Francisco, Sayres inherited an,

SPCA with a strong infrastructure, departments that had become the envy of the growing No Kill movement, and a fundraising apparatus that had amassed an endowment of over forty million dollars. [He] would not fully leverage the opportunity he was given. In a short period of time, with money being wasted, fundraising opportunities missed, deficits created, an increasingly bloated bureaucracy developing, and key programs gutted or eliminated, the SPCA finally abandoned all pretensions toward No Kill in San Francisco.

This is a man who, as head of the wealthiest and most powerful SPCAs in the nation, claimed on the front page of USA Today, the most widely circulated newspaper in the country, that not killing was the moral equivalent of killing. This is a man who in Austin, Texas, has chosen to attack No Kill and shelter reform advocates and hinder their goals by throwing his organization’s support behind a shelter director who refuses to embrace alternatives to killing and who also kills tens of thousands of animals annually despite hundreds of empty cages at her facility. Sayres is also taking credit for the modest decline in killing this year which is exclusively the result of the work of a private rescue group saving the animals the ASPCA-partner shelter is otherwise determined to kill.

During my tenure with him in San Francisco, Sayres rarely ventured out of his office, almost never walked the kennels or interacted with the animals, and was so detached, that he simply signed off on whatever his staff said, no matter how regressive those he hired were (and there are plenty of regressive people at the ASPCA also). But there is one incident in particular which sheds light on the Oreo case.

When I was working with Sayres in San Francisco, he had signed off on the killing of a dog who I felt deserved further evaluation. He made the decision to kill a dog without seeing the dog, without observing the evaluation, without, I would venture, even being able to pick the dog out of a kennel of other dogs. I objected and suggested that we needed to set the bar higher. I gave him a formal proposal that, before killing an animal, he appoint a guardian ad litem, someone who would represent the dog (or cat) the same way an attorney would defend the accused during a death penalty case. It would not cost him anything, as I was an attorney, I already worked there, and I agreed to represent the animals whenever a behaviorist or veterinarian issued the death warrant. He said, “No.” Ironically, that is the process used in the criminal and civil case against dog slayer Michael Vick. A guardian was appointed by the federal judge overseeing the disposition of the dogs. As a result, the vast majority of Vick’s victims were saved. In other words, when Sayres is given the chance to be fully involved, he chooses not to be, even when it means death for dogs at the shelter he oversees; or when it means a lost opportunity to advance this movement, as would befit someone in his position.

 

The Great Betrayal

In 1866, over 140 years ago, Henry Bergh began the modern humane movement in the United States with the founding of the ASPCA. For the rest of his life, Bergh devoted himself to saving the lives of animals in and around New York City. For over two decades, Bergh spent each and every night, regardless of freezing temperatures, walking the streets of New York City tending to sick animals, fighting for their rights, working to save them, and confronting—and stopping—their abusers.

At the time, New York City had the largest horse-pulled railway in the world. In one poignant incident, one evening in February of 1871 during the evening rush hour, working people rushed for the cars, and the horses began to strain with heavy loads through snow and slush. As one overloaded car reached the corner near where Bergh stood, the driver was ready to give the horses another lash when the call came to “Stop!” and “Unload!” It was Bergh. “Who the hell are you?” came the reply from the driver. “Unload!” called the order again. When the driver refused, Bergh reportedly pitched him into a snow bank and unhitched the horses. Often, Bergh would completely stop traffic on the lines, causing traffic jams that would leave thousands of people stranded and cursing to no avail—because one man had stopped all the traffic to protect a single horse.

As hard as Bergh labored to protect all animals, he worked equally hard to protect dogs, particularly against abuses at the hands of city dogcatchers. Through prosecutions of abusive dogcatchers, lobbying for stronger laws and greater protections, and by striving himself to save them, he reduced deaths for dogs at the hands of the city pound by over 80 percent in just one year alone. Henry Bergh would not have killed Oreo.

Today, Ed Sayres sits in the chair once occupied by Bergh. He does not advance the cause of animal protection. He is not a tireless champion on their behalf. He does not faithfully represent Bergh’s vision, nor does he faithfully represent how most Americans now feel about animals. Instead, when given the opportunity to save the life of an animal, he cowers in his office, refusing to return telephone calls, while collecting a paycheck of half a million dollars a year. On the afternoon of Friday, November 13, Ed Sayres had a personal driver take him home. Oreo’s body was sitting in a freezer, waiting to be delivered to a landfill.

Toward the end of his life, Bergh would often lament, “I hate to think what will become of this [SPCA] when I am gone.” Ed Sayres has answered that question for him. And Sayres’ answer: “an agency that kills savable dogs,” would have hurt Henry very deeply.

When I was growing up, the ASPCA represented very little beyond an annual fundraising calendar with pictures of kittens and puppies and platitudes about the human-animal bond. And while we have all grown up to demand more than calendars and killing, the ASPCA has not. And while that agency claims to be a leading voice for the animals and the people who love them, their actions toward Oreo demonstrate otherwise: The ASPCA doesn’t represent the dog lovers at Pets Alive. It doesn’t represent the values of the American people. It no longer represents the fierce compassion of its founder. And it certainly doesn’t represent dogs like Oreo.

Posted in Animal Abuse, Animal Information, Animal Shelters, Animal Stories | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Why Should You Volunteer for an Animal Rescue?

Posted by homefurever on October 27, 2009

Willy - feature dog - week of 9-28Maybe these statistics will answer the question; are you aware that…

  • 6 to 8 million lost and unwanted animals enter animal shelters nationwide annually?
  • 3 to 4 million animals are euthanized in shelters every year, well over 250,000 per month?
  • the leading cause of death of healthy dogs and cats is euthanasia?
  • only 1 in 3 animals have a home that lasts their entire lifetime?
  • only 20% of animals currently in homes were adopted from shelters?

If the statistics don’t convince you, how about this?

There are few things more rewarding than seeing a family brimming with excitement over their new pet, especially if it is an animal you have come to know and love, and it seems like the perfect match.

Or this?

There are so many situations where an animal is neglected or abused that you might think that this type of work would be depressing.  In fact, it’s quite the opposite.

When you see a starving, flea infested dog who is trapped in an abandoned building and you know that his life depends on you, the feeling can be overwhelming. But once you’ve rescued that animal, cleaned him up, insured he has medical attention and some food and then placed them in a foster home, you then experience a tremendous feeling of hope. 

Then when you see that dog a few weeks later after he’s been treated with love in that caring foster home and his coat is shiny and his tail is wagging, you are overcome with happiness and satisfaction that you’ve played a role in saving that animal’s life and dramatically improving his circumstances.  Your heart just wants to burst!

If these reasons aren’t enough, we encourage you to visit HomeFur-ever at one of our upcoming adoption events – because we’re certain the faces of the many animals currently in our care will absolutely convince you that volunteering for an animal rescue is one of the most important things you can do with your life!

Posted in Animal Abuse, Animal Care, Animal Shelters, Pet Rescue, Volunteering | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

Police arrest suspect in Roseville cat-killing

Posted by homefurever on September 17, 2009

theft - cat killingNow even animals that are living indoors in what should be considered a safe environment with a family who loves them can’t be considered safe.  We were appalled when we read this account in The Detroit News of an event which recently happed in our Metro Detroit community.

While we know that another animal cannot replace the tragic loss of a beloved pet, we hope that the Ross family will consider a visit to a local animal rescue or shelter to adopt another animal who would love to become a member of their family.

And we sincerely hope this felon receives the maximum sentence possible!

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Thursday, September 17, 2009; Christine Ferretti / The Detroit News

Roseville — A man accused of killing a family cat by stuffing it into a washing machine was arrested Wednesday night, saying he did it because the pet “was bothering” him, police said.  Roseville Deputy Police Chief James Berlin said detectives tracked Ty-Shawn Eric Bost to a Highland Park apartment complex, where he was taken into custody without incident about 6 p.m.  Bost was transported to the Roseville Police Department, where he confessed, saying he killed the cat because “it was bothering me,” police said.

The 19-year-old is being held in the department jail pending an arraignment at 1 p.m. today on felony charges of second-degree home invasion and killing and torturing an animal. The offenses could land him in prison for up to 15 years. The Macomb County Prosecutor’s Office approved the charges Wednesday afternoon for Bost, whose last known address was near Six Mile and Gratiot on Detroit’s east side.

Bost is believed to have at least one prior arrest in Detroit, but police Wednesday declined to provide details about his record. Police said after he stole video games, cash and a laptop computer from Kimberly Ross’ home on Beaconsfield on Monday, Bost placed the kitten, Ruby, into a front-loading washing machine and turned it on, killing her.

Ross and her daughter, Lacey, 13, returned home just before 11 p.m. that night and heard a “clunking sound” coming from the washing machine. Ruby was found lifeless, spinning around inside.

Ross’ daughter Dayna was glad to hear police had a suspect Wednesday. “It wouldn’t matter to us if this person was 10 or 90; someone came into our house, violated our space and killed one of the members of our family,” said Dayna Ross, 20.  ”It’s just heartless.”

Berlin declined to reveal how police were able to link Bost to the crime, but said he did not know the family he allegedly victimized.

The Michigan Humane Society is offering a $2,000 reward for information leading to an arrest and conviction, and CrimeStoppers is offering $1,000.

Anyone with information is asked to contact the Roseville Police Department at (586) 775-2100 or call (800) 773-2587.

Posted in Animal Abuse, Animal Stories | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Michael Vick – a Multitude of Opinions

Posted by homefurever on August 14, 2009

For those who are angry about Michael Vick – whether you believe he’s paid his debt and are angry people won’t let it go, or you believe he can never pay GYI0000533600.jpghis debt and are angry he is being given a second chance at a privileged life - we would like to refer you to a blog called ‘A Day in Our Life’.  While the writer of this blog is definitely of the opinion that Vick is unremorseful, she does attempt to provide a fair analysis of the situation in several blog posts, as well as the links that are made available to additional Michael Vick-related content.

We at HomeFur-ever certainly understand that this subject is controversial, and we abhore Michael Vick’s actions - AND we mourn the lives of the innocent animals he took.  However, we also feel it is important to understand that there are some people who – even though they may be animal lovers – may feel he has paid his debt to society.  Therefore, in our coverage of events such as this, we will always attempt to provide information from both sides of the story so our readers can decide for themselves where their opinion lies.

As always, to us, it’s about saving the lives of innocent animals and we just want to get the word out about that need – in every way possible.

Posted in Animal Abuse, Animal Information, Animal Stories, Pet Rescue | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments »

The Sanctuary for Vick’s Animals

Posted by homefurever on August 9, 2009

Since Michael Vick’s recent release many people on Twitter and FaceBook have been questioning what became of the animals that were taken from his facility.  Below is a report on the animal sanctuary that took in these abused animals and took on the challenge of rehabilitating them in order to enable them to be adopted and enjoy the loving lives they were meant to have.  The world needs more resources like this place.

 

Pet sanctuary offers animals a slice of heaven

By Marjorie Cortez

Deseret News, Published: Tuesday, Aug. 4, 2009

ANGEL CANYON, Kane County — It caught me a little flat-footed. At the Best Friends Animal Sanctuary outside Kanab, the no-kill policy extends even to rattlesnakes. If they happen to slither into one of the improved areas of the 33,000-acre sanctuary, they’re captured live and relocated.

No kill, no exceptions.

For someone of my thoroughly Western sensibilities, it seemed a bit much.

It’s not that I’d go out of my way to kill a rattlesnake. But if it came between the snake and the safety of a loved one, I’d err on the side of safety.

But that’s the difference between my personal philosophy and that of Best Friends Animal Sanctuary. All animal life is respected and nurtured there, whether a dog is disabled, a cat is ill with feline leukemia or a horse is too hurt to ever be ridden again. The sanctuary’s overarching goal is to findBest Friends sanctuary 1 forever homes for the thousands of companion animals in its care. Three out of four animals are eventually adopted. The rest live out their lives at the sanctuary, which is home to thousands of cats, dogs, mules, horses, donkeys, potbelly pigs, birds and rabbits. When they pass on, there’s a lovely cemetery for their final rest.

Lest there be any misunderstanding, I fully support animal rescue. Our dog came from the Companion Golden Retriever Rescue in West Jordan. He’s an important part of our family. He came to us about two months after our previous dog died. It was a good fit for all. He needed a home, and we needed to mend our hearts.

Tina, our tour guide at Best Friends, suggested that people who want to work with rescue animals volunteer in their own communities, or as many people do, arrange to volunteer with Best Friends during vacations.

Best Friends sanctuary 3Although the sanctuary is Kane County’s largest employer, Tina said, it would be impossible to provide the level of care and nurturing at the sanctuary without the army of volunteers who come from all over the world to lend a hand.

Words don’t adequately describe the scope of the place. Staff and volunteers are literally caring for hundreds of cats and dogs and other critters each day. Some animals have very damaged psyches, such as the 22 pit bulls that belonged to NFL player Michael Vick.

Vick, once the highest paid player in the NFL, was sentenced to 19 months in prison for financing a dogfighting ring. The dogs are probably the most asked about inhabitants of Best Friends Animal Sanctuary.

The pit bulls live a life far different than their previous existence. They’re loved, walked, played with and provided a safe, predictable routine. One of the dogs was adopted recently, Tina said.

The Vick dogs are an extreme example. But very few of the animals at the sanctuary end up there by accident. A tour of the place is an overwhelming reminder that too few people spay or neuter their animals and far too many people view animals as disposable commodities. Fortunately, places like Best Friends Animal Sanctuary and any number of small animal rescues in the country are backstops to the human indifference that results in there being so many homeless animals.

Our visit to Best Friends Animal Sanctuary made me grateful for the staff andBest Friends sanctuary 2 volunteers’ dedication to animals that deserve a second chance. Since my family’s visit last week, I’ve done a lot of soul searching about how I feel about crossing paths with rattlesnakes. I’ve softened my stance, a little. I’ll give them a wide berth, if they’ll return the favor.

Marjorie Cortez, who learned at the sanctuary that many domestic birds can outlive their owners and thus people should carefully consider if they can make that sort of commitment, is a Deseret News editorial writer. E-mail her at marjorie@desnews.com

Posted in Animal Abuse, Animal Care, Animal Information, Pet Rescue | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments »

ASPCA Extends Reach Via Mobile Site

Posted by homefurever on August 5, 2009

By Chris Harnick, August 5, 2009, Mobile Marketer

The ASPCA reaches out through the mobile channel

The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals is continuing its mobile strategy with the launch of a mobile site meant to help our furry friends.

ASPCA graphicThe ASPCA’s mobile site aims to increase the organization’s visibility amongst on-the-go consumers. The custom mobile Web site for the ASPCA will feature content specially tailored for mobile-phone Web browsing.

“The strategy here is that the ASPCA wanted to have an on-the-go resource for people to get pet care tips, shelter locations and the ability for people to make donations via their credit cards through an online transaction right from the palm of their hands,” said Zak Dabbas, managing partner at the ASPCA’s mobile provider. 

“This is basically an extension of their Web presence into the mobile space,” he said.

The ASPCA was the first humane organization in the United States. Its mission is “to provide effective means for the prevention of cruelty to animals throughout the U.S.”

In July, the ASPCA teamed up with another mobile services provider for a mobile public service announcement campaign.

The public service campaign will feature free in-game advertising, as well as mobile donation opportunities in which users can donate money to the charities via their mobile phones (see story). 

Along with their free in-game advertising, the ASPCA has been successful at converting standard-alert subscribers to donors using SMS.

The ASPCA already offers free cat and dog tips to mobile users who opt-in by sending a text message with the keywords CAT or DOG to short code 27722. At the bottom of the ASPCA’s SMS alerts, it asks subscribers to reply with the keyword GIVE to make a $5 donation (see story).

“I think that a lot of clients are realizing that mobile is a great way to reach your audience,” Mr. Dabbas said. “There are a lot of benefits in mobile and it gives brands the ability to have an additional touch point to reach consumers.”

“The ASPCA is targeting people who are on the go and not in front of the computer,” he said.

Posted in Animal Abuse, Animal Care, Animal Information, Fundraising | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

If You’ve Ever Wondered If Animal Rescue Groups Are Really Necessary -

Posted by homefurever on August 3, 2009

And yet ANOTHER reason why rescue organizations such as HomeFur-ever are so desparately needed to help the world’s animals:

U.S. News

Officers:  Man threw dog off 6th-floor NYC roof

From Associated Press, July 31, 2009
NEW YORK – A New York City man has been accused of throwing his dog from the roof of a six-floor city housing project, critically injuring the animal.

Animal welfare officers arrested 19-year-old Fabian Henderson of Brooklyn on Friday. He has been charged with aggravated cruelty to animals and reckless endangerment, both felonies.

Joseph Pentangelo with the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals says surgeons had to reassemble Oreo’s front legs. The 1-year-old terrier mix is able to walk.

Residents of the housing project called the animal welfare group last month, saying a dog was being beaten inside an apartment. Neighbors later called to say a dog had been thrown off a building’s roof.

Officers do not know if Henderson has an attorney.

Posted in Animal Abuse, Animal Information | Tagged: , , , , | 1 Comment »

Firefighter kills pets to avoid kennel fees

Posted by homefurever on July 18, 2009

COLUMBUS DISPATCH, Published: Thu, June 25, 2009

COLUMBUS — A Columbus firefighter admitted Wednesday to securing his two dogs in his basement and blasting them with a rifle so he and a girlfriend could vacation without paying to board the animals.

“He said chunks of concrete were flying everywhere,” Assistant Franklin County Prosecutor Heather Robinson said.

“I think it was the thrill of the kill for him. He has shown no remorse for this.”

Firefighter David P. Santuomo, 43, pleaded guilty to two counts of animal cruelty and one count of possession of a criminal tool for taping a 2-liter plastic bottle onto the gun as a makeshift silencer.

He was convicted of “needlessly killing … a companion animal” Dec. 3, according to the charges filed 10 minutes before the hearing in municipal court. One dog was shot six times in the head.

Santuomo, who did not apologize or give a statement in court, will spend 90 days in jail and pay $4,500 in restitution while serving five years’ probation, Judge Harland H. Hale ruled.

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Horrendous behavior like this is exactly the reason rescue groups like Home Fur-ever exist.  We hope that community awareness of our group and others like us will cause them to call us to take their pets from them rather than resorting to such barbarian behavior!

Posted in Animal Abuse, Animal Stories | Tagged: , | 1 Comment »

MI Legislators Plan to Weaken Bill Designed at Making Animal Euthanasia More Humane

Posted by homefurever on July 5, 2009

This article was recently found in the Detroit News / Free Press.  If you believe as we do that the current intention of these lawmakers is irresponsible, we urge you to contact your representatives in the state legislature and strongly voice your opinion of what their actions should be as your elected representatives.  We believe these bills must maintain their strong stance against gassing animals; and certainly should not change because of cost-related issues or lack of training in administering euthanasia injections.  It should be a state requirement that shelter staff are properly trained in this technique – which actually costs less to administer than gassing.  We hope you will join us in this belief and take action with your elected representatives.

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Gassing of dogs, cats may continue; Bill on euthanasia at shelters weakened

State legislators, including two from metro Detroit, plan this month to revise – and essentially weaken – three bills aimed at making euthanasia of stray dogs and cats more humane.

The original versions would have outlawed the use of gas chambers in animal shelters, instead requiring lethal injections.

But after some officials, particularly some state veterinary officials, voiced opposition to the bills at a June 25 meeting, the legislative sponsors – state Reps. Eileen Kowall, R-White Lake; Fed Miller, D-Mt. Clemens; and Rick Jones, R-Grand Ledge – now plan to allow some leeway.

“We’ll say whenever possible you should do injections because that’s the most humane,” Miller said last week. “But if you have the training and you’ve invested in the equipment to use gas properly, that’s allowed.”

Poison gas is no longer used at animal shelters in most of Michigan, including metro Detroit.  But at least 10 counties in north and west Michigan still use it according to the Michigan Department of Agriculture.

State officials said Michigan shelters euthanized 118,365 dogs and cats in 2008 – 53% of the animals brought in – but figures weren’t available on how many were gassed.

Animal advocates are upset about the revisions to the bills.

“In a gas chamber, the larger dogs survive for four to five minutes – terrified and choking,” said Joe Sowerby, founder of the adoption event Pet-a-Palooza, set for August 1st at the Palace of Auburn Hills.

Those injected with sodium pentobarbital lose consciousness in seconds and die in two minutes, Sowerby said.  And studies show the average cost of injections is less than gassing, Sowerby said.

But Assistant State Veterinarian Dr. Nancy Frank said she wouldn’t limit shelters’ options because not all facilities have the training for injections.

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