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Archive for the ‘Animal Information’ Category

Cookies for a Cause

Posted by homefurever on November 7, 2011

a Fundraiser for HomeFur-ever Animal Rescue

What:  Receive a ‘to go’ container and fill it from a variety of home-made holliday cookies, pay by the pound. Dog treats, calendars and stockings will also be available.

When:  December 12th, 9:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.

Where:  The Woods Clubhouse, located behind the Laurel Park Mall in Livonia (6 Mile/Newburgh area) 18328 University Park Drive

For More Information:  Contact HomeFurever Volunteer Denise @ 734-233-5146 or 734-844-3513

Click HERE for more details

Posted in Animal Information, Fundraising | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Stray in Birmingham, Michigan Out of Time – PLEASE HELP!

Posted by homefurever on August 5, 2011

We are trying to save the life of a young pit bull in Birmingham, MI. This wonderful dog was brought into a local Birmingham vet office as a stray and her time has run out. One of our volunteers was just contacted today to try and save her life. She is a young (6-12 month) red and white pit bull mix. She has a great temperament, wonderful with people and other dogs. They did not test her with cats. 

She is very friendly and happy and we hate to see her short life end because of human irresponsibility. Please ask all your fosters and contacts if they can provide assistance with finding a foster for her ASAP. 

Our volunteer is playing middle man for 2 vets that don’t want to see this dog euthanized but have no control over the owner/management of this vet office. They were given permission to seek a foster, a rescue or an adopter and our volunteer was contacted. 

Please let us know if you can help. Her time is limited. If you would like to meet her, please email Raegan at HomeFurever@gmail.com .

Posted in Animal Information, Animal Stories, Pet Rescue | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Breed Discrimination Found in Monroe County, Michigan

Posted by homefurever on July 28, 2011

Currently there are four Pitbulls being kept at the Monroe County Animal Control. They have been temperament tested and evaluated by the Monroe ASPCA and the Buster Foundation; one of the most reputable authorities and advocates for the breed. They were found to have sound temperaments which would allow them to be adopted into loving homes. 

However, they have been handed a death sentence by a judge in Monroe based on an evaluation by a veterinarian.

Upon viewing the attached video and reading all the accounts from the Monroe ASPCA and The Buster Foundation which has led up to this point, it is clear that this is a case of breed discrimination. What has transpired is despicable; akin to racism in the dog world

Please view the video and read the details of this case. In the video you will see a dog that is by no means vicious. The evaluation was untrue and unfair. You can judge for yourself.

To view the video and sign this petition, click on this link. http://thebusterfoundation.rescuegroups.org/

Please speak up for the voiceless and sign the petition so that the lives of these dogs might be spared and they can get the chance they deserve to placed into loving homes.  AND…please pass this information on in any way shape or form possible. These dogs need as much help as they can get!

Posted in Animal Abuse, Animal Information, Animal Stories | Tagged: , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Tales for the Pet Lover’s Heart

Posted by homefurever on July 26, 2011

We’re excited that Home Fur-Ever has been chosen by our friends at Nestlé Purina and Kroger to participate in the 2011 “Tales for the Pet Lover’s Heart” program.  The fourth-annual “Tales” campaign is a joint program between Nestlé Purina and Kroger stores to donate up to $175,000 to 20 participating animal welfare organizations across the country. 

The campaign encourages pet enthusiasts to share joyful tales, photos and videos of their pets.  In addition, we hope you will consider entering the campaign sweepstakes that kicks off in July.  Nestlé Purina and Kroger will donate $50,000 to one of the participating animal welfare organizations – it could be us! – in honor of one randomly selected person.  The winning person will also receive a year’s worth of groceries at Kroger and a year’s supply of Purina pet food.

Just for participating in this campaign, Home Fur-Ever will receive a $5,000 donation.  Also, for every pet tale submitted to the program website, www.TalesForThePetLoversHeart.com., Purina and Kroger will donate $1, up to $25,000, to be divided equally among the participating animal welfare organizations.  So Home Fur-Ever has an opportunity to receive an additional $1,250 if 25,000 stories are submitted.  We encourage you to log on to the website and enter your tale – you have an opportunity to support our organization and other worthy animal welfare groups around the country.

The “Tales for the Pet Lover’s Heart” campaign runs through November 2011.  For more information, feel free to visit the program website, www.TalesForThePetLoversHeart.com, or Facebook page, www.Facebook.com/TalesForThePetLoversHeart.  And thanks to our friends at Nestlé Purina and Kroger for including us in this program and supporting pet welfare.

Posted in Animal Information, Animal Stories, Fundraising, Pet Rescue | Tagged: , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

No-Kill Conference

Posted by homefurever on January 6, 2010

The No Kill Advocacy Center is teaming up with the Animal Law program at George Washington  University Law  School, Maddie’s Fund and Friends of Animals to bring together the nation’s most successful shelter directors and the nation’s top animal lawyers. They will help you create a No Kill community and teach you how to use the legal system to save the lives of animals.

Learn from animal control/shelter directors who are now saving over 90% of all animals using the building blocks to No Kill success – programs and services that have had results in both urban and rural communities – to increase adoptions, reduce length of stay, increase redemption rates, rehabilitate animals, and much, much more.

Learn from animal law experts who have challenged our legal system to help animals: Whether it’s drafting model laws, fighting breed specific legislation, eliminating the gas chamber, filing impact legislation, or protecting condemned dogs, learn how to use the legal system to save the lives of animals.

Learn from activists fighting entrenched and regressive shelters in their own community as they show you how to launch successful campaigns for reform.

To get more details about this event, click HERE.

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

Older Dogs Often Make the Best New Pets

Posted by homefurever on December 7, 2009

By Justin McClelland, December 6, 2009

LEBANON — Amy Neal and Ruth Bertagna are adamant that old dogs can learn new tricks.

As two volunteers at the Humane Association of Warren County in Lebanon, both insist that older pets can provide a lot of value and love to families looking to add a four-legged member to bring to their home. And the biggest trick these volunteers are looking to perform is to find homes for the shelter’s increasing older pet population.

“There are lots of positives to adopting a senior,” Neal said. “Puppies and kitten can take a lot of patience to train and figure out their personality. With older pets, what you see is pretty much what you get.”

Mari Lee Schwarzwalder, executive director of Warren County’s Humane Association, said the animal shelter has seen a steep increase in older pets — both cats and dogs — in the past six months. Many of these pets were left behind by families who had to move for new jobs or were forced to locate to smaller apartments that didn’t allow pets.

“It’s not usually their first choice to leave the pets,” Schwarzwalder said.

Such is the case for Hudson, a 7-year-old black Labrador mix whose family had to leave him behind when they left Lebanon for an out-of-state job. He is excitable and friendly, and also already housebroken and eager to show affection.

“Older pets have a tremendous amount of love to give,” Bertagna said. “This may sound silly, but they really do understand and appreciate being rescued.”

Neal said that older pets often are more mellow and require less strenuous exercise (in the case of dogs) to care for.

“They often make an easier transition to a new home than a puppy,” Neal said. “They enjoy easy living.”

Posted in Animal Information, Animal surrender, economic impact on animals | Tagged: , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Pets Go Homeless as Recession Hits Hard

Posted by homefurever on November 29, 2009

by The Post Chronicle

When financial difficulties hit the home, the first to go homeless are not the human family, but their pets. Pets go homeless when recession woes hurt their families, and everyone suffers simply because of the fear of going hungry or being unable to pay the human’s grocery bill, much less food for our pets.

The ASPCA (American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals) says that hundreds of thousands of pets may continue to go homeless as a result of the economic downturn. Other times, pets may be lost because of  “people problems” like divorce, foreclosure, and lifestyle changes.

As people lose their homes to foreclosure, and may be forced to move into apartments or stay with relatives, there’s just no place for a dog or cat.

Most of these beloved pets will end up in animal shelters, animal pounds, given away, sold, or just set loose to fend for themselves outside the home.

If you are faced with the agonizing decision to give up your pet, consider these alternatives:

  • See if a friend, neighbor or family member can temporarily take your pet until you can take them back, and make sure you check in on your pet regularly if someone is indeed nice enough to take them in; Try to move into a rental property that allows pets. Most apartment complexes don’t mind a cat or bird, but dogs – especially bigger dogs – aren’t always welcome so check out resources on our blog that help you find apartments where your pets will be welcome!
  • Contact a local animal shelter or veterinarian and see if they have a list of potential adopters. Give them a picture of your pet and a little write-up that they can hang on their bulletin boards; you can also pin up pictures at the local grocery stores.

Contact the ASPCA www.aspca.org if you’d like more information on how to protect the 4-legged members of your family from being lost to you forever.

On the other hand, if you are a person who has considered adopting a pet in the past, there’s no better time to find an animal who needs to be loved just as much as you do!  HomeFur-ever would love to help you find the perfect new member of your family, click HERE to contact us for help in finding your new best friend!

Posted in Animal Information, Animal surrender, economic impact on animals | Tagged: , , , , , , | 4 Comments »

‘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.

____________________________________________________________

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 Stories, Animal Information, Animal Abuse, Animal Shelters | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments »

Urgent Need for Foster Homes in Detroit Metro Area

Posted by homefurever on October 15, 2009

It was bound to happen, it always does, Fall has arrived and with it the cold, rainy weather that is so dangerous for homeless animals.  And due to the economic conditions in the Detroit metro area, the numbers of homeless animals are increasing at a rapid pace – far more than we at HomeFur-ever or any other of the dozens of rescues and shelters in the SE Michigan area can accommodate with current resources.

Blog Group Picture 1In the case of HomeFur-ever, we are urgently in need of foster homes all over the Detroit metro area in which to place the animals we rescue.  In just the last two weeks we have put out emergency notices on Twitter and Facebook asking for foster homes to take in a half-dozen animals currently forced to live outside, most with little or no shelter.  Some of those wonderful animals include:  Bully, Chata, Negra, Cass, Reva, and Moe.  We are currently providing them with food, water, urgent medical care, and as much shelter as we can provide them outside – but we urgently need a safe foster home in which to put them!
We Rescued this Mom and Her Two-week-old Pups

We Rescued this Mom and Her Two-week-old Pups

And the story doesn’t end there.  Just this past week we were informed about several animals forced to live outside without shelter, food, or water.  This group included a Mom, 6 of her two-week old puppies, and several other animals.  Unfortunately, by the time we were made aware, several of the puppies had already died as a result of their living conditions.  Our volunteers were devastated!  However, the remaining animals needed our help so we rescued them and have started getting them the medical care, food, water, and shelter that they need.  They are currently in a temporary location and we are desparately searching for a long-term foster home where they can recover and stay until a permanent ‘furever’ home can be found for them.

As the weather continues to get colder, and more families are adversely affected by the state of Michigan’s economy, the number of homeless and abused animals will continue to grow.  That being the case, the need will also grow for more foster homes in which to place the animals that we rescue.  If you would like to help an animal-in-need, please contact us via our website.  We would love to talk to you about our many wonderful animals to determine which one might be most suitable for a foster placement in your home!

Posted in Animal Information | 2 Comments »

Dog Flu Shots Now Available

Posted by homefurever on September 23, 2009

Posted: Wednesday, 23 September 2009
(CBS)  While humans deal with the H1N1 virus, another flu virus has been spreading in the dog world.

Resident veterinarian Dr. Debbye Turner Bell shared the details about H3N8, otherwise known as canine influenza, with Early Show co-anchor Maggie Rodriguez on Wednesday.

According to Bell, there is a new vaccine available, which Bell called “a good thing, because no dog has natural immunity to this very contagious virus.”

In 2004, a mysterious virus raced through greyhounds at Florida racetracks almost as fast as they could run. It caused coughing, high fever, runny noses, and in many cases, life-threatening pneumonia, she explained.

“It was disturbing because of the fact that so many dogs were sick and some were dying,” said Dr. Cynda Crawford, veterinarian at the University of Florida’s veterinary school.

Within six months, this devastating disease had spread to 14 tracks in six states. A year later, in 2005, the virus was still spreading. But finally, some answers. Crawford identified the bug.

“It is highly contagious,” Crawford explained. “Virtually all dogs exposed to this virus will become infected.”

Today, this highly contagious virus has been noted in 30 states, affecting thousands of dogs in shelters, boarding kennels, and doggy day care facilities.

The spread of the virus seems to have plateaued in many areas. However, four-to-five states are still seeing outbreaks: Florida, Colorado, New York, Pennsylvania, and there is an outbreak currently in Virginia, Bell pointed out.

“Is this anything like H1N1?” Rodriguez asked.

“Well, it’s a type A, influenza, however it is not swine flu, as we like to call it the canine influenza, it’s not contagious to humans so far as we know,” Bell said. “There’s no evidence that it can be given to people or other species.

“The mortality rate is about 5 percent. It’s very similar to the human H1N1 in that generally it’s mild, there’s cough, nasal discharge, sometimes with a secondary bacterial infection, many recover from it except for those who go on to pneumonia.”

Dr. Debbie Wohl, a veterinarian who practices in Valley Stream, N.Y., shared her experience with Rodriguez and Bell and administered the vaccine to her dog named, Harley.

“That is pretty much what we saw. Several years ago there was an outbreak in our area,” Wohl said. “We think it came from a dog who used to go to a doggie day care center in the city. And because it’s so contagious, quite a few dogs got ill from it. We saw a lot of dogs coughing, nasal discharge, fever, anywhere from mild to severe.”

Although most of the dogs got over it in one or two weeks, some of the dogs did progress to pneumonia and in those cases they got very sick and one or two did pass away from it, Wohl explained.

According to Bell, since this is a virus that spreads in communal areas, dogs that go to kennels, doggie day cares, or grooming parlors should be vaccinated. She also added that people that work with animals should vaccinate their own animals as well.

The vaccine involves a series of two shots, with the second one following two to four weeks later.

“This is called a lifestyle vaccine,” Bell said. “If you have a dog that’s at home, stays in your yard and never comes in contact with other dogs, probably doesn’t need this vaccine. But if you travel, go to kennels, this vaccine is for you.”

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