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Archive for the ‘economic impact on animals’ Category

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!

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HomeFur-ever Debuts New, Donated Website Early in Wake of Recent Robbery

Posted by homefurever on September 21, 2009

hfe logo #2We at HomeFur-ever are happy to announce the early debut of our new, donated website at www.HomeFurever.com.  In conjunction with our pro-bono marketing firm, Strategic Growth Concepts, and our pro-bono website consulting firm, Powerful Design, we decided to debut the new HomeFur-ever website on Friday, September 18th, several weeks early, as a result of the substantially increased interest in our group, its’ activities, and our animals available for adoption, because of the robbery we recently experienced.  

The site, already in development, was quickly finalized late last week in order to facilitate the ability of the community to learn about our efforts to save animals, and enable them to contribute toward that effort in a variety of ways. The goal of the website debut date change is to ease the public’s ability to donate resources (we need EVERYTHING from cash to crates to food to people!); we also hope to take advantage of the publicity generated by the theft.  Please click HERE to learn about all the great features on our new website!

We’re VERY excited about our new website and its many new functions, andIsabella we’re confident that having this site will enable us to help more animals thru increased participation of volunteers, foster homes and adoptive homes, as well as increases in donations of cash and supplies.  Please visit the site at www.HomeFurever.com if you have not already done so!

Posted in Animal Care, Fundraising, Pet Rescue, economic impact on animals | Tagged: , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

A Bill to Benefit Pet Owner’s Introduced in Congress

Posted by homefurever on August 22, 2009

A new Bill was introduced in the House of Representatives last month that would benefit pet owners by allowing them to deduct up to $3,500 for “qualified pet-care expenses,” including vet bills.  However, word is that the Bill is drawing little attention, and lots of laughs.

Taxes graphicWhile obviously owning a pet is not as expensive as raising children, in today’s economy taxpayers can use every break they can get – and a $3,500 tax break could be the difference between being able to keep your pet or having to give him/her up.  With foreclosure rates on the rise, the U.S. is experiencing an unprecedented rate of animal abandonment – animals left alone in empty houses, or the lucky (sort of) ones being taken to shelters in the hope that they will find new homes.  A tax break such as this could be helpful in changing this trend.

While those in Congress may find it amusing, we think this Bill has potential to be very valuable to pet owners and the animals they love; as well as being a potential incentive for those without pets to become pet owners.

So we ask our readers the following questions:

  1. Do you think such a Bill has value to the pet owners of America?
  2. Do you think this Bill could be the incentive needed to encourage increased animal adoptions of shelter and rescue animals?
  3. If you think this Bill has merit, what steps can the animal-community take to give the Bill momentum and help it to pass?

We would be very interested in seeing your comments and suggestions on this matter.

If you would like your voice to be heard by your elected officials, please feel free to register on this site where you can view all activity related to this Bill, as well send communication to elected officials in your specific geographic area regarding your preferences for their vote on this matter.

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Humanity and Pets Partnered Through the Years (HAPPY) Act (Introduced in House)

HR 3501 IH, 111th CONGRESS, 1st Session

 

To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to allow a deduction for pet care expenses.

 

July 31, 2009

Mr. MCCOTTER introduced the following bill; which was referred to the Committee on Ways and Means


 

To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to allow a deduction for pet care expenses.

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,

SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.

This Act may be cited as the `Humanity and Pets Partnered Through the Years (HAPPY) Act’.

SEC. 2. FINDINGS.

The Congress finds the following:

 

    • (1) According to the 2007-2008 National Pet Owners Survey, 63 percent of United States households own a pet.

  

    • (2) The Human-Animal Bond has been shown to have positive effects upon people’s emotional and physical well-being.

SEC. 3. DEDUCTION FOR PET CARE EXPENSES.

 (a) In General- Part VII of subchapter B of chapter 1 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (relating to additional itemized deductions for individuals) is amended by redesignating section 224 as section 225 and by inserting after section 223 the following new section:

‘SEC. 224. PET CARE EXPENSES.

 `(a) Allowance of Deduction- In the case of an individual, there shall be allowed as a deduction for the taxable year an amount equal to the qualified pet care expenses of the taxpayer during the taxable year for any qualified pet of the taxpayer.

`(b) Maximum Deduction- The amount allowable as a deduction under subsection (a) to the taxpayer for any taxable year shall not exceed $3,500.

`(c) Qualified Pet Care Expenses- For purposes of this section, the term `qualified pet care expenses’ means amounts paid in connection with providing care (including veterinary care) for a qualified pet other than any expense in connection with the acquisition of the qualified pet.

`(d) Qualified Pet- For purposes of this section–

  

    • `(1) QUALIFIED PET- The term `qualified pet’ means a legally owned, domesticated, live animal.

  

    • `(2) EXCEPTIONS- Such term does not include any animal–

  

    •  
        `(A) used for research or owned or utilized in conjunction with a trade or business, or

  

    •  
        `(B) with respect to which the taxpayer has claimed a deduction under section 162 or 213 in any of the preceding 3 taxable years.’.

(b) Clerical Amendment- The table of sections for part VII of subchapter B of chapter 1 of such Code is amended by striking the last item and inserting the following new items:

  

    • `Sec. 224. Pet care expenses.

  

    • `Sec. 225. Cross reference.’.

(c) Effective Date- The amendments made by this section shall apply to taxable years beginning after December 31, 2009.
A BILL IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, H. R. 3501

Posted in Animal Care, economic impact on animals | Tagged: , , , , , , , , | 10 Comments »

Steep Vet Bills, Sour Economy Doom More Pets – But, There ARE Options!

Posted by homefurever on July 30, 2009

As more and more pet owners are faced with hard choices mandated by today’s difficult economic climate, an unfortunate result is that many familymoney graphic pets are not getting the level of medical care they need.  Desparate pet owners are faced with ‘no-win’ choices of no medical care, minimal medical care, economic-mandated euthanasia, or surrendering their pet.

We at HomeFur-ever are aware that no responsible pet owner would make any of these choices if they had any other option.  Therefore, one of our goals in this blog is to try to provide you with education that leads to additional choices.  In that light, we would like to make you aware of the resources and options suggested in the article below.  Or, as a last resort if you are forced to surrender your pet, we urge you to contact a shelter or rescue in your geographic area to see if they can take in your pet and try to find them a new happy home, rather than implementing economic-mandated euthanasia.

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Owners facing hardship scramble for help or face ‘economic euthanasia’

By JoNel Aleccia, Health writer, msnbc.com

When Lara Yount saw her daughter holding the empty leash, she knew the news was bad. Daisy Mae, their 2-year-old beagle, had run away again, this time into the path of a passing car.

“You could tell the leg was broken,” recalled Yount, 38, a mother of three from Bloomsdale, Mo., who found her dog in a ditch three weeks ago.

Daisy - beagleBut when Yount got the bill to repair Daisy’s injuries — a fractured pelvis and a shattered tibia — she knew the news was worse.  It was $3,200, a large sum in good times and an impossible amount since her husband, David, lost his steady construction job earlier this year.

 “I tried to talk the vet down to $1,500, but he couldn’t do it,” said Yount, who earns $7.50 an hour at a local feed store. “I talked to my husband on the phone and he said, ‘We’ll just have to put her down.’ ”

As the United States economy continues to spiral, pet owners grappling with financial troubles are facing terrible choices, animal care experts say. Confronted with steep bills for emergency injuries or sudden illness, cash-conscious owners are delaying care, opting for less-aggressive treatments, or in some cases, choosing to destroy family pets they otherwise would save.

“They come straight from the vet and say, ‘I can’t afford to treat my animal,’ ” said Mark Kumpf, president of the National Animal Control Association and director of an animal shelter near Dayton, Ohio. “They’ll say, ‘The vet said he should be euthanized and I can’t even afford that.’ ”

Kumpf said he’s seen a 20 percent spike in people turning in animals at his shelter in the past year, and an equal hike in the number of people who request what’s known as “economic euthanasia.” No national figures track overall rates of relinquishment or euthanasia, but some veterinarians across the country say they’re also seeing a rise.

Others are worried that they soon will.

“It is a big concern,” said Dr. Kimberly May, a veterinarian and spokeswoman for the American Veterinary Medical Association. “We have been hearing anecdotal reports of people not going for treatment or not going as far with treatments as they were two years ago or a year ago.”

2 million dogs, 82 million cats
In a nation where 72 million dogs, nearly 82 million cats and 11 million birds share people’s homes, the human-animal bond would appear to be strong. Nearly half of U.S. households with pets regard the animals as family members, according to the AVMA.

But less than 3 percent of pet owners have insurance to cover veterinary care, according to industry estimates, including emergency care that can quickly exceed hundreds or thousands of dollars. Even then, nearly all vets require a deposit of at least half the estimated bill up front, with clear means to pay the rest.  If owners can’t pay, vets can’t treat.

Increasingly, financial worries are prompting pet owners to seek alternatives at the vet counter, said Dr. Gary Stamp, a diplomat with the American College of Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care. They’ll refuse certain diagnostic tests or ask for less expensive treatment options.

“There’s the optimal option, then a less positive option,” he said. “Then there’s the option where you just put them on fluids and hope for the best.”

Other desperate pet owners are swamping the few agencies that provide financial assistance for veterinary care.  Demand for the Helping Pets Fund operated by the American Animal Hospital Association has tripled in the last several months, said spokesman Jason Merrihew.

200 calls a day
The Pet Fund, a California-based nonprofit, is fielding nearly 200 calls a day, more than double the volume of a year ago, said executive director Karen Leslie.

“This kind of response we have not had absent a national disaster,” said Leslie, who tells clients their animals must be stable enough to outlast a four-month waiting list. “We can’t do anything for people who need emergency care.”

 

Many calls come from people like Tracy Blinn, 37, of Surprise, Ariz., who can’t afford the cost of X-rays and blood tests to see what’s wrong with her 8-year-old rottweiler, Kona. A month ago, one of Kona’s legs became too swollen and painful to use and the dog’s right eye started drooping.

Even a few years ago, the $360 cost for diagnostic tests would have been nothing, said Blinn. But her family runs a direct-mail marketing business that served the struggling local automobile industry; nearly all their work has dried up. And the four investment houses that once provided a tidy income have recently slipped into foreclosure, she said.

Blinn asked a local vet for a break on the costs to treat Kona, but he refused.

“He said he’s been having a lot of issues with people not paying their vet bills,” Blinn said. “I’ve looked everywhere on the Internet and called everyone. I even put an ad on Craigslist.”

When she heard that Leslie couldn’t provide emergency help, Blinn grew quiet. She has four kids and three dogs and a husband who has one solution in mind.

“He’s just willing to put her down and I’m not willing. I have hope. Why not try?” she said. “I just think it’s sad. You get these animals and it’s a trust issue. I’m feeling terrible that just because of finances, she might die.”

Kumpf said he wished more pet owners facing financial crisis would try harder to keep their animals. He’s been known to waive fees and to provide some free medical care. This month, he’s launching a program that lets people earn $10 an hour toward paying off fines and fees for services.  But that hasn’t yet stopped the steady parade of relinquished pets, despite their owners’ obvious distress. 

“Many people are embarrassed to the point of complete shame,” he said. “They feel like they’re abandoning a family member.”

Animal care experts have a few suggestions for pet owners in financial trouble. They suggest applying for CareCredit, a veterinary credit service that essentially provides loans for care. They urge pet owners to borrow from friends and family, to hold personal fundraisers or to cut back on unnecessary — even necessary — expenses to pay for their animals’ treatment.

And they urge pet owners to be persistent.

 
 

‘He’s my little baby’
Lisa Vigilo, 41, a marketing executive in New York, lost her $80,000-a-year job in January 2008. It took her eight lean months to get another one, and by that time, her 16-year-old cat, Oreo, was diagnosed with diabetes.

With a job pending but no immediate money, Viglio quickly racked up more than $3,000 in vet bills. Friends and family charmed by years of Oreo’s photos helped. Vigilo applied for CareCredit, her vet allowed a payment plan and she was awarded a $500 grant from The Pet Fund for Oreo’s medication.

“Somebody else would have said, ‘He’s getting older, put him down,’” she said. “I’m so grateful I was able to reach out for help and be able to get it at the point I needed it. I know he’s not a child, but in my world, he’s my little baby.”

Lara Yount was persistent as well. She had $1,500 that she’d been saving for badly needed auto repairs, so she gave that to Daisy Mae’s vet, Dr. Mark Anderson of Veterinary Specialty Services in St. Louis. Then she turned to the Internet, where an agency called IMOM.org offers an online fundraising service for emergency veterinary care.

The Web-only resource was launched a decade ago by Jacki Hadra, a 64-year-old New Jersey woman, in memory of Magic, Hadra’s beloved black cat. Since 1998, IMOM has paid out $1.2 million for care for some 1,669 pets using the slogan: “Companion animals shouldn’t have to suffer or die simply because their caretakers are financially challenged.”

Online donations save Daisy
Within days of posting Daisy’s predicament, Yount had raised the remaining money — some $1,600 — that she needed. A week later, the beagle was back at home with Yount’s kids, Catelynne, 11, Catarina, 13 and Cody, 17.

“To have people you don’t even know donate that kind of money is just phenomenal,” she said.

But it will take more than intermittent donations to resolve the crisis of affordable veterinary care, said Leslie, the director of The Pet Fund. Her agency is working to raise awareness about the need for resources to pay for treatment, but also for education to help ensure more people are prepared to care for their pets.

“As eager as people are to see universal health care for people, we’re eager to see a larger fund for veterinary care for animals,” she said. “It’s not that pet owners are irresponsible, it’s that pet owners aren’t prepared for that $10,000 emergency.”

Ways to Pay for Vet Care

 

Ask your vet about setting up a payment plan. Nearly all veteriarians require at least half of the low estimate of charges to be paid before they’ll treat an animal. Most can’t accommodate payment plans, but some will.Consider pet insurance. Only 3 percent of all pet owners have insurance for veterinary care, but many animal experts support the coverage. Read policies carefully and consider plans with low premiums and high deductibles that essentially provide catastrophic care, experts suggest.

Contact CareCredit. The firm is the nation’s leading credit service for veterinary bills. For treatment plans from $1,500 to $25,000, the agency offers 24-, 36- and 48-month plans.  

Contact your local humane society or animal shelter. Many agencies offer some limited financial assistance, though demand may outweigh resources.

Contact nonprofit animal rescue groups. Breed-specific groups often have funds to help owners in need.

More resources: The Pet Fund, IMOM.org, the American Animal Hospital Association.

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