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- From: diannes@milton.u.washington.edu (Dianne Schoenberg)
- Subject: Re: Cats Under Beds
- Message-ID: <1992Nov18.235848.9287@u.washington.edu>
- Sender: news@u.washington.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: University of Washington, Seattle
- References: <1992Nov17.220703.12813@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu> <myers.722109540@bach>
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Wed, 18 Nov 1992 23:58:48 GMT
- Lines: 64
-
- In an article (myers.722109540@bach, 18 Nov 92 17:59:00 GMT) myers@nosc.mil
- (Margaret E. Myers) writes:
-
- > In San Diego we have both the Humane Society (a private organization) and
- > the city (or is it county) run Animal Control Shelter. Perhaps your city
- > has the same thing. I have never tried to adopt an animal from the city
- > shelter but I can't imagine them putting you through the third degree.
-
- Here in the Seattle area we have six shelters, four of which are operated
- by various local governments, two of which are privately-run. The
- municipal shelters are no less careful about adopting out animals than the
- private ones are.
-
- > They don't even make people sign their animals in. They have various
- > size cages out front so the cowards can just drive up, drop the animal(s)
- > off and drive away.
-
- They do this because the alternative is to pick up the animals after the
- owners have turned them loose. People ARE awful cowards when they know
- they are doing something shitty. Even with the cages-out-front system,
- people regularly come to the shelters in the middle of the night and leave
- their animals tied to the doorknob--they don't want anyone to even SEE
- them abandoning their charges. Forcing people to sign their animals in
- would only increase the number of abandonments, and thus the suffering of
- the animals.
-
- > It is a heart wrenching place to visit. The attendant
- > told my friend and I that they put the kitties to sleep 3 days after they
- > receive them. These are deserving kitties too!
-
- So? The number of outgoing animals HAS to equal the number of incoming;
- they only have room for so many. In the Seattle area, I am told that owner
- turn-ins are usually taken into the back room and euthanized immediately
- on arrival. Strays must by law be held 72 hours; if the shelter staff
- thinks they are adoptable, they may be held a few more days after that. I
- recently visited our county shelter about 1 PM and was surprised to see it
- 2/3 empty; a friend visited at 5 and it was full. Among the cats that day
- were 6 or 7 entire litters of young kittens.
-
- In Washington state a dog that winds up in a shelter has about a 1/3 chance
- of making out alive. "Making it out alive" includes both strays that are
- reclaimed by owners and those adopted by new owners. The chances of a cat
- coming out alive are about half that of a dog's--only 1 in 6.
-
- This is not the fault of the shelter workers nor is it any indication of a
- lack of caring on their part. It is the fault of irresponsible pet owners,
- particularly those that allow their animals to breed indiscriminately.
- Margaret, please turn your indignation to constructive action: volunteer
- with a shelter or rescue group, get involved in public education, adopt an
- animal from a shelter. Every little bit helps.
-
- P.S. I talked someone out of breeding a litter yesterday!!!
-
- ***************************************************************************
- Dianne & her kids: diannes@u.washington.edu
- K.C.: U-CD Nightwind's Elan, HC HCT CGC (Briard)
- Chloe: Found a Four-Leaf Clover, HT CGC (OES)
- Ms. Hilary Prickle (African Pygmy hedgehog)
- Mr. Bun (English Angora rabbit)
- Jeremy (Briard)--foster dog from a shelter, looking for a permanent home
- (sadly, catless at the moment)
- ***************************************************************************
-
-
-