I know a shelter…no names named…that desperately needs a complete makeover. We’re talking way beyond Ugly Betty here.
Said shelter has lots of local claims to fame. Here are seven of its deadly sins…
1-It’s one of the biggest shelters in one of the largest, urban cities on the eastern seaboard.
2-It euthanizes 120,000 stray and abandoned pets every year.
3-It has two receptionists handling 2,800 calls a day—to the tune of hundreds of similarly abandoned calls every day.
4-It boasts a grand total of one personnel member to handle all media, education and special events…along with all its volunteer coordination activities. (And, by the way, the city wants to cut this job.)
5-It doesn’t have anywhere near enough vets to handle all the low-cost spays and neuters it could be doing.
6-Its leaders and staff are frustrated, disgruntled, demoralized…etc.
7-The community it serves is frustrated, disgruntled, demoralized…etc.
I visited this shelter last week. I walked away feeling frustrated, disgruntled, demoralized…etc.
And who wouldn’t?
Offer a dying shelter a dwindling pittance to work with then burden it with extremes of bureaucratic oversight? You deserve the mess you’ve conjured: an ineffectual municipal facility with an unhappy citizenry and hundreds of thousands of dead animals.
Congratulations!
It doesn’t take a brain surgeon to see what’s happening here. But the area’s commissioners (largely responsible for the mess from what I can see) could apparently care less.
Animals in this city aren’t getting any satisfaction. They’re not getting any relief from the abandonment, sickening housing, lack of human education and inaccessible sterilization services that plague them.
Meanwhile, owners of well cared for pets, for their role in licensing their pets and financing the lion’s share of this facility’s operating costs, get treated to a bureaucratic nightmare right out of Terry Gilliam’s Brazil.
The licensing renewal system is so fraught with glitches that citations (hefty, two hundred dollar-plus fines in some cases) are often erroneously generated for owners who maintain perfect compliance…year after year, even after the “bug” has been supposedly exterminated from their licensing paperwork. (By the way, you must visit the facility in person to resolve these disputes.)
Last Friday, I visited this shelter to meet with its director. I had two agenda items:
1-Make licensing a fair and feasible reality for my compliant clients.
2-Find out why my paperwork for applying to work as a part-time, spay and neuter speed-demon had not been processed (I applied back in April).
I got only as far as point number one. After I received a detailed explanation as to why the licensing and citation database doesn’t work like it should, the answer to the second seemed obvious:
When a computer system is so badly broken it can’t even crunch the numbers an old IBM laptop could’ve whipped through in the ‘80’s, there’s no mistaking the damage that must underlie everything else.
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Patty, The FL legislature passed unanimously HB219, titled "The Gertrude Maxwell Bill". This bill will create within the Department of Agriculture a direct-support organization to provide grants to animal shelters for spaying and neutering animals, provide grants for shelters and services during times of emergencies and develop and desseminate pet care education materials. Good-luck!
Your article of working with your local homeless shelter, has gotten me involved in the homeless shelter where I live. I make sure there is dog food at the shelter, for dogs owned by the homeless. I am hoping to expand the services for these animals. It all takes time.
Becky November 9th, 2008 09:41:00 AM
Hey, Becky! Thanks for the tip. I'm already so overworked and yet I can't help wanting to try to get these guys one of those grants. I'll look into it--at least to hand them the info (for the one outreach person to handle?).
It's great to see you doing homeless work. Yep, it all takes time. Wish we had more of it.
Dr. Patty Khuly November 9th, 2008 09:54:00 AM
I think you should 'out' them. The only way this will change is with massive public pressure. And it doesn't even have to be all from Florida. There have been a number of shelters who have had their sickening problems exposed which have resulted in major nationwide bad press for the shelter system and the administration involved.
I really miss a certain Seattle website that used to excel at this. Anytime they'd publish something about a bad shelter you could bet on thousands of faxes and emails going to that municipality as well as about a 50% chance that madjor media would jump on it.
Anyone got any ideas of maybe revamping this activity on a new or existing web sites...something like badshelters.com.
2CatMom November 9th, 2008 10:27:00 AM
I know, I know - maybe I should do it - but Ihave no idea where to start - guess I'l have to stop by the local book store and see if there's something along the lines of "Starting a web site for dummies.'
2CatMom November 9th, 2008 10:30:00 AM
2catmom....
start here....it's free and will only take you a short time to be up and running
https://www.blogger.com/start
you can get fancy after you get the hang of it.
good luck
LorriM November 9th, 2008 12:39:00 PM
It seems like we need more animal caring people in south florida. I'd love to do it but I don't know where to begin with especially since I'm working a full time job.
Ande November 9th, 2008 06:17:00 PM
Ande: There's no dearth of caring people. The trouble is the institutionalized nightmare that is county government. The rest of the shelters in the area are relatively well-funded--mostly privately. This shelter is just plagued by the powerfully restrictive hand of the county government.
Dr. Patty Khuly November 9th, 2008 06:31:00 PM
If it is government that is hurting this shelter from its purpose & postive direction and progression, than the only thing that can be done is "exposure, public awareness, media campaign" to attempt to turn things around in a hurry, for the short term.
A well devised plan is necessary for the long term, probably needing legislation and advocates willing to work hard to achieve successful outcome.
Quite frankly, with your business undergrad & VMD...I bet you would be an ideal canidate to tackle this ....not that you are looking to. Sadly, now is probably the time, most states are looking to trim back and my guess is that animals are not going to rank high in social programs or earmarked $$$
Barbara A. Albright/New Hampshire November 9th, 2008 08:55:00 PM
If this shelter is run like the one I volunteered at in Mississippi it probably isn't getting the funds that are being donated. All donations to the shelter in Ms.went into the county "general fund" and then was distributed to various county program.
The way we got around this, god forbid the county ever finds out, was to have the donations made out to our non-profit and deposited into a separate bank account just for the shelter. That way the shelter director and our organization had control.
This shelter now has it's own spay/neuter clinic and transportation program.
Patty P November 10th, 2008 04:53:00 AM
Barbara: That was art history undergrad...but who's counting? We have a meeting tonight of the South Florida Veterinary medical Association. And I have an in with The Miami Herald. You'd think we'd be able to make something happen, right?
Dr. Patty Khuly November 10th, 2008 08:11:00 AM
I remembered reading "Wharton", my apologies! A meeting should come up with something, good luck! It sounds like a serious redirection of money needs to take place.
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