A week or so ago, an acquaintance posted the following
message on Facebook:
Trying to understand why we have so
many wonderful local animal rescue groups that go out of state to save animals
when there are SO MANY animals right here that need help AND HOMES. I don't get
it.
Her post got me thinking. It was a
sincere, heartfelt comment, and one I’ve thought about many times.
For the past 10 years, I’ve
volunteered with a county-based animal welfare organization in Maryland. We
don’t operate a shelter; rather, we rescue animals from our county shelter and
provide them a safe harbor in one of our foster homes until they find their
forever families. We are committed to this effort because each year as many as
10,000 animals are euthanized at that shelter.
So when Hurricane Katrina devastated
the American Southeast and rescue organizations across the United States opened
their doors to thousands of animal victims, we made the decision not to do so.
Our reason: For each Katrina dog or cat we took into our small foster program,
another dog or cat languishing in our county shelter would remain behind bars…right in our own backyard but out
of sight and out of mind.
I also work for another animal
welfare organization in the nation’s capital. We take animals from several
other local shelters that frequently run out of space, as well as a couple of rescue
groups in other states. Occasionally, we are asked by national organizations
like the ASPCA or the Humane Society of the United States to take animals they’ve
rescued from puppy mills and hoarding situations or that have been made
homeless by natural disasters. Most recently, we took in several dogs and cats
whose homes were destroyed or made unlivable by Superstorm Sandy. Not knowing
if or when they could care for their pets again, their people made the
difficult and selfless decision to give their pets a new life by turning them
over to the ASPCA.
As soon as the story of these
animals’ arrival at our shelter hit the news, people were calling and emailing
to ask when they’d be available for adoption…even though they’d never visited—or
inquired about—the many other wonderful dogs and cats we have just waiting to go
home.
The sad reality is that animals
rescued from puppy mills, hoarding situations, or natural disasters generate
more public attention than those picked up as strays or dumped like trash on an
almost daily basis at local shelters in almost every county or municipality in
every state in the nation. Their stories are “sexier” and generate lots of
media attention, leading to high demand by potential adopters. In my
uncharitable moments, I wonder if people like being able to tell their friends
and family that they rescued a “Katrina” cat or a puppy mill survivor.
The fact is that there are no easy
decisions when it comes to animal rescue because there are more homeless
animals than people who want to give them homes. Fortunately, there are myriad
shelters, rescue groups, and animal welfare organizations with almost as many
missions and niches to fill. Collectively, we can—and do—make a difference.
And for me, at least, the bottom
line is that an animal rescued is an animal rescued, no matter where that
animal came from.
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