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City's Death-Row Pets Have a Chance to Live
Frantic race is on to get a piece of $1B for cities
that pledge to end euthanizing animals
by Heidi Singer, Staten
Island Advance City Hall Bureau
Sunday, January 12, 2003
A Silicon Valley billionaire has provided a historic opportunity
to virtually end the mass killing of homeless dogs and cats in New York
City.
But to make it happen, the troubled shelter system must
practically re-invent itself. Already staggering under its burden of 60,000
animals a year amid crippling budget cuts, the city is racing against
time to repair its shattered relations with animal welfare groups and
open up an institution that had become increasingly isolated in recent
years.
The largest animal welfare fund in the nation's history,
called Maddie's Fund, was created in 1999 with an astonishing promise
of $1 billion to be divided among cities that pledge to eliminate killings
of adoptable animals by 2008.
The fund has already given out one-fifth of its current
endowment, and a number of major cities are working to become no-kill
and get a piece of the cash.
"I do have a real sense of urgency," said Jane
Hoffman, a lawyer and animal activist chosen by Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg
to lead the charge. "They're going to make it tough for New York
City. They know this is a big nut to crack and they want to make sure
we can do it."
Dogs Go Unwalked
The challenges are huge. Last year, according to Ms. Hoffman,
the city killed 12,000 to 14,000 healthy, adoptable dogs and cats in its
three shelters and two intake centers, including one in Charleston. That
figure doesn't include all the animals classified as dangerous, bad-tempered
or otherwise unadoptable — anything from angry pitbulls to hissy
kittens.
The Center for Animal Care and Control (CACC) puts an
estimated three-quarters of its shelter animals to sleep.
By the end of the Giuliani administration, only a handful
of the city's 30 to 40 rescue groups were willing or allowed to work with
the shelter, said Ms. Hoffman, including only one Staten Island group,
and the number of animals "pulled" had dropped to 5,500 a year.
Although shelter officials denied it, a city Comptroller's two-year audit
found virtually no evidence of volunteers or that dogs were being walked.
Animal activists said they merely hoped adult dogs and
cats that wound up in shelters would be killed quickly, to end their suffering.
They blamed the center's executive director, Marilyn Haggerty-Blohm,
for cutting off rescuers and volunteers, and doing little to increase
adoption. But the Charleston animal lover and former aide to Guy Molinari
was considered untouchable with Giuliani in office.
Creating Maddie's Fund
Around the same time the comptroller's audit began, Maddie's
Fund was created by Dave Duffield, founder of the computer firm
PeopleSoft, in memory of his miniature schnauzer, Maddie.
The California-based charity began with $240 million and
is expected to rise to $1 billion in the next few years, with the goal
of creating a "no-kill nation."
To get the money, communities must show they can eliminate
killings of adoptable animals within a five-year period, a goal so ambitious
it forces cooperation among city government, animal rescue groups and
veterinarians, which New York City has infamously lacked.
But when Bloomberg took office, he created the alliance,
and Ms. Hoffman has put together a $17 million Maddie's Fund grant proposal.
To make it happen, she says she's convinced most of the city's animal
rescue groups to give the shelter system another chance, this time with
the backing of the mayor's office. Meanwhile, Ms. Haggerty-Blohm was removed
in October and an interim executive director, Tottenville lawyer and bulldog
breeder Julian Prager, appointed.
The mayor signed an agreement last Sunday that will allow
rescue groups better access to city shelters. Groups that rescue specific
breeds are eager to start pulling dogs again, said Ms. Hoffman, which
might mitigate the recent jump in adoption fees to $200 for a purebreed.
And a program is in the works to let hundreds of vets perform spays and
neuters on rescue animals for just $10 each.
She said animal rights groups, famous for their infighting,
are beginning to talk about cooperating on regular adoption fairs in parks
and other public spaces - although not yet in this borough.
"I think one of the problems we have on Staten Island
is the various groups, not that they don't get along, but they don't work
together," said Ellen Donnelly, vice-president of the Staten Island
Council on Animal Welfare. "Which is a problem, because if we did,
we could get a lot more done, and we could get that money."
Still, the Council has applied to join the alliance, and
both P.L.U.T.O. Rescue and Feline Rescue of Staten Island are already
members.
Animals to Save
The plan is to increase the number of animals saved by
2,400 each year until 2008, when the number would reach 12,000, or roughly
the number of adoptable animals the shelter now kills.
Animal activists on Staten Island say already they've
seen encouraging signs. They've noticed CACC staff are more cooperative.
Volunteers are being allowed back into the shelter starting this weekend.
Adoption fairs will begin in Staten Island parks in the spring, and CACC
has begun private fundraising to make up for the budget cuts, said Prager.
He also plans to bring a mobile spay/neuter van to the Charleston facility.
Of the Island's two major rescue groups, one, P.L.U.T.O.,
has just been let back into the shelter, and the other one, the Staten
Island Council on Animal Welfare, is considering working with it for the
first time in the organization's 30-year history.
"I see a change for the positive in the staff,"
said Catherine O'Callaghan, an animal activist who attended the first
volunteer meeting last December. "Before they were more secretive,
but now they're more open."
Now that volunteers are becoming more involved, they have
plans for the shelter, collecting toys and blankets for the animals and
asking the shelter to create dog runs in a city-owned lot next door.
Heidi Singer covers City Hall for the Staten
Island Advance. She may be reached at singer@siadvance.com.
Copyright © 2003 Staten
Island Advance
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