Thursday, April 28, 2011

Press Release: Tornado Disaster Recovery: Animal Welfare Response: "Hold and Label Displaced Pets for Owner Recovery"

Please forward to Animal Control Facility Managers, Local Government officials, FEMA operatives, and anyone else involved in the recovery operations that may have some bearing on this issue.

Share on Twitter: 
RT @seprr Tornado Disaster  Animal Rescuers READ & SHARE B4 adopting out recovered Pets to new owners http://bit.ly/jQpHKa #tornado

SE Pet Rescue Railroad, Atlanta GA April 28th, 20
Yesterday, the world witnessed an unprecedented meteorological event, characterized by some experts as Biblical in it's proportions and intensity.

There has been enormous loss of life. Once again, similar to Katrina, the Animal Rescue community is now faced with enormous amounts of displaced pets, separated from their families and homes, wounded, cold, hungry, scared, homeless, and now orphaned from beloved owners who may have been killed during the storm's passage.

When rescuing these pets, please tag/label these pets as "Held for Owner Recovery/Displaced by Tornado Disaster".

Please do not make them available for adoption by the general public until an adequate hold period has expired, perhaps one month at a minimum.

These are beloved members of families, not cast out strays that have been neglected. Treat these Pets like you would a lost child, and return it home.
Please extend Animal Control Hold Periods to accommodate the extended time lines necessary for recovery by the owners, given the dire and extreme circumstances.

When determining an appropriate Hold Period, consider:
-  1,000's of people are actually in the hospital, and will be there for an extended period.
-  1 Million+ are without power today. How long will it take to restore basic access to power, much less shelter, clothing, a hot meal, employment? Who knows?
These pets must be rescued now, lest they starve, are stolen, become food for coyotes, or go feral foraging for food.

I write this to ward off a repeat of what unfolded in the aftermath of Katrina, when good intentions of hard-working rescuers had an unintended effect. Many of the rescued pets were put into foster care. Instead of being returned to their original owners, they were adopted by new owners, sometimes 1000's of miles away. Certainly, many rescuers would argue about the reasons why the pets were left behind. The fact is that the rescue movement carte-blanch, saved these animals from their plight, placed them into foster care, and also overlooked the fact their returning owners would be seeking their animals afterwards. We have seen the legal fights and the broken hearts.

This time around, let's do whatever we can to return these pets to their owners.
This time there can be no petty arguments and judgements about the intentions of the pet's owners when it takes about 30 seconds for a tornado to rip your world apart with practically no warning at all. That is why people RUN for shelter during tornadoes. There is usually very little advance notice, unless you just happened to be tuned into the right channel at the right time to hear Emergency Broadcast Beacon. Even today, people are easily out of touch long enough to be taken by complete surprise by a tornado, much less over 100 of them of such awesome speed and intensity. There can be no argue. WE MUST ASSUME these owners want their beloved pets returned and are actively worried and seeking them as I write this letter.

A solution is relatively straightforward:

1- When collecting these displaced pets, closely note where the pet was found and document the location where possible.

2- Tag these pets as Displaced and give them longer owner recovery periods, up to one month versus the normal 5 day Hold Period such as we have here in Georgia.

3- Where resources are scarce for housing the rescued pets, place them in foster care, but with the explicit understanding that these pets are Displaced Pet fostered for "Owner Recovery".

4- Please do not, under any circumstances take a Displaced Pet and put it up for adoption without a reasonable time frame for the owner to seek, find, and secure their pet. Do not Euthanize Displaced Pets. These are loved members of families, not cast out strays that have been neglected. Treat these Pets like you would a lost child, and return it home.

5- Do not transport the Displaced Pets out of the market, away from the area where the pet was found. If they do not remain in the animal control or humane shelter nearby where they were found, there is simply no chance for the Displaced Pet to return home.

SEPRR's network is available to ALL Rescuers needing a place to promote their notices, especially for Transport!

Prayers and Good Hunting during your recovery and rescue efforts.

Best wishes,
--
Bryan "Beau" Grant, Director
SE Pet Rescue Railroad
Office:      +1 (678) 389-9903
Fax:         +1 (404) 348-4759
Mobile:     +1 (404) 932-6399

http://facebook.com/seprr
http://twitter.com/seprr
http://twitter.com/bryangrant
(sent from the web at Google Apps)


Reform Companion Animal Laws - Please Sign & Share this Petition:  http://ht.ly/2fDGN

Please Share the word on Twitter:
RT @seprr support laws in #GA to END euthanizing animals http://ht.ly/2fDGN #petrescue #gapolitics

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Promote the Petition! Save the Lives of Pets in Georgia!



As you may already know, the SE Pet Rescue Railroad  (google search: SEPRR)  has been hard at work gathering signatures, information, and ideas to promote a petition that proposes several changes and reforms to Georgia's current Georgia Animal Protection Act http://on.fb.me/fSBT8m

We need your help. Without your active participation, there will be no end in sight.  

1- Please review the petition. http://bit.ly/SaveGaPets   Even if you disagree with a few points, please sign it anyway, and then email us your suggested changes. This is not a final draft. It is NOT a law that is ready to be signed. It is a demonstration of the interest by the public in widespread, deep-reaching reform of the current system.

This is a work in progress. The right answers will come forward the more you participate! 

2- Please share the links below as status updates, text sms messages, or even on Twitter (be sure to RT@seprr posts!) 
Reform Companion Animal Laws - Please Sign & Share this Petition: http://bit.ly/SaveGaPets  Please Share the word on Twitter:
RT @seprr support laws in #GA to END euthanizing animals http://bit.ly/SaveGaPets   #petrescue #gapolitics

3- HARDCOPY! Hit the streets with it! 
Print out and take a copy of the petition to your rescue events such as fundraisers and adoption events!  http://bit.ly/SaveGaPets-hardcopy


Here is why:

Georgia, similar to many other states, kills up to 300,000 animals a year. We invest between $125,000,000 to $140,000,000 annually from property, state, and local taxes into the animal control operations in each county.  129 of 159 counties have animal control. The other 30 counties are not in compliance with Georgia laws requiring animal control services in each county. 

Even if an animal control adopts humane operational policies such as the No Kill Nation model, this still will not end the underlying source of the problem, overpopulation and poor animal husbandry.  While Animal Husbandry is an issue that depends upon education, and given that Georgia is 49th in Students Graduating from High School (Morgan Quitno Education State Rankings 2005-2006), we have a long road to improve the issues driven by lack of education and public awareness. It is a necessary component, but will not have any measurable results. Given the culture of the state's house and senate and budget conditions, any reform must have clear accountability and demonstrable returns on the taxpayer investment. 

A Transparent and Sustainable Business Plan to Save Georgia's Pets
A Three year period of Free Spay and Neuter offered Statewide would directly and immediately impact the underlying problem, and would generate tax savings within 2 years that double the annual investment required, and those savings would increase and remain in place permanently.
Consider that when a No Kill shelter is full, where does the next animal go? They are sent to the animal control down the street, the "kill shelter".  Atlanta Humane Society regularly turns away animals. Call and ask about their policy. Yet, 1.6 miles away, Fulton County Animal Control euthanizes as many as 3,000 animals a year at tax payer expense. 

To be fair, Fulton County, thanks to the Low Cost Spay Neuter programs made available by the efforts of the Barking Hound Village Foundation, have reduced it's kill rate to 1/3 the rate of neighboring Metro Atlanta shelters, and represent an enormous success even while killing as much as 3,000 a year. It's all relative. Fulton County's success is measured in real terms by a 60-70% reduction of Euthanasia over a 3 year period versus other regional animal control services. They are true "Rock Stars" when compared to many other animal control services. Yet, even their program can not succeed when neighboring areas do not have accessible programs for neutering and education. Their problems will always spillover into Fulton County, hence the numbers remain to be dealt with, tragically.

Our petition calls for several reforms, the most important is a statewide, three year long FREE Spay and neuter program. We also call for a statewide database to track the numbers so we can prove the sustainable success of the model. The database is already designed by another activist who serves in the current Dept of Ag administration as an advisor. It may be launched within 12 months!  Without the presence of a database, our spay/neuter program can not be launched, since there will be no way to measure success. Ultimately, the program will be doomed to failure since we will not be able to prove we made a difference saving animals or saved one penny of tax money. The database project is crucial, and must go forward. The good news, that project is relatively straightforward and is internal to the Dept of Agriculture. No lobbying required! 


Consolidate Regulation, Management and Enforcement
We call for a centralization of animal control services and enforcement, managed statewide. This will increase the quality of enforcement, reduce redundancies such as shelters that do not share capacity with one another, head count and staff can enjoy more structured learning and policy creation, and the public can access the entire shelter network via one portal, enabling better visibility of the entire market of adoptable animals. 

Spay and Neuter 
Free or inexpensive access to spay and neuter procedures will go a long distance to reducing the numbers of viable animals at risks in shelters. A variable license fee based upon spay/neuter status may provide additional incentive for compliance. Animals given up as a direct result of the fee could be given special status so they would not die in a shelter as a result of their owner's decision. Puppy Mills could be easily identified. Pure-bred pups would be much more valuable in a market where there is no longer a moral choice to adopt and rescue a shelter dog from Death Row versus buying a Pure Bred. The current situation is so bad that that if you did want a Pure Bred, you could visit Petfinder.com and in a matter of a few days find a large selection of practically any breed you may want, and all of them are either currently in rescue or still on Death Row. Imagine what this must do to the value of the puppies that are being intentionally bred for sale? Simple ECON101.

A statewide system for spay and neuter, in conjunction with a uniform animal shelter system, will  save animals, improves the conditions in shelters, and improves the chances of the animal being re-homed or safely returned to it's owners who may still be looking for their lost pet. We could extend hold periods indefinitely and an animal found in one location could be sheltered in another location, yet still be visible to the owner looking for their pet via the internet.  

Even if Constituents Don't Care about Animal Welfare...
There are those who do not care about animals saying "We should spend tax money on people first!". Taxpayers in Georgia ALREADY spend $140million annually  on this deplorable and tragic system The 3 year spay/neuter program alone  will save an enormous amounts of expenses. The estimates are that a  $25 million annual investment  in each of the first three years will generate an ongoing annual initial return on investment of $56 million by the 24th month. That amounts to $87 million is savings by the end of the 3rd year. 

How is this possible? 40% of the population will simply not be bred, so they will not be in the system to be managed and/or euthanized. 40% of $140m = $56m. Given that this will have a lasting effect, the savings will actually go up over a given period of time,so by the 4th or 5th year, we could enjoy a savings as high as $80-$90m annually. 

Then we could afford to pave roads, pay our police, teachers, and firefighters what they deserve, and perhaps even keep Hope Scholarships available for our kids.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Sharing Rescue Alerts in Email and Social Media

Please review this article and share it!

RT @seprr Sharing Rescue Alerts in Email & Social Media http://bit.ly/hTpFA0 #petrescue
 

Hopefully, this information will better empower Rescue  volunteers and promoters to increase the reach and effectiveness of your Rescue Alert Notices and  Fundraising Event announcements

File Sizes of Photos & Attachments:
A common mistake MOST rescuers make is sending files that are too large via email. The maximum TOTAL size of attachments for any email should not exceed 300k.  Once emails exceed 1mb they become problematic to share.

Ones with fliers often can not be seen at all, for a variety of reasons. Always include the basic meeting/event information in TEXT format in addition to the gorgeous fliers!

If people want to share it to help you, anyone using a smart phone or MS Outlook will be silently grumbling as they watch the Windows Blue Wheel of death grind away, or the download icon on their phones slowly tick away the minutes. If they were not on unlimited data, they would really not be happy campers.

At Ga Perimeter College, I teach my students how to fix image file sizes: one of the articles I recommend to them is here. The students have to put together PowerPoint presentations to present the results of their research in the course. Large, file-sized photos dramatically increase the size of the PowerPoint. Large PowerPoint files are difficult to share with others, in the same way large photos are difficult to share.
I also recommend to them SlideShare to post their PowerPoints online for easy sharing.

SOCIAL MEDIA:
Moral of the Story: Tweets are NOT just for Twitter.

You can greatly increase your reach if you adopt the use social media channels. This article provides a thorough walk thru of how to take a basic email such as this, and to get it out to 10's of thousands of people in Social Media.

Here is a sample of one I put together today for one of our transport coordinators.

It has all the images (small file sizes), links, info, contacts, and a tweet that anyone can share anywhere, with anyone, in any social media channel, chat status, sms text, email, smoke signals, the back of a napkin.. Boom. Done and Done.

You can also take that Tweet and post it to relevant places, such as in the case of Floyd County Animal Control, the Darlington School and Berry College Alumni Fan Pages, Belk Stores of Rome, etc etc etc. Put it right in front of the public. Generate awareness. Share the tweets onto Fan Pages, Blog Comment fields, etc.
To set up your own Rescue Transport or Alert, and to promote it using Social Media and Email networks please review the information at the link in the following "Tweet":

RT @seprr How to Post a Rescue Alert on SEPRR & Social Media: http://on.fb.me/How2Post2SEPRR #petrescue #gapolitics


Training:
Until May 13th, I have access to use my computer classroom for training rescuers. free. I am on campus Fridays, teaching classes from 7am-2:30pm. If you can coordinate 5 or more volunteers to show up for a training, we can do a 2-3 hour session. Please submit specific topic areas and questions at least 1-2 weeks in advance of the scheduled date so the course will be more relevant. If you have a small, one-off question,  I have some time in the morning from 9am-9:45am and after 2:30pm, and access to an entire big screen projector equipped computer lab. Come on by. (Location:CE1190)

EMAIL LIST  Please DO join SEPRR's Rescue Alert Email list.

Review the posting guidelines on the home page. (SEPRR's email list)

Southeast USA/GA based members should also join the following lists:
Georgia Animal Rescue High Volume, Set your preferences to Daily or Weekly Digests.
SPOT Society High Volume, Set your preferences to Daily or Weekly Digests.

Crossposting:
SEPRR will occasionally crosspost. However, if a Crossposter will not join the SEPRR mail list, and expects us to manually post it for them, we will not do so after the first few messages unless there is discussion about the arrangement and an agreement in place. Recipients often construe SEPRR as the source, instead of being the crossposter. When there are errors and issues, they pursue SEPRR, not the original sender. 


I hope rescuers found this useful.

**CANCELS TONIGHT** Memphis TN to New Windsor NY T'port Thurs updt: Fri/Sat April 22/23 ~ Left Behind Labbies - 5 LEGS BY 10PM TONIGHT

2 Chocolate Labs need their Rescue Ride from Memphis to New York this weekend.

Need Drivers from Greenville TN to Harrisbirg PA BY 10PM TONIGHT




Share on The Twitter
RT @seprr 2CHOCLABS URGENT/ TRANSPORT MAY CANCEL NEED DRIVERS BY 10PM 3/21 http://bit.ly/2choco-labs Grnvl TN->Hrsbrg PA #petrescue

The driving segments below need drivers! 
Leg 7 ~ Greeneville, TN to Bristol, TN (I81)
51 miles ~ 0 h 50 min

3:20 pm ~ 4:10 pm

NEEDED


Leg 8 ~ Bristol, TN to Wytheville, VA
(I81)
73 miles ~ 1 h 05 min

4:20 pm ~ 5:25 pm

NEEDED


Leg 9 ~ Wytheville, VA to Roanoke, VA
(I81)
73 miles ~ 1 h 05 min

5:35 pm ~ 6:40 pm

NEEDED



Leg 13 ~ Hagerstown, MD to Harrisburg, PA
(I81)
77 miles ~ 1 h 25 min

12:25 pm ~ 1:50 pm

NEEDED


FYI: For those new to rescue transport, these transport  functions the same way as a relay race. Each drive commits to driving a segment, usually 50-100 miles, and then hands off the "passengers" to the next driver just like handing off a baton. In this way, a transport can take rescues thousands of miles  and provides a fun way for people to become involved in the Companion Animal Rescue Movement.

To set up your own RescueTransport or Alert, and to promote it using Social Media and Email networks please review the information at the link in the following "Tweet":

RT @seprr How to Post a Rescue Alert on SEPRR & Social Media: http://on.fb.me/How2Post2SEPRR #petrescue #gapolitics





Original Post sent by Denise Santoro:

LEFT BEHIND LABBIES
*this pair was left behind by a transport ~ need to move them*
Friday/Saturday April 22/23, 2011
Memphis/Jackson, TN to New Windsor, NY
Sampson and the pup
Crossposting is greatly appreciated ~~ please do NOT post on Craigslist!!
+++I TRY TO COMBINE MY RUNS WHEREVER POSSIBLE IN ORDER TO USE DRIVERS/FUEL EFFICIENTLY, RIDERS MAY BE ADDED TO SOME RUNS+++
*Passenger info below*

All legs are F~L~E~X~I~B~L~E!  10 minutes added to each leg for transfer and potty breaks. All legs will be monitored.  I'd hate to miss your offer to help, so please EMAIL ME DIRECTLY AT THE EMAIL BELOW if you are able to assist. DO NOT RESPOND TO THE LIST or I may never see your offer to help!  If you would like to volunteer only as BACKUP if the leg doesn't fill, please indicate clearly on the email that you are volunteering only for BACKUP. We also appreciate offers for BACKUP if a leg is filled should an emergency occur.

!!THANK YOU!!

Please return leg being offered along with the following information (if you have driven for me previously, only update changed items):
Martha Chandler ~ momof4mutts64@yahoo (.com)*
*email only as I work full time
*Please utilize the auto response I have on my email for guidance*

NAME:
PRIMARY EMAIL:
ADDRESS:
HOME CITY/STATE:
HOME PHONE:
CELL PHONE:
VEHICLE COLOR/MAKE/MODEL:
EMERGENCY CONTACT (NAME/PHONE NUMBER):
REFERENCES (i.e. VET/RESCUE/PERSONAL/TRANSPORT COORDINATOR, ETC):
PREFERRED MEETING PLACE:

Friday April 22 (all times CDT):
Leg 1 ~ Memphis, TN to Jackson, TN (I40)
84 miles ~ 1 h 20 min
7:00 am ~ 8:00 am

Leg 2 ~ Jackson, TN to Hurricane Mills, TN (I40)
63 miles ~ 0 h 55 min
8:10 am ~ 9:05 am

Leg 3 ~ Hurricane Mills, TN to Nashville, TN (I40)
78 miles ~ 1 h 10 min
9:05 am ~ 10:15 am

Leg 4 ~ Nashville, TN to Monterey, TN (I40)
90 miles ~ 1 h 20 min
10:15 am ~ 11:35 am

Leg 5 ~ Monterey, TN to Knoxville, TN (I40)
*time change ~ one hour ahead*
89 miles ~ 1 h 25 min
11:35 am ~ 1:00 pm **CDT**
12:35 pm ~ 2:00 pm **EDT**
Filled by Julie ~ thanks!

Leg 6 ~ Knoxville, TN to Greeneville, TN (I81)
65 miles ~ 1 h 00 min
2:10 pm ~ 3:10 pm
Filled by Bob ~ thanks!

Leg 7 ~ Greeneville, TN to Bristol, TN (I81)
51 miles ~ 0 h 50 min
3:20 pm ~ 4:10 pm
NEEDED

Leg 8 ~ Bristol, TN to Wytheville, VA (I81)
73 miles ~ 1 h 05 min
4:20 pm ~ 5:25 pm
NEEDED

Leg 9 ~ Wytheville, VA to Roanoke, VA (I81)
73 miles ~ 1 h 05 min
5:35 pm ~ 6:40 pm
NEEDED

**OVERNIGHT FILLED BY ANGELS OF ASSISI**

Saturday April 23 (all times EDT):
Leg 10 ~ Roanoke, VA to Staunton, VA (I81)
88 miles ~ 1 h 30 min
8:00 am ~ 9:30 am
NEEDED

Leg 11 ~ Staunton, VA to Strasburg, VA (I81)
79 miles ~ 1 h 25 min
9:40 am ~ 11:05 am
Filled by Vanessa ~ thanks!

Leg 12 ~ Strasburg, VA to Hagerstown, MD (I81)
63 miles ~ 1 h 00 min
11:15 am ~ 12:15 pm
Filled by Edith ~ thanks!

Leg 13 ~ Hagerstown, MD to Harrisburg, PA (I81)
77 miles ~ 1 h 25 min
12:25 pm ~ 1:50 pm
NEEDED

Leg 14 ~ Harrisburg, PA to Allentown, PA (I78)
82 miles ~ 1 hr 30 min
2:00 pm ~ 3:30 pm
Filled by Don ~ thanks!

Leg 15 ~ Allentown, PA to Morristown, NJ (I78/I287)
71 miles ~ 1 h 20 min
3:40 pm ~ 5:00 pm
Filled by Kathy ~ thanks!

Leg 16 ~ Morristown, NJ to Newburgh, NY (I287/I87)
Filled by receiver ~ thanks!

*Passenger info*
Passenger 1:  Sampson
Breed: Chocolate Lab
Age: 9 yrs
Gender: Male
Size/Weight: 60 lbs
Spayed/Neutered: Will be done at rescue
General temperament: Sweet, very gentle and calm, loves to ride in the car
Any Special Needs:  None known
Mandatory Items Provided:   Vet records, leash, collar and Health Certificate
Crate: Optional, not provided                       
Reason for transport: Kill facility to rescue (avoided euth by 10 minutes!)
Vaccines: UTD

Passenger 2:  The Pup
Breed: Chocolate Lab
Age: 2.5 yrs
Gender: Male
Size/Weight: 50 lbs
Spayed/Neutered: Will be done at rescue
General temperament: Very sweet, put more active than Sampson
Any Special Needs:  None known
Mandatory Items Provided:   Vet records, leash, collar and Health Certificate
Crate: Optional, not provided                       
Reason for transport: Kill facility to rescue (avoided euth by 10 minutes!)
Vaccines: UTD

Sending Temp Foster:
Lauren ~ laurenhyoakum@gmail (.com)
Memphis, TN
901.237.8288
 
Receiving Rescue:
Hudson Valley SPCA
Joannie ~ kayjonnie@aol (.com)
New Windsor, NY
845.564.6810
www.hvspca.org

Thursday, March 31, 2011

SAFE! Fosters Urgently Needed: BARNESVILLE GA 2 Golden Retrievers Owner Turn-In

Safe! Pulled into fostering by Bright Star Animal Rescue
Byron, GA 31008

Update from    Sandra Bray
date    Fri, Apr 1, 2011 at 6:04 PM

The good news is the dogs are safely in Bright Star Rescue in Byron GA.  I was extremely impressed with this group, they are all about the dogs.  I will be posting photos of them leaving me later this evening.  Their expressions were different as they climbed into the back seat of her car, it was like all uncertainty was gone!  They were happy again!!

These two poor dogs reached out and touched so many people.  I think Lisa and I were both over whelmed at the loving concern given to these two dogs.
I'm sure they will live out the rest of their lives together in a loving home.
That's the best we can do!!
Thanks so much!!
Sandra

2 Golden Retrievers Owner Turn-In  

Update2: Angels Among US Pet Rescue is Boarding them. A Warner-Robbins Rescue is committed to pulling them tomorrow. -BMG
Update1- They were turned in today. -BMG

Contact: Sandray Bray sbray01@bellsouth.net


Share on any social media network:

rt @seprr Fosters Urgently Needed: BARNESVILLE GA 2 Golden Retrievers Owner Turn-In
http://bit.ly/hcWSqM



Original Message (Crossposted)
"I am asking if you would please email this to your friends or family.  We are desperately trying to get these dogs  a home before Friday.  They have been together since puppies.  They are 7 years old.  They are fully vetted, all shots, house broken, used to riding in car.  Get this-- the family is moving and do not want to take these dogs.  So, instead of trying to find them a home before they leave, they are putting them in the pound this Friday.  Sandra took pictures and was able to hold the people off til Friday as far as putting them in the pound.  We are praying they will have a change of heart and take the dogs with them.  Sandra said they are very friendly , but scared dogs.  Of course, I am sure they know what is going to happen to them.  She doesn't think the female will last long in the pound before she has a break down.  The male is a little more stronger .  Very healthy , maintained  up until now.  Please help me try to find them a place to live out the rest of their years.  Thanks so much.  -Colleen..."

URGENTS: Gwinnett County GA Many Pure Bred Labs, Pits, Sheps on Death Row WEEK OF MARCH 28TH - APRIL 2ND

Animal ID # is 13966/1775
MALE,  PEN 117 -
ADULT GOLDEN RETRIEVER
Available for adoption starting on 03/31/2011

(end of the 5 day hold period)

FOUND STRAY ; FRIENDLY
Lawrenceville, GA URGENT: DOGS - WEEK OF MARCH 28TH - APRIL 2ND

There are lots of pure bred dogs here, just like these two labs Labs! 

There are many others including Shepherds, Pitties, and  several small breeds.


Several of these animals are available through Operation Second Chance 
 

Animal ID # is 13918/1736
FEMALE
ADULT,  PEN 115 – LABRADOR
Adoption starting on 03/30/2011
 
(end of the 5 day hold period)
FOUND STRAY ;  FRIENDLY
"A new program that allows inmates to train dogs in order to save their lives and find them permanent homes began February 16, 2010 at the Gwinnett County Jail.Sheriff Butch Conway conceived the idea after looking at the staggering number of animals that are being put down in Gwinnett County for lack of resources to save them. He believed his department could make a difference not just in the life of these dogs, but in the life of our inmate population."


To Save Their LIVES - DON’T BUY, PLEASE ADOPT

Stop the killing once and for all: Please review & sign this petition for 3 yrs of Free Spay and Neutering in GA and call for sweeping reforms in the current system to keep animals out of shelters. 

If you want a paperbased copy for your store, rescue, or office please contact info@sepetrescue.org

Share as your Status via SMS or any Social Network:

RT @seprr URGENTS: Gwinnett GA Doggy Death Row Roster:3/28-4/2 Pure Bred Labs Pits tiny dogs cats http://bit.ly/e7qLzg #petrescue

THERE IS NO SAFE PERIOD FOR ANIMALS AT THE GWINNETT COUNTY ANIMAL SHELTER.
**THEY ARE ALL URGENT**
Animal ID # is 13946/1759
YOUNG MALE, PEN 134 - CHOCOLATE LABRADOR
The shelter thinks I am
Available for adoption starting on 03/30/2011
(end of the 5 day hold period)
FOUND STRAY; FRIENDLY
AFTER THE FIVE DAY HOLDING PERIOD,
ANY ANIMAL MAY BE EUTHANIZED AT ANY TIME BASED ON THE DISCRETION OF THE STAFF.







ADOPTION HOURS:
Monday- CLOSED
Tuesday-Saturday: 10AM- 3:30PM
Sunday: 12PM-4PM

ADOPTION FEES and GUIDELINES:
$90 Total (
$60 Cash / Remaining $30 paid in cash, check, or card (AMEX not accepted))
You must be at least 18 years of age to place an animal on hold or to adopt.

Use the new stuff to save animals!
QR Codes!








FOR OUT OF STATE RESCUES/ADOPTIONS:
Please Contact Tues- Saturday: Officer Chris Hughes 770-339-3200 EXT 5572


Inquiries about the Shelter’s Operations:
Mary Lou Respess, Shelter Manager, 770.339.3200
Mary.Respess@gwinnettcounty.com

Additional Contacts:

Emergencies
To report an animal bite: Call 911 for medical attention first. The 911 operator will call us about the animal. To report cruelty cases or an injured, sick, or vicious animal call us at 770.513.5700.

Complaints
To file a complaint (barking dogs, etc.) call 770.339.3200 (Monday - Friday, 8:00am - 4:00pm)

Pet Listings


Several of these animals are available through Operation Second Chance

Lost Animals
To reclaim your lost pet from the Shelter, bring identification (drivers license or Georgia ID) and proof of ownership, such as vet records.