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> Out of the Cage! > Spring
2007 > Mayor's Alliance Hosts Visit by Taiwanese Animal Enthusiasts
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Emma and Bob received a warm
welcome at Animal Haven SoHo, where they were greeted
by the Maddie's Fund mascot.
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Mayor's Alliance Hosts Visit by Taiwanese Animal
Enthusiasts
When Bob Wei-Lun Lin and his partner, Emma I-Chen
Liu, planned their dream trip to New York, they had one thing in
mind: animals.
Bob is a 30-year-old Ph.D. student, focusing on
mobile communication technologies. Emma is a 29-year-old research
assistant. They both have a keen interest in animal protection.
They share their home with their dog, Furry, who they adopted three
years ago and trained to pass the beginner and intermediate levels
of obedience training. They worked with a private animal shelter
called Eternal Love in Taoyuan, a province of Taiwan, where they
helped to increase the shelter's adoption rate and promote spay
and neuter within the community. Their "Dogs Home Club,"
which they founded at the National Central University (NCU) in Taiwan,
was awarded the school's Best Club Award.
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ASPCA President Ed Sayres welcomed
Bob and Emma at the ASPCA's recently expanded shelter
and adoption facility. |
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Then, in 2005, they entered a tour design competition
held by the Youth Hope Foundation in Taiwan, which involved designing
a "dream trip" with an altruistic purpose. Bob and Emma
designed a trip to New York to learn everything they could about
animal protection in the U.S. Their entry won the highest number
of Internet votes, and the couple was chosen as the winners by the
competition's referees. Their prize: a dream trip to New York City!
In preparation for their travels, Bob and Emma researched
their trip on the Internet. Impressed by what they read about the
progress being made in NYC by the Mayor's Alliance, they contacted
the Alliance for guidance. They explained that they wanted to learn
more about the methods and procedures being used by the Mayor's
Alliance in order to share the experiences and programs within their
own animal protection community in Taiwan. Bob explained that although
they have many private animal shelters in Taiwan, they still have
much to learn about treating stray animals.
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An ASPCA dog for adoption "teases"
his visitors from inside his new state-of-the-art dog
room. |
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So the Mayor's Alliance arranged for Bob and Emma
to see firsthand how Alliance member organizations are working to
save lives in NYC. First, they met with Ed Sayres, President of
the ASPCA, and
toured the ASPCA's recently renovated shelter and adoption center
on East 92nd Street, escorted by Mayor's Alliance President Jane
Hoffman. They toured Animal
Haven's new adoption center in SoHo, where Animal Haven's Jennifer
Bristol, Maddie (the six-foot Maddie's Fund mascot), and members
of NYC's Chinese press greeted them. The reception at Animal Haven
received coverage on Sino TV, World Journal, and Sing
Tao Daily.
At the Humane
Society of New York on East 59th Street, Anna-Marie Karash welcomed
Bob and Emma and guided them through the facility's shelter and
medical quarters. NYC's Animal
Care & Control (AC&C) shelter on East 110th Street welcomed
the visitors for a tour of the shelter and invited them to attend
a volunteer training session. Stops at KittyKind's
adoption center at PETCO in Union Square and City
Critters' adoption location at PETCO in Kips Bay gave Bob and
Emma a cat's-eye-view of adoptions in NYC.
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Bob and Emma had the chance
to meet with Animal Precinct's Joann Sandano,
Annemarie Lucas, and other ASPCA Humane Law Enforcement
(HLE) Unit officers. |
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One of the highlights of their NYC tour was a visit
to the Long Island City offices of the ASPCA's
Humane Law Enforcement (HLE) Unit, where they met Annemarie
Lucas, Bill Dunn, Dale Riedel, and Joann Sandano — some of
the HLE officers already familiar to them through Animal Planet's
Animal
Precinct, a popular television show even as far away as
Taiwan. And rounding out their tour were visits to several NYC dog
runs, pet supply stores, and boarding facilities.
Emma and Bob fulfilled their dream of coming to
New York to see firsthand how New Yorkers care for both their companion
animals and homeless animals. They recorded their experiences through
photographs, note-taking, and literature, and are now back home
sharing their experiences and learnings with their Taiwanese colleagues.
If you can read Chinese or have access to a translation
program, such as babelfish.altavista.com
you can read some of Bob and Emma's observations from their trip
on their blog site at:
http://blog.pixnet.net/qqichen/category/266752
http://blog.pixnet.net/qqichen/post/4719715
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