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> Out of the Cage! > Summer
2007 > Volunteer Spotlight: Deborah Chieglis Fills Two Unique
Volunteer Needs
Volunteer Spotlight: Deborah Chieglis Fills Two Unique
Volunteer Needs
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Deborah Chieglis provides two
valuable volunteer services — providing foster
care and sewing cage comforters. |
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Editor's note: More than two years ago, Deborah
Chieglis was a featured volunteer
in Out of the Cage! Because of her special volunteer contributions
to NYC's homeless animals, we decided to feature Deborah again in
an updated article, and also highlight the fact that instructions
for creating cage comforters are now available to everyone who visits
the Mayor's Alliance web site. Please take a look!
Deborah Chieglis spends her days dealing with law
firms, accountants, advisors, and due diligence issues. She is a
consultant in the financial services industry, handling marketing,
sales, and content development for conferences. But Deborah's true
passion is animals, and it's embodied in her volunteer pursuits
— creating cage comforters and fostering back to health weak
and injured cats and kittens.
Cage comforters
are small quilts that are placed in the cages of animals awaiting
adoption from shelters or rescue groups. The comforters provide
the animals with a more cozy and comfortable environment, and help
reduce the animals' stress of being in a cage. They also allow potential
adopters to more easily envision the animals as part of their homes
and lives.
Deborah began sewing cage comforters more than two
years ago while she was grieving the loss of her 18-year-old black
"meezer," Taj, to cancer. A few months after Taj's death,
Deborah visited the Animal Care & Control (AC&C) shelter
on East 110th Street to "take a look" at the cats. Feeling
that it was too soon to adopt, she decided instead to volunteer
at the shelter, doing adoption education and kennel cleaning. When
she discovered that volunteers at AC&C's Brooklyn shelter were
sewing cage comforters for the animals, she was inspired to try
it. "I went home and cannibalized an old comforter, and when
I brought the little comforters up to the Manhattan shelter, I saw
almost immediately that the animals' stress level went down as they
settled into the comforter," she remembers.
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Homemade cage comforters make
a shelter cage more comfortable, and they can help to
increase an animal's chances of adoption. |
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Since then, Deborah estimates that she has created
roughly 150 comforters. She says it's hard to keep track, focusing
less on numbers and more on diminishing the piles of donated sheets
and comforters she has in her apartment. "I have notices in
my building welcoming donations of fabric and linens from my co-op,"
she says. "As an added result I've become the 'go-to' person
in my building for any pet behavioral or adoption issues."
During the week Deborah makes time to work on the
comforters. She brings some of them to the Mayor's Alliance,
which in turn donates them to City
Critters, KittyKind,
AC&C, and
other groups. And sometimes Deborah takes comforters directly to
AC&C. To see the cage comforters in use, stop by PETCO at Union
Square, where KittyKind shows cats for adoption, or PETCO in Turtle
Bay, where City Critters cats are available.
To inspire more people to get involved in making
cage comforters, the Mayor's Alliance posted Deborah's easy "how-to"
instructions on our
web site. The Alliance also has arranged for Deborah to teach a
cage comforter class for seniors through a program of the Jewish
Association of Services for the Aged (JASA).
She advises: "You want to make sure they are
pretty non-destructible," she says. "That means that tiny
claws and paws won't ruin them immediately. Stay away from looped
fabric and fabric that pulls easily. The best material is fleece.
Some of the cats and kittens pull and suck on the fabric as if they
are nursing!"
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Tokyo was Deborah's first "three-legger"
foster cat. |
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And that brings us to Deborah's other volunteer
endeavor: fostering "three-leggers," as she affectionately
calls them. These are cats that have come into the shelter system
with severe fractures but are otherwise adoptable, she explains.
"Thanks to the Picasso
Veterinary Fund, these cats have received medical treatment.
I have fostered three amputees so far, and am now on my fourth."
Deborah's first "three-legger" foster
cat was Tokyo, who, about a year ago, had a bad rear-leg fracture.
Tokyo was taken to Fifth
Avenue Veterinary Specialists, the specialty veterinary hospital
in Chelsea that has treated dozens of Picasso Veterinary Fund animals
for the Mayor's Alliance, where a splint was applied to the leg.
Following the procedure, Tokyo was placed in an adoption program
with an Alliance Participating Organization (APO). But her rear
leg became stiff (not an unusual occurrence with this type of injury),
so she was returned to Deborah for physical therapy. After trying
many different forms of physical therapy and consulting with a veterinary
surgeon, it was decided that it was in Tokyo's best interest to
amputate the leg and thereby improve her mobility. Deborah cared
for Tokyo throughout her recovery, up until she was adopted into
a permanent home.
Describing her fosters, who range in age from one
to two years, Deborah says, "They recuperate fairly quickly.
It's amazing how resilient they are! Very soon they are jumping
onto the bed (with a little help from a step stool), the couch,
and relaxing in the sunshine in front of my living room window."
"When I tell people about the fostering I do,"
Deborah says, "they almost always say, 'How can you do that?
How can you let them go after you nurse them back to health?' I
view myself as a half-way house — a midpoint in the animal's
life — so that they can easily transition into their forever
home. While I would love to keep each and every one of them, it's
more important that I can help a potential adopter get a well-balanced
and loving cat."
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Deborah's "permanent foster"
cat, Puppy, plays social director for her other foster
cats. |
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Deborah does have one foster who never left —
and so has become her foster helper. "She's a tiny tiger who
was abandoned on the street, malnourished, covered in fleas and
cooking oil. While she is a little girl, she plays an important
role in helping the fosters adapt to new situations. Also, she has
been seen teaching them where all the best toys are hidden in the
house!"
Deborah says she learned her commitment and love
of animals from her mother, who lives in Upstate New York. Recently
her mom rescued a mom-cat and litter of kittens from the countryside.
"I did not, however, inherit my sewing skills
from her. She is a Seamstress Extraordinaire and I am a humble but
diligent beginner who managed to break a sewing machine already."
But never mind that. Deborah says that cutting and sewing the cage
comforters is great therapy and a good source of relaxation for
her. "To see the animals cuddling in them at the shelters and
adoption centers is the ultimate payoff."
To learn how you can create cage comforters for
shelter animals, check out Deborah's
instructions. If you and a group of friends or colleagues want
to find out how to make sewing cage comforters a fun and useful
group activity, please contact the Mayor's Alliance at info@AnimalAllianceNYC.org.
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