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Alliance News Items > No Kill, The New Goal In Animal Control
No Kill, The New Goal In Animal Control
by Lynda Crawford, Gotham
Gazette
Monday, February 2, 2004
A red pit bull was brought to the city's animal
shelter in the Bronx recently with two broken legs. A shelter official
contacted Jane Hoffman from the Mayor's
Alliance for New York City Animals, who called a private veterinarian.
The vet agreed to examine the animal for free, and do the orthopedic
surgery at a reduced rate, which was paid for by a charity set up
for this purpose called the Picasso Fund.
If it had been brought in just a year ago, chances
are good that the dog — badly injured, homeless, and thus
deemed un-adoptable — would have been killed.
Last year about 35,000 cats and dogs were reportedly
killed at the five shelters run by New
York City's Center for Animal Care and Control. At least
a third of them were healthy and not dangerous. They were killed — euthanized, in the parlance of the field — because
there just wasn't room for them. This is the way it has been
for decades. Every day, as many as 200 animals — lost, homeless,
unwanted, sick or injured — are taken to these shelters. By
the end of every week, about two-thirds of them have been put to
death.
But now there is a new vision for the future of
New York's cats and dogs. It is expressed in something approaching
a slogan — No kill in NYC by 2008.
From Kill to No Kill
There are many reasons why animal shelters got into
the business of killing the animals they had rescued from the streets.
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First was simply
the overwhelming overpopulation of cats and
dogs. Estimates put the number of dogs in the city at about
a million and a half, and cats at more than two and a half
million. Too many thousands of these are homeless animals
roaming the city.
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Strong>Inadequate shelters
are also at fault: the population during one month in 2003
was 171 percent of capacity at the Brooklyn shelter, 114 percent
of capacity at Manhattan, and 137 percent of capacity in Queens.
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Years with no ambitious adoption
and spay/neuter programs have contributed as well.
An audit by NYC Comptroller William Thompson a couple of years
ago found the city's shelter system "does not provide
humane conditions for all of the animals in its shelters and
has not made aggressive efforts to increase adoptions of homeless
animals." Spay-neutering initiatives, to stem the overpopulation,
were under-publicized.
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New York City per capita spending
on animal control is about half the national average.
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And underlying all this was
a leadership philosophy that accepted this killing as sad
but necessary.
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That philosophy began to change nationally in 1989
when a Californian named Ed Duvin wrote an article
condemning euthanasia for healthy adoptable animals in shelters
as "massive slaughter" and "an abject failure."
The article stirred heated debate and resulted in more and more
humane organizations, including the American
Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (the ASPCA)
in New York, distancing themselves from the killing, by leaving
it to municipal-run shelters. But this didn't stop the deaths;
it only changed who administered them.
The concept of "no kill" began in 1990
at the San Francisco
Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, which teamed
up with the local animal control agency to create programs that
encouraged adoption, instituted spay/neutering, reunited pets with
owners, and vastly improved the shelters themselves. In 1989, only
38 percent of the animals in the shelters in San Francisco were
saved from killing. In 2003, the save rate had increased to 78 percent.
"No kill" does not mean that there will
no longer be animals put to death at animal shelters. Rather, the
goal is not to euthanize any healthy "adoptable" animals.
About 20 percent of the animals may be too sick or too dangerous
to save, according to the National
Council on Pet Overpopulation, and they will continue to be
euthanized.
Even the more modest goal of saving healthy adoptable
animals will take up to five years to achieve in New York City.
New Leadership
That "no kill" is now even the official
goal in New York is largely due to three people, the city's
new generation of leadership in animal care.
Jane Hoffman: Strategic Alliance
The first is Jane Hoffman, a lawyer who helped found
the Animal Law Committee of the Association of the Bar of the City
of New York, the first such bar association committee in the nation
(eight cities and ten states have since followed suit). At the end
of 2001, the committee sent a memo
to Mayor-elect Michael Bloomberg, outlining opportunities to improve
New York City's policies towards animals. The mayor invited
Hoffman to City Hall, a meeting that led to the formation of the
Mayor's Alliance for New York City Animals, with Hoffman as
its president. "I think what appealed to them" said Hoffman,
"is that a lot of people were screaming about this situation,
but not offering options. We did."
There are now 50
organizations in the Mayor's Alliance. Their mission is to increase
the adoption of shelter animals and increase spay/neutering of cats
and dogs, both of which will ultimately help to achieve the third
goal: decrease the killing of animals at shelters. These efforts
would be paid for by securing a grant from Maddie's
Fund, a foundation that supports collaborative no-kill efforts
within communities.
Ed Boks: Emphasizing The "Care" In Animal
Care and Control
Hoffman lured Ed Boks to head the Center
for Animal Care and Control, which is a non-profit agency created
in 1995 under contract with the city to operate the city's animal
shelters (taking over from the ASPCA). Boks had gained a reputation
in animal control in Maricopa County, Arizona (which includes Phoenix
and several other cities), where he had promised that he would not
leave until he had made it the first no-kill metropolitan area in
the country. But the opportunity to do the same in New York was
too strong a siren call. "If we do it in New York, we will
rob every other community in the United States of their excuses."
Boks likes to repeat a saying by Gandhi — "the way you can judge a community is by how they treat their
animals. Right now," Boks says, "how we treat our animals
is a cause of tremendous shame. Our shelters are abhorrent."
A former pastor, Boks would like to emphasize the "care"
in Animal Care and Control. Since the city cut its funding for the
agency from $8.9 million to $7.2 million last year, Boks has teamed
up with well-known animal advocates such as Mary Tyler Moore to
raise additional funds. Boks also hopes to be able to roll out programs
that worked in Maricopa County — he has already initiated one,
for feral cats (the "wild" offspring of domestic pets) — if he can find the funding. "Our job won't be done
until we can develop a safety net for all animals."
Edwin Sayres: Ten Percent Fewer Deaths A Year
The third new leader passionately committed to "no
kill" is Edwin Sayres, the new president of the ASPCA,
a national organization founded in 1866 that is headquartered here
in the city. Sayres, who has spent three decades working for animal
welfare organizations, hopes to lend his expertise as well as the
resources of his organization to help New York City reduce its animal
euthanasia rate by ten percent a year.
"With Ed Boks here," said Sayres, "and
with what Jane Hoffman is creating with the Mayor's Alliance,
and what I bring to the table…it feels like the planets are
all in their right alignment. There is strong competency and good
spirit, so we have placed more priority on our role in New York."
The ASPCA has increased its spending in the city
to $15.5 million (up from $12.5 million last year), and says these
resources will be aimed at increasing adoptions, and providing animal
behavior training sessions to owners; a large number of pets are
surrendered to city shelters because of their behavior problems,
many of which could have been corrected. The society will also provide
additional hours and more staffing for their mobile unit (ASPCA Cares), which offers on-the-spot spay/neutering in various neighborhoods;
last year, the mobile unit performed 7,000 surgeries. ASPCA Cares
is free for those on public assistance and for rescue groups, and
$25 for anyone else.
Pets to the People
Less than 10 percent of the estimated 56,000 animals
brought to city shelters last year were adopted. (The fate of the
rest: Some were reunited with their owners, and others were transferred
to animal rescue groups or private shelters that hold onto them
indefinitely if they need to, but it is estimated that at least
60 percent were euthanized). To save more lives, the animal care
activists are devising new ways to get these pets to people.
Last year, the Mayor's Alliance offered five adoption
events at city parks, complete with festive tents, banners,
nice display cages, and orange mesh vests for the animals printed
with the words "Adopt Me." Three hundred shelter animals
were adopted in this way. (Dates for the 2004 park adoption events
are already lined up: Central Park (May 23); Clove Lakes Park (Sept.
25); Prospect Park (June 20, Oct. 24).)
Another strategy is to compete with pet stores.
Animal
Haven, a member of the Mayor's Alliance, partnered with Biscuits
& Bath, a dog day care center, to create a small storefront
adoption
center on Second Avenue for shelter animals. The window looks
just like a pet-store window, except there is a sign that says "Adopt
Me." Animal Haven offers lifetime support services, including
training for the new owners on care for the animals. "It is
an educational opportunity," explained Marcello Forte of Animal
Haven. "We want the adoptions to stick." Last year, they
were able to place 500 shelter animals this way.
They also operate an adoption van that set up at
several heavily trafficked areas. "We're going to the public
and bringing the animals," said Forte. "Pets to the people."
Then there is the Pet-Ark,
an ATM-like kiosk that helps people locate pets for adoption from
within the shelter system. Funded by Mary Tyler Moore and her husband,
Dr. Robert Levin, Pet-Arks are now up and running in nine locations
and on the Web. The hope is that Pet-Arks will soon be in banks,
post offices and even Starbucks.
Available pets can also be reviewed online
through Animal Care and Control
"Adopting from a shelter, the animal is good
to go," said Hoffman. "They're spayed/neutered…they
have all their shots, and you get some details on the animal. You
get a great healthy animal at a portion of the cost. And 20 percent
of animals in shelters are purebreds. Buying from a shelter makes
you part of the solution."
Allowing Pets in Apartments
Sometimes adoption efforts are hindered by "no
pet" clauses in tenant leases. If a landlord has a no-pet clause
in the lease, but the tenant "openly and notoriously"
has the animal for 90 days or more without interference, the landlord
waives the right to enforce the law for the life of the pet. If
a tenant brings home a new dog after this one dies, however, the
90-day period begins anew.
A bill introduced last year by City Council Member
Melinda Katz would extend that post-90-day grace period through
the life of the tenant, rather than the life of the pet. The legislation
would also ensure that seniors, 62 and older, would not be denied
housing or be subject to eviction on the basis of having pets. A
hearing
in December brought many supporters to testify, while a representative
from a council of low-income coops spoke against it. Katz will reintroduce
the bill this year.
Low Cost Spaying and Neutering
Adoption is the first priority because of the high
euthanasia rates, but the long-term solution to this problem is
widespread low-cost spay/neutering, or "turning off the faucet."
The low cost is important. The price to spay or neuter a dog at
a vet's office can range from $85 to $500 and, for cats, the price
fluctuates between $125 and $250. The Mayor's Alliance is
hoping for a grant that would provide six million dollars for spaying
and neutering animals in low-income families.
Over half the membership of the Veterinary
Medical Association of New York City (VMA/NYC) agreed to offer
their services to spay/neuter up to six animals a year for no more
than $20 for anyone on public assistance, with the remainder of
their fee being paid from the grant.
Jay Kuhlman, a veterinarian for 34 years (and the
doctor who treated the pit bull with two broken legs), sees low
cost spay/neutering as essential to avoiding the high rates of euthanasia.
Veterinarians could be helping more, he thinks, by posting signs
and talking to their customers. "We the people have done this.
And we can decrease it."
Rescuing Street Cats
Bryan Kortis, a documentary filmmaker, was on his
way home to his two cats on Manhattan's Upper West Side in 1999
when he happened upon what he thought was a single kitten in an
empty lot, and he stopped to see if he could help; maybe he could
handle one more addition to his home. It turned out not to be one
kitten, but several. Indeed, there were 30 cats there, most of them
under a year old. This he couldn't handle. Kortis tried calling
all over the city to get someone to take care of the cats, only
to find that there was no humane organization in existence that
dealt with street cats. He realized that if wanted someone to help
these cats, he was going to have to do it. In that instant, Neighborhood
Cats came into existence.
Kortis learned about trap-neuter-return (TNR) — a humane feral cat colony management program — from the Alley
Cat Allies. The program involves trapping feral cats, preferably
the whole colony at once, and bringing them to a vet for spay/neutering.
Kittens are rescued and brought to shelters, hopefully for adoption,
and adult cats are returned to where they were found, but monitored
and fed from this point forward by volunteer guardians.
"There are tens of thousands of feral cats
in New York City, " said Kortis. "Maybe hundreds of thousands.
Half of the kittens coming into city shelters are street cats. Three
to four thousand animals a month are being euthanized and most of
them are cats. If we can't stop the flow of these kittens
going into shelters, we're not going to be able to stop the
euthanasia rates."
Neighborhood Cats initially concentrated on the
Upper West Side, with remarkable results: in four years, he says,
the number of stray cats from the neighborhood going into shelters
dropped by 73 percent. Now, they operate throughout the city, have
completed some high-profile operations at Riker's Island and
Fresh Kills, and conduct workshops and courses.
The goal of Neighborhood Cats is that euthanasia
becomes "what it was meant to be," said Kortis, "the
mercy killing of beings that are mortally ill and suffering, and
nothing else."
A Caring — and Licensing — Community
"The best shelter is a caring community,"
said Boks, who is promoting responsible pet ownership, which includes
not just spaying and neutering, but also getting a license for your
dog. Dogs with licenses who wind up in a shelter "go home,"
said Boks. Those who are not wearing tags "don't go
home. It is the single most prevalent reason for animals dying in
shelters."
Hoffman also recommends microchip identification
for pets, a tiny implantable chip that is injected into the skin;
shelters and veterinarians now all have scanners to read these IDs
. "If the license falls off, they still have the microchip."
They are also encouraging New Yorkers to "foster"
a litter for 30 days, or to volunteer at an animal shelter. There
are programs with schools to teach children to care, and even programs
with banks: Negotiations are currently in progress with JP Morgan
Chase to encourage employees to adopt pets from shelters by covering
the fees.
Jane Hoffman is optimistic that no kill is a reachable
goal. Adoptions, she points out, nearly doubled last year from the
year before. "Our hope is that at some point we can save them
all," she said.
"It's up to the community," said
Ed Boks.
Copyright © 2004 Gotham
Gazette
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