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Alliance News Items > Shelter big takes 'no-kill' race to
L.A.
Shelter
big takes 'no-kill' race to L.A.
by Lisa L. Colangelo, New
York Daily News
Thursday, January 3, 2006
Former Animal Care and Control Director Ed Boks
is hoping a little friendly rivalry will save lots of homeless animals
in both New York and Los Angeles.
Boks, who is slated to take over Los Angeles' controversial
Animal Services Department this week, said the two cities should
compete to see which will become "no-kill" first.
"No-kill," the high bar for animal shelters,
means that healthy, adoptable animals will no longer be euthanized
simply because there is no one to adopt them and no more space at
the shelters to keep them.
"It's about consciousness-raising," Boks
said. "This is one of the few social problems with a very simple
solution."
But Animal Care, which contracts with the city,
receives only about $7 million for animal control services every
year. And unlike other nonprofit animal rescue groups, it cannot
turn away any unwanted or stray animals.
Last month, Boks and the board announced a mutual
agreement to let his contract expire, and he accepted the job in
Los Angeles.
Although adoptions increased and euthanasia rates
dropped during Boks' two-year tenure in New York, he said the lack
of funding made the job difficult. And he is worried about the city
following through on its commitment to become "no-kill."
Boks urged the Animal Care and Control board, which
is chaired by city Health Commissioner Thomas Frieden, to boost
funding to the point where "AC&C can provide the level
of services New Yorkers expect and deserve for themselves and their
pets."
He said he hopes the upcoming budget negotiations
"don't fall through the cracks."
Boks faces new, even tougher challenges as he takes
over Animal Services in Los Angeles. The former general manager
was fired — a move that bitterly divided activists in the
animal care community.
But Los Angeles has a larger budget and six shelters
— twice as many as in New York City.
Jane Hoffman, head of the Mayor's Alliance for NYC's
Animals, said she is confident that Animal Care and Control will
continue in the right direction, noting that Mayor Bloomberg stood
at a press conference last year and said the city was moving to
a "no-kill" goal.
"We do feel more funding needs to be devoted
to AC&C," Hoffman said. "But we also have to make
sure the money they do receive is properly allocated and does not
replicate existing programs."
Hoffman and ASPCA President Ed Sayres will speak
about "Making New York City a Humane Community" on Jan.
5 at 8 p.m. at the 92nd Street Y.
Copyright © 2006 Daily
News, L.P.
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