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No Kill In NYC By 2008
by Lacy Stephens, Animal
News Center
Friday, February 20, 2004
Death took a holiday for many New York City shelter
animals in early February. The New
York Animal Care & Control centers held mass adoptions Feb.1
and 2 to counteract the overpopulation in city shelters.
"Our weekend goal was to adopt (out) 100 pets.
The final count is 246 adoptions and 40 placements, for a grand
total of 286 placements," said Ed Boks, executive director
of AC&C, who credited the New York Daily News for helping
get the message out.
The weekend events signaled a significant step toward
the AC&C's goal of no kill in New York City by 2008. If achieved,
New York will be the first major metropolitan "no kill"
community in the U.S. "If we do it in New York, we will rob
every other community in the United States of their excuses,"
said Boks.
Animal Care & Control's three facilities took
in over 50,000 stray animals last year. Fewer than 10 percent of
these animals were adopted. A "no kill" community would
mean life for every adoptable animal in New York City shelters.
Ed Boks shares his vision with other influential
New Yorkers. Mayor-elect Michael Bloomberg and lawyer Jane Hoffman
formed the Mayor's Alliance for New York City Animals in 2002. "Our
hope is that at some point we can save them all," said Hoffman,
now president of the Mayor's Alliance. There are currently 50
organizations in the alliance, all working to increase shelter
animal adoptions and spay/neutering, and decrease euthanasia.
The Mayor's Alliance held five adoption
events at city parks last year where over 300 shelter animals
were adopted. Dates for the 2004 park adoptions are already planned:
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Central Park (May
23)
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Clove Lakes Park (Sept. 25)
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Prospect Park (June 20, Oct.
24)
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Edwin Sayres, president of the American
Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA), hopes
to help New York become a "no kill" city by reducing its
animal euthanasia rate by 10 percent every year. "With Ed Boks
here and with what Jane Hoffman is creating with the Mayor's Alliance,
and with what I bring to the table, it feels like the planets are
all in their right alignment," said Sayres.
The ASPCA has increased its spending in the city
from $12.5 million last year to $15.5 million this year. These funds
will be aimed at increasing adoptions and providing animal behavior
training lessons to pet owners.
Dr. Jay Kuhlman, a veterinarian for over 30 years,
stresses low-cost spay/neutering as imperative for a long-term solution
to high euthanasia rates. "We the people have done this. And
we can decrease it," said Dr. Kuhlman.
Ed Boks sees hope in the future for New York City
shelter animals because he has faith in New Yorkers. "This
was a historic weekend in New York City animal welfare and demonstrates
what a community can do when challenged to end the killing,"
said Boks.
Sources
Gotham Gazette, "No
Kill, The New Goal In Animal Control," 2 February 2004.
New York Daily News , "Adoption
Drive Saves 250 Pets," 3 February 2004.
Reprinted from Animal
News Center.
Copyright © 2004 Animal
News Center.
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