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Alliance News Items > The Mayor's Alliance for NYC's Animals
on Track for 'No-Kill' City by 2015
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Wednesday, January 21, 2009
The Mayor's Alliance for NYC's Animals on Track for
'No-Kill' City by 2015
New York, NY – Wednesday, January 21, 2009
– In 2005, the Mayor's Alliance for NYC's Animals began an
ambitious ten-year initiative to transform New York City into a
no-kill community - where no dog or cat of reasonable health or
temperament is killed merely because he or she does not have a home.
Today, as it embarks upon year five of the initiative, the Mayor's
Alliance is well on its way to achieving that goal.
Founded in 2002, the Mayor's Alliance for NYC's
Animals is a coalition of approximately 140 animal shelters and
rescue groups working with the City of New York to find homes for
every cat and dog in the city who needs one. The project is funded
by Maddie's Fund®, The Pet Rescue Foundation, and
the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA)
— one of the founding members of the Mayor's Alliance.
Evidence of the Alliance's success can be seen in
the decreasing euthanasia statistics. In 2007, for the first time
in New York City's history, euthanasia at municipal shelters fell
below 50 percent, to 43 percent. When final numbers for 2008 are
available next month, the euthanasia rate is expected to be 38 percent.
That number is down from 74 percent in 2002 (the year the Mayor's
Alliance was formed), when 31,908 of the more than 40,000 dogs and
cats entering NYC's Animal Care & Control (AC&C) shelters
were euthanized.
"We have a long way to go, but we're definitely
making progress toward our goal," says Jane Hoffman, president
of the Mayor's Alliance for NYC's Animals. "The current economic
downturn puts additional pressure on our facilities, but we're determined
to become a no-kill community and the Alliance has realized some
impressive achievements along the way."
Among the Mayor's Alliance for NYC's Animals successes:
Transport & Transfer:
In 2008, the projected total of AC&C adoptions and transfer
of animals to other organizations for adoption increased to 22,000
from only 8,643 in 2002.
Microchipping:
Microchipping pets speeds their return to their rightful owners
should they become lost, thereby reducing overcrowding at AC&C
shelters. To raise awareness of the importance of microchipping
and to make it as easy as possible for New Yorkers to microchip
their pets, the Alliance offers free
and low-cost ($25) microchipping clinics for dogs and cats,
staffed by volunteer veterinarians, at adoption festivals and other
animal events.
Increased Adoptions:
Since the Maddie's Pet Rescue Project in NYC began, adoption numbers
have increased steadily. Adoptions by AC&C and Maddie's Pet
Partners (those Mayor's Alliance member organizations that participate
in the Project) have increased from approximately 12,819 in 2003
to a projected 26,219 in 2008.
Capacity-building Grants:
Helping Alliance members improve or expand facilities also has had
a positive impact on adoptions. KittyKind, for example, received
a capacity-building grant to update and expand its cat adoption
center in PETCO Union Square — one of the city's busiest pet
supply stores. Additional capacity has increased the organizations'
ability to save more lives.
Spay/Neuter Initiatives:
The Maddie's Spay/Neuter Project in NYC, funded by Maddie's Fund and administered by the Mayor's
Alliance, provides low-cost spay and neuter surgeries for New York
City pet owners who have a Medicaid card. In 2007, more than 6,500
surgeries were performed, while in 2008 over 10,000 were performed
thanks to the project.
NYC Feral Cat Initiative:
To help control and humanely reduce the city's tremendous feral
cat population, the Mayor's Alliance created the NYC Feral Cat Initiative. This project funds trap-neuter-return
(TNR) programs in neighborhoods throughout the city, providing training,
advice, equipment, and hands-on-support by TNR coaches to increase
the number and magnitude of local grassroots TNR efforts.
Strength Training:
The Alliance routinely invites its participating organizations to
attend training sessions on a broad range of relevant topics. For
example, Dr. Louise Murray, Director of Medicine at the ASPCA's
Bergh Memorial Hospital, conducted a presentation on preventing
the spread of infectious disease in the shelter environment.
"These are just some of the successes that
the Mayor's Alliance has achieved, thanks to very hard work on the
part of all of our members and our partners in city government.
To be successful as we move ahead, we'll continue to rely upon the
integrated efforts of our participating groups and the generosity
of Maddie's Fund and the ASPCA." says Hoffman. "With persistence
and incremental progress, year after year, we will arrive at our
goal — the day when no "Little New Yorkers" are
killed simply because they don't have homes."
*Images and more information available upon request.
About the Mayor's Alliance for NYC's Animals
The Mayor's Alliance for NYC's Animals, Inc., founded
in 2002 and powered by Maddie's Fund, is a coalition of more than 150 animal rescue groups and shelters that are working with the
City of New York to find homes for every cat and dog in the city
who needs one. For more information about the Mayor's Alliance,
its participating organizations and pet adoptions, please visit
the Mayor's Alliance website at www.AnimalAllianceNYC.org.
About Maddie's Fund
Maddie's Fund®, The Pet Rescue Foundation,
is a family foundation funded by Workday and PeopleSoft Founder
Dave Duffield and his wife, Cheryl. Maddie's Fund is helping to
create a no-kill nation where all healthy and treatable shelter
dogs and cats are guaranteed a loving home. To achieve this goal,
Maddie's Fund is investing its resources in building community collaborations
where animal welfare organizations come together to develop successful
models of lifesaving; in veterinary colleges to help shelter medicine
become part of the veterinary curriculum; in private practice veterinarians
to encourage greater participation in the animal welfare cause;
and in the implementation of national strategies to collect and
report shelter statistics. Maddie's Fund is named after the
family's beloved Miniature Schnauzer who passed away in 1997.
(www.maddiesfund.org)
Contact
Carrie Hyman, M. Silver Associates
Phone: (212) 754-6500 x245
E-mail: carrie@msilver-pr.com
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