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Alliance News Items > New Low Cost Vet Mobile to Help Struggling
NYC Pet Owners Keep Their Pets in Tough Economic Times
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Monday, July 20, 2009
New Low Cost Vet Mobile to Help Struggling NYC Pet
Owners Keep Their Pets in Tough Economic Times
The Mayor's Alliance for NYC's Animals and Animal
Care & Control of NYC (AC&C) Co-Host Exciting Launch Event
on Saturday, July 25, at AC&C's Manhattan Shelter
NEW YORK, NY – Monday, July 20, 2009 –
On Saturday, July 25, New Yorkers will get their first glimpse of
the "Low Cost Vet Mobile" — a new mobile veterinary
clinic created to help cash-strapped New Yorkers at risk of having
to give up their companion animals because they can no longer afford
their veterinary care. The program, developed by Garo Alexanian
of Companion Animal Network and staffed by local veterinarians,
will provide pet owners with affordable, preventive veterinary care
and also a first step in developing relationships with veterinarians
within their community.
The Low Cost Vet Mobile will make its debut at the
Animal Care & Control (AC&C) Manhattan shelter, located
at 326 East 110th Street, on Saturday, July 25 at 12:00 noon. A
press conference will take place between noon and 1:00 pm. To celebrate
the launch, AC&C will host a special pet adoption promotion
from noon until 7:00 p.m., where dozens of wonderful dogs and cats
will be available for adoption both inside the shelter and on a
North Shore Animal League America adoption van parked curbside.
Adoption fees for adult cats (over one year old) will be waived.
In addition, vaccinations for dogs and cats will be available for
$10 on the Vet Mobile, and the Mayor's Alliance for NYC's Animals
will offer extra-low-cost ($10) microchipping for cats and dogs
between noon and 6:00 p.m.
Traditionally, many low-income pet owners do not
seek preventive veterinary care for their pets, and when their pets
become ill, they surrender them to AC&C. In today's particularly
challenging economy, the number of these animals arriving at AC&C
shelters has skyrocketed. "The mobile clinic will help so many
pet owners that are having trouble making ends meet and caring for
a sick pet at the same time," says Richard Gentles, AC&C's
spokesperson. "We applaud Garo's initiative, and the timing
couldn't be better."
By providing another means of access to affordable
veterinary care to low-income New York City pet owners, the Low
Cost Vet Mobile is expected to substantially reduce the number of
animals surrendered to city shelters, which already are at full
capacity. "I expect the program will prevent approximately
5,000 surrenders over the course of a year," says Alexanian.
"This can translate to a 12–15 percent reduction in shelter
intakes."
Stemming the tide of preventable pet surrenders
is crucial to the success of current efforts underway in New York
City to reduce, and eventually end, the killing of healthy and treatable
cats and dogs at city shelters simple because they do not have homes,
according to Jane Hoffman, President of the Mayor's Alliance for
NYC's Animals – the organization that spearheads the city's
efforts to become a no-kill community under a multi-million-dollar
grant from Maddie's Fund®, the Pet Rescue Foundation.
"The Low Cost Vet Mobile provides another important alternative
for our city's pet owners who don't want to part with their companion
animals." Among other programs currently available to these
pet owners are the Safety Net/Pets for Life NYC program, low-cost
vet care at the Humane Society of New York Veterinary Hospital in
Manhattan, and the Bensonhurst Low Cost Animal Clinic in Brooklyn.
Dr. Elizabette Cohen, DVM, host of the radio program
Happy and Healthy Pet and author of the book Most of My
Patients Wear Fur, will be the veterinarian on duty for the
Low Cost Vet Mobile's Manhattan launch on July 25, and also for
the van's premiere at AC&C's Brooklyn shelter on Wednesday,
July 29. At both launch events, Dr. Cohen will consult with patients,
provide tours of the van, and also sign copies of her book, for
which she will donate 100% of the proceeds from the days' book sales
to AC&C.
Going forward, the Low Cost Vet Mobile's location
will alternate between Animal Care & Control's Manhattan and
Brooklyn locations, where it will provide assistance to pet owners
at two of the busiest points of entry to the New York City shelter
system.
About Companion Animal Network
Companion Animal Network (CAN) was the force behind
the creation of Animal Care & Control of NYC (AC&C). Four
years ago, CAN founded the nation's first surrender prevention program,
and now it is launching the Low Cost Vet Mobile. CAN has been acknowledged
by the New York City Council in Resolution #985 for its efforts
to bring improvements to the animal control services of New York
City. (www.companionanimalnetworktv.org)
About Animal Care & Control of New York City
Animal Care & Control of New York City (AC&C)
rescues over 43,000 animals each year, making the organization the
largest pet rescue and adoption agency in the Northeast. Since
1995, the not-for-profit organization has been responsible for New
York City's municipal shelter system, caring for rescued animals
and finding loving homes for homeless, injured, neglected, abused
and abandoned animals in all five of the boroughs in New York City.
(www.nycacc.org)
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®, The Pet Rescue
Foundation, 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)
Press Contact
Carrie Hyman, M. Silver Associates
Phone: (212) 754-6500 x245
E-mail: carrie@msilver-pr.com
Jessica Del Guercio, M. Silver Associates
Phone: (212) 754-6500 x237
E-mail: jessica@msilver-pr.com
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