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A Day at the Shelter

Thousands of pets' lives hang in the balance

 

Click here to view the accompanying slide story.  It’s well worth your time!

 

By Sherrie Buzby
Courtesy of:  The Arizona Republic
Jun. 28, 2006 12:00 AM

 

 

Reyna Martinez of Phoenix waited in line with a sweet-faced, 40-pound, floppy-eared mutt named Coco. She was moving from a house to an apartment that wouldn't accept pets Coco's size. Her children were heartbroken to lose the only dog they had ever loved.

This was just the beginning of a day of dramas during a recent Saturday at the Arizona Humane Society in Sunnyslope.

Even before the Humane Society opened that morning at 9, people holding pets were waiting in line to turn in animals.

One woman, still sleepy-eyed and in her pajamas, waited in line holding a wet bird with no feathers on its neck. She had found it while walking her dog earlier that morning.

Another woman carrying a crate of kittens soon followed. The stories varied, but the result was the same: too many unwanted animals waiting for a home.

Maricopa County has the second highest turn-in rate of unwanted animals in the United States.

Between Maricopa County Animal Care & Control and the Arizona Humane Society, an estimated 85,000 to 90,000 animals are taken in per year. That's enough to fill every seat in US Airways Center five times over. The only area with higher intakes is Los Angeles, according to a 2005 survey by the Society of Animal Welfare Administrators.

By 9:03 a.m. all nine kennels in the Humane Society's front lobby were filled with dogs. The traffic continued non-stop until the doors closed at 5 p.m.

The number of cats, dogs and small animals taken in on this slow Saturday came to 212. As the lobby began to fill, each person took a number to bring order as new arrivals filtered in. Dogs were told by their owners to sit still while they reached to sniff new surroundings.

Kittens, kittens and more kittens arrived.

The top reasons given for surrendering animals are: owner moving, behavior, no time, too many pets, and cost. Others bring by stray animals they had rescued.

Client service coordinator Mary Ellen Morales has worked the intake counter for nearly five years.

"I'm not going to hurt you," she said to the new arrivals, sometimes giving them a gentle pat.

As many of the animals as possible are put up for adoption, Humane Society officials say. Last year, about 44,000 animals were taken in at the Sunnyslope facility, with 18,000 placed into homes or sent to rescue groups in the Valley.

Others are euthanized.

"People are under the assumption we are a no-kill shelter," Morales said.

That's not the case. To be adopted, animals must pass health and temperament tests.

In a dog evaluation room, Andy Gallo, 27,one of four people who assess animals, pointed his camera at a pit bullterrier that had been returned after being adopted from the facility as a puppy. A photo is taken of each new arrival to go along with paperwork.

Many animals arrive with severe temperament problems. Some are just scared and will need time to settle their nervousness.

"We cannot put anyone at risk, including any of our staff or volunteers," Gallo said. "After years of experience, you learn what to look for."

Still, the process is intense, and evaluators receive extensive training to make decisions. These decisions weigh heavily on Gallo's heart, but he knows they need to be made.

In the cat evaluation room, 20-year-old Mackenzie Reetz cuddled kittens and soothed frightened adult cats as they cowered in their crates. Strange smells, dog barks and the accumulated nervous energy of all of the pets was thick in the air. Rows of crates holding cats waiting for evaluation multiplied quicker than Reetz could process them.

A fluffy, white, blue-eyed kitten looked up from the most recently opened crate full of kittens. Very young kittens separated from their mothers need extra attention and bottle feeding every few hours. The Humane Society doesn't have the resources to do this, especially now, when kitten births are at their highest.

When Reetz checked their teeth and realized these kittens were too young to eat on their own, she knew they had to be euthanized. When the shelter is full and foster care isn't available, there is no other option.

Reetz estimated that 15 litters had arrived with kittens that needed more care than the shelter could offer.

Since May 1, the Humane Society has been receiving 850 cats and kittens per week. The intake of cats is up 45 percent this year compared with 2005.

"To say our feline intake is skyrocketing is an understatement," said Jill Van Tuyl, vice president of operations.

In the Second Chance Hospital, an infirmary for injured or wounded animals, a groggy pit bull went into and out of consciousness. He had been shot twice, and an X-ray by clinic veterinarian Eric Wika revealed fragments of bullets in both rear legs. The dog was kept comfortable, but with the amount of damage, he had to be put to sleep.

Nearby, foster-care coordinator Sheila Lampert helped veterinarian Barbara Capwell as she removed stitches from a 13-year-old shitzu with an injured back. The dog was turned in by its owner and when fully healed would be placed on the adoption floor, Lampert said, explaining that age isn't a consideration when it comes to saving pets' lives.

There is one area, however, that was full of hope - the adoption center.

"I want this puppy," a little boy squealed with glee as an entire litter, tails wagging, ran up to the kennel's edge.

At 6 p.m., an hour after closing, Charlotte Childress grabbed a broom to sweep up the hairballs, tattered ticket numbers and dirt from the day. For the first time that day, the shelter was peaceful.

At 9 the next morning, it would start all over again.
 

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