FOLLOW US

Follow Shelterplanners on Facebook!Follow Shelterplanners on Twitter!
« How to Finance an Animal Shelter – Two Viable Alternatives to Traditional Financing | Main | Why Building a New Animal Shelter Alone Won't Save More Animals »
Wednesday
Jul242013

Community Saves 42 Animals from Euthanasia 

1 of 22 Cats Saved

Just when you think no one cares –

On Monday evening, July 22, WVIR ran a story about the crisis emerging at the Shenandoah Valley Animal Services Center.  The center had so many dogs and cats in the shelter they had run out of space and were facing having to decide which of their companion animals would have to be euthanized.

After learning of the dire situation, the staff at Shelterplanners decided to spend the day helping the community save animals!

The Shenandoah Valley in Virginia stretches from Winchester to Roanoke. Activities there are regularly covered via television broadcast to all of Central Virginia by WVIR, NBC 29 in Charlottesville some 30 miles East across the Blue Ridge Mountains.

Volunteers from the Charlottesville-Albemarle SPCA rose to the call and, drove 45 minutes across Afton Mountain to Lyndhurst, VA to see if they could provide some assistance – and it’s a good thing they did! 

Concerned citizens from not only the Valley but as far away as Culpeper inundated the Center with phone calls and personal visits volunteering to adopt dogs and cats to relieve the shelter’s distress. 

One volunteer transported 5 cats to the Charlottesville-Albemarle SPCA, a No Kill shelter – in all, 19 dogs, 22 cats and a bunny were adopted or transferred to foster homes and other shelters.

Overwhelmed by the response, the staff at the shelter could not keep up with the influx of calls as well as folks who simply arrived unannounced to adopt.  The volunteers from across the mountain helped the shelter staff by providing much needed aid with adoption paperwork, answering phones and helping introduce animals to their new families.

Not a single companion animal had to be euthanized!

How’s that for community involvement in animal welfare?