| About seven
years ago the board of directors voted to classify HART
as an “Open Admissions Shelter”. This means no stray,
abandoned or neglected animal will be turned away. I
would like to take this opportunity to explain how this
policy works, and the many facets of the shelter with
impound business.
HART is an open
admissions humane society as well as the impound holding
facility for an average of sixteen local municipalities.
Although the two businesses are housed in the same
building, they are two separate identities.
The humane
society takes in all stray animals as they come through
the door. There is no fee assessed to these animals, but
a donation to help care for them is always welcome.
These animals are held for seven days when possible. In
a case that the stray animal is sick, injured or
aggressive, the animal may be humanely euthanized before
the seven day holding period is up. Stray animals are
advertised and if not claimed by the end of the holding
period, are temperament tested as well as feline
leukemia or heartworm tested. If everything is “A OK”,
the animal is placed on the HART adoption floor.
HART also takes
in animals that have an owner, but who, for various
reasons, the owner can no longer keep the pet. This
procedure is different since the owner usually has to be
put on a waiting list to surrender the pet because of
kennel space limitations. A surrender fee is assessed to
personal surrendered animals. Personal surrendered
animals go through the same testing procedures that
stray surrenders do before being placed on the adoption
floor.
Impound animals
are brought to HART by either animal control or a law
enforcement officer. These are animals that are running
at large in an area contracted for animal control
services. If the animal has identification, the officer
will attempt to contact the owner before impounding it.
All impound animals are held seven days with the
exception of sick, injured or highly
aggressive
animals. Animals are assessed and tested at the end of
the seven day impound hold and either are placed on the
HART adoption floor or humanely euthanized. All owners
claiming their animal from impound are required to pay
the pick up fee set by the municipality as well as the
daily impound fee before the animal will is released.
Impound animals are the property of the municipality
that authorized impounding. They only become property of
HART if they are moved to the HART adoption floor.
These three
scenarios reflect how HART takes in animals. Of course
there will always be the ones tied to the front door or
taped up in a box in the parking lot, that HART takes
in.
I hope this will
clear up some misconceptions that the public has about
what HART really does. There is another question that I
would like to address that goes hand in hand with how
HART takes in animals.
This question is
whether HART is a No-Kill shelter. The answer is no, and
I would like to explain the reason why. HART cannot be a
no kill facility because it is an Open Admissions
shelter and impound holding facility: therefore, we
often receive animals for which euthanasia is the most
appropriate and humane option.
No-Kill shelters
take in only a limited number of animals and the highly
adoptable ones. If they are full No-Kill shelters do not
take in one until one is adopted. Also HART does
impound, and that means the dangerous, injured, sick
animals need to be euthanized. The impound contracts
make up a substantial dollar amount of the HART annual
budget. Another reason that HART has chosen to be an
open admissions shelter is because there needs to be
someplace for all these helpless animals to go. If a
shelter only takes in the most desirable breeds, sizes,
ages etc., who cares for the so called “misfits”? A
No-Kill shelter has very limited intake, HART takes in
an average of 3,000 annually. The adoption rate on dogs
is excellent, but, unfortunately, this is not the case
for cats. The cat overpopulation is an epidemic
throughout the whole United States.
HART strives to
be a Low-Kill shelter and does everything possible to
make this happen. HART does an excellent job with
helping the animals in need. |