«I guess we're supposed to stop feeding the cats and watch them all die,» said
Homeless Animal Response Program volunteer Ray Zeeb, who was issued a warning citation this fall for feeding ferals.
Smith, a volunteer with
the Homeless Animal Response Program, calls herself the colony manager and traps, spays and neuters, vaccinates and feeds cats in the area.
CONTRA COSTA COUNTY Antioch Animal Services, Bee Holistic Cat Rescue and Care, Inc., Biff & Bark Foundation, Cat Support Network, Community Concern for Cats, Contra Costa Animal Services, Contra Costa Humane Society, Contra Costa SPCA, Delta Animals Safe Haven, East Bay Animal Rescue and Refuge, Feral Cat Foundation, FurEver Animal Rescue, German Shepherd Rescue of Northern California, Golden State German Shepherd Rescue, Good Newz Pittie Pups Rescue, H.A.L.O. (Homeless Animals» Lifeline Organization), HARP (
Homeless Animals Response Program), Outcast Cat Help, Paws and Tails Rescue, Safe Cat Foundation, Tony La Russa's Animal Rescue Foundation, Umbrella of Hope, Walkin'the Bark, White Kitty Foundation
Not exact matches
«The ASPCA is pleased to be in a position where we can assist
animal shelters in Florida by helping move
homeless cats and dogs out of impacted communities to free up much - needed space for owned pets displaced by the storm,» said Dick Green, senior director of Disaster
Response for ASPCA Field Investigations and
Response.
She is an advocate for
homeless / shelter
animals as well as an active volunteer with the Sedgwick County
Animal Response Team.
was founded in
response to the large number of adoptable
homeless animals impounded at the Stratford
Animal Control Facility.
Although each
response may be unique in their own way, one underlying factor remains consistent — a deep passion for improving the lives of
homeless animals in need.
The Coconino Humane Association provides shelter for
homeless and unwanted
animals, community education, cruelty investigations, a pet food bank, emergency
response, senior adoption program, and disease prevention and adoption services to Northern Arizona.
In 1999, in
response to an 85 % death rate at the city shelter, she started EmanciPET, a low cost and free spay / neuter clinic in an effort to decrease the number of
homeless animals.