Sentences with phrase «animals living on the street»

I expect these accusations will reach a fever pitch tomorrow, not just in light of my recent pictorial of PETA's brutal slaying of animals and its abhorrent defense of abusive shelters, but also because I will post an article called «The Lie at the Heart of the Killing: The Myth of Pet Overpopulation,» where I take to task the notion of national pet overpopulation, regional pet overpopulation, shelter overpopulation, and why the calculus doesn't change when you include the number of animals living on the street into the equation.
There are a million homeless animals living on the streets of New York City, and most of them are cats, according to the Mayor's Alliance for NYC Animals.
It has been estimated that there are 70 million stray animals living on the streets, but only six to eight million cats and dogs are brought into shelters each year.
After meeting a local woman who ran a rescue organization and clinic called Isla Animals, they worked to implement pet education programming and free spay / neuter services to help reduce the number of homeless animals living on the streets.
There are millions of stray animals living on the street and contributing to the problem is the last thing anybody wants or needs.
Additionally we feed the pets of the homebound disabled, families in crisis, feral cat colonies, and animals living on the streets.

Not exact matches

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Without modern sanitation, life would be nightmarish — human and animal waste would fester on the streets along with garbage and food scraps, producing a stench so foul that you'd want to keep your windows closed even in the sweltering heat of summer (for the moment, envision lacking the luxury of air conditioning).
One of the favorite standout animal films at the Cannes and Sundance Film Festivals in 2015 was «White God», a Hungarian film centered on the story of a 13 - year old girl whose father sets her dog free into the streets, where he must learn to live among the packs of wild dogs who roam the city, as he tries to find his way back to his best friend.
I was living on the streets of Winter Haven, Florida until the animal control officers found me and took me to live where they take all of the animals they find.
There are many animals who have been removed from abusive or neglectful situations, while others have been living on the streets and are badly in need of care.
He was an animal that had learned to live on the streets and to survive on his own hunting ability, I guess.»
By becoming a foster you are giving the the abused, neglected, and many times homeless animals living on the harsh streets of East St. Louis a second chance.
We believe that abandoned animals that reside in the city animal shelters or on the streets deserve the right to live out their natural life expectancy.
Our original rationale for pairing homeless teenagers with shelter animals was our founder's observation that many young people living on the streets and under bridges had pets with them.
Born to a single mother living on the streets, Hank, his mother, and his siblings were taken to an animal shelter and sat on death row.
Until pet overpopulation is reduced to a point where animal shelters and rescue groups can handle the number of homeless, incoming animals without having to euthanize for space, we believe it is more humane to spay the pregnant pet than it is to contribute to pet overpopulation where that future litter could potentially live life on the streets as homeless pets, and will displace another pet who is waiting for a hone.
There are an estimated 70 million homeless cats and dogs living in the U.S. Six to eight million animals enter the U.S. shelter system each year, mostly after being surrendered by their families or picked up on the streets by animal control authorities.
Some animal hoarders began collecting after a traumatic event or loss, while others see themselves as «rescuers» who save animals from lives on the street.
Immediately upon rescuing the cat (or dog), put him into a quiet room in your house, away from all other animals so that he can deal with the shock of change from either life on the street or being suddenly separated from his prior family and home.
Leslie Ferrell, Director of Client Development at Francis Cauffman Architects and the founder of Architects for Animals thanked the architects by saying, «No animals should have to live on the street, but while thousands are still out there, we want to do what we can tAnimals thanked the architects by saying, «No animals should have to live on the street, but while thousands are still out there, we want to do what we can tanimals should have to live on the street, but while thousands are still out there, we want to do what we can to help.
Although dog overpopulation and abandonment will likely continue, attention must be brought to the animals that are currently living on the streets.
As Greece's financial crisis deteriorates there's been a steady rise in the number of animals living in shelters or dumped on the streets because their owners can no longer afford to keep them.
«We have a big, fenced yard and live on a quiet street, so there isn't noise to spook them, and predators / stray animals don't get inside.
It is estimated that 70 million cats and dogs are currently living on the streets in towns and cities across the U.S., with an estimated six to eight million animals entering the shelter system each year.
Who among us hasn't read and cried over the plight of a homeless person who, in refusing to abandon their companion animal, is now living with them in their car or on the street?
Shelters usually spare animals from life on the streets or from euthanasia by providing them temporary housing and trying to find them new owners, while ACE recommended charities tend to spare animals from life in industrial agriculture by reducing the size of the factory farming industry (preventing new farmed animals from coming into existence) and reducing the suffering of existing farmed animals by, for example, getting companies to adopt cage - free or other similar policies.
Neva currently lives in Los Angeles with her deaf pit bull dalmatian mix, Cheeseburger, who she found on the street as a puppy, her other adopted dogs Keelo and Coco, and the several foster animals she is helping at any given time.
Many times, we rescue animals that have been neglected or have lived on the streets for so long that they need additional vet care or special treatments.
New Life Rescue is a unique, community - based organization dedicated to saving the lives of companion animals who are abandoned on the streets, languishing in the shelters, or left behind when their guardians lose their homes to foreclosure or other unforeseen tragedy.
On the last Tuesday of every February, World Spay Day shines a spotlight on the power of affordable, accessible spay / neuter to save the lives of companion animals, community (feral and stray) cats, and street dogs who might otherwise be put down in shelters or killed on the streeOn the last Tuesday of every February, World Spay Day shines a spotlight on the power of affordable, accessible spay / neuter to save the lives of companion animals, community (feral and stray) cats, and street dogs who might otherwise be put down in shelters or killed on the streeon the power of affordable, accessible spay / neuter to save the lives of companion animals, community (feral and stray) cats, and street dogs who might otherwise be put down in shelters or killed on the streeon the street.
With help from SWA and their amazingly generous grant, we have been able to continue to save homeless, neglected, and unwanted animals from lives on the streets or euthanasia in shelters.
While it makes us feel good to feed hungry animals, the better nutrition will only allow them to have larger litters when they reproduce — adding more cats to the same, difficult life on the street.
Animals have a better life on the street than in a death camp «shelter»
They work in conjunction with shelters and rescues throughout California and beyond to help save animals on death row, on the streets or in unsafe living conditions.
Proponents of «catch and kill» sheltering use «practical» arguments in favor of ending life all the time, such as «Killing dogs and cats is necessary because there are too many animals and not enough homes» or «Feral cats suffer on the streets and therefore killing is the compassionate option.»
«In August 2015, mild - mannered mutt Bagel became a family pet for ProSocial's CEO, Meredith, and her husband and their two boys, soon after an animal rescue organization in Los Angeles, Wags & Walks, found the dog living on the streets and determined she'd been deliberately abandoned by her owners.
We recognized that pet overpopulation was rooted in a lack of education and availability of services resulting in unwanted animals being surrendered to City and County shelters or living on the streets causing public safety issues.
No matter where this cat will eventually live, making sure that it is spayed or neutered is the best way to ensure it is not contributing to the animal over population problem that put it on the streets in the first place.
Whether it is saving a dog from a shelter, from living on the streets or providing extensive medical care to those animals in desperate need; VDR continues to do all that is in their power so no dog will have to make the ultimate sacrifice.
«But the unique attribute is that the shelter will be staffed exclusively by homeless people who live on the streets with their pets and thus have a demonstrated affinity for caring for animals in need.
«These animals are not just living on the streets, but many of them are injured, sick and in real need of medical attention.
Despite the best efforts of rescue shelters and organizations to save these animals from life on the streets, once the animals are brought into a shelter's care, they still have to overcome the challenge of getting adopted.
The Human Society of the United States (HSUS) and Humane Society International created World Spay Day as a way to save the lives of companion animals, feral cats and street dogs who might otherwise be put down in a shelter or killed on the street.
According to the Humane Society of the United States, World Spay Day is an annual campaign dedicated to putting the «spotlight on spay / neuter as a proven means of saving the lives of companion animals, feral and stray cat colonies, and street dogs who may otherwise be euthanized in a shelter or killed on the street
It is really a matter of timing as I think folks know they should spay — they just have no idea that by waiting that extra month they will probably have an additional six or eight little ones to place; meanwhile the other animals in the shelters, or on the streets, pay with their lives.
Some people estimate that the number of stray dogs on the city's streets exceeds 50,000 — not including the dogs that live in the city's 30 - plus animal shelters.
Let us inject a bit of unsavory honesty in this post - pet animals which do not end up in loving homes are destined for just one thing, a life of desolation in the streets or on their own and then ending in a lonely and slow death in some way or another.
World Spay Day is an annual campaign of Humane Society International and The Humane Society of the United States that shines a spotlight on spay / neuter — a proven way to save the lives of companion animals, feral cats, and street dogs who might otherwise be put down in a shelter or killed on the street.
Additionally, the exhibition presents three earlier series of portraits that investigate the inner lives of particular animals: Reverie (2005) depicts gray wolves, alone and in packs, in forested nature preserves in Sweden, Norway, and the United States; Palermo 7 (2006) contains close - up portraits of racehorses, with their heads tethered in place in their hippodrome stalls in Italy and France; and Heart Shaped Hole (2008) depicts stray dogs, adapting in different ways to the privation they experience on the streets of Palermo.
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