Not exact matches
Eva you need to read a little father
back, before the lady put her pet in a no
kill with a donation others have admitted to dropping cats off
at shelters... you cant assure they all lived.
At that point, the national animal rescue and
sheltering organizations would obediently strike their tents and leave, turning custody of the disaster - affected animals in their care
back to local animal control agencies, who would hold them for return to their owners or adoption or, a more likely scenario, would eventually have them
killed.
believes that actions speak louder than words and is
backing up the No
Kill rhetoric with lifesaving programs designed to save the animals most likely to die at kill shelt
Kill rhetoric with lifesaving programs designed to save the animals most likely to die
at kill shelt
kill shelters.
We are also a no -
kill shelter and always take our dogs
back at any time the adopter can no longer keep or care for a dog.
Because
back then, even though I knew — in fact had experienced firsthand — the vitriol against the No
Kill movement by HSUS, the ASPCA and other large, national organizations, I believed that
at the very least, these organizations were regulating our
shelters by promoting and ensuring basic standards of care, as they have claimed, and still claim, they do.
This story is done just down the road, in St. Louis, and it is done by Chris Hayes, who has been doing a lot of VERY good animal reporting lately including breaking the news about the Sikeston Pit Bull Roundup
back in December., this article about how many
shelters hide behind the word «adoptable»
at shelters, this story about how a family pet was threatened to be
killed due to how it looks, among others.