I wrote this article from the perspective of both a veterinarian and
former shelter worker.
19) Green Mountain, NC resident and
former shelter worker Susan Garriques wrote to the NC Commissioner of Agriculture:
6) Hendersonville, NC resident and
former shelter worker Angie Buie wrote to the NC Commissioner of Agriculture:
I am
former shelter worker, now medically out, but suitable dog and training just beyond where have my experience.
Not exact matches
A social
worker at a women's homeless
shelter in New York City contacted me about a resident of the
shelter who wanted to sue her
former employers for unpaid wages.
It follows an animal control officer, adoption
workers, female inmates who train rescue dogs, and vets who acquire
former shelter dogs.
Some reports suggest as many as 50 dogs had been shot and dumped in a landfill across the street from the
shelter, and quote a
former a
former shelter worker as saying cats were euthanized by being beaten on the head with a pipe
I interviewed a
former «no - kill»
shelter worker at length and she told me that her coworkers would «adopt» dangerous / aggressive dogs (fill out paperwork and take the dogs into their private custody) and then have those dogs euthanized so that their deaths happened off of the record and weren't included in the
shelter's save rates.
But according to
former workers, in the years leading up to the day Regallis took her first photo, conditions at the
shelter had gone from sketchy to inhumane.