Not exact matches
Contact your
shelter and local officials and tell them you support
lifesaving policies for cats, including spay and neuter funding and spay and neuter before adoption.
Learn more about what you can do to help your local
shelter adopt
lifesaving policies for community cats.
They include implementing
lifesaving policies for animals in communities and local animal
shelters.
According to the LifeLine Animal Project, they firmly believe
shelters should be «aggressively promoting homeless pet adoption, providing affordable spay / neuter services, increasing public awareness, and advocating for
lifesaving public
policy.»
She played an integral role in helping the Animal Services Office become the nation's largest no - kill open intake animal
shelter by developing community
policies and programs that promote
lifesaving and connect community members with the resources needed to keep their pets safe and healthy.
The improvements, from the basic (holding creative, attention - getting adoption promotions) to the more involved (lobbying city officials for friendlier community cat
policies) are proof of what
shelters can accomplish when they let go of fear - based
policies — and bring fresh ideas and energy to their
lifesaving programs.
This type of informed legislation, along with programs like the Community Cats Projects, which are operating in four cities, not only facilitate the establishment of no - kill
sheltering policies, they directly address the long - term objective of creating sustainable no - kill communities, where the community as a whole is an extension of a
lifesaving shelter system, and the public is a partner in ensuring the safety of all animals.
When the
shelter's former director Bonney Brown began her work there in 2007, she immediately instituted many
policy and program changes to increase the
shelter's
lifesaving capacity.