Sentences with phrase «stop animal overpopulation»

Not exact matches

PAWS believes the number one way to stop the overpopulation of unwanted animals is to spay and neuter your pets.
Reach & Teach covers being a responsible pet owner, how to stop pet overpopulation, how to have a healthy and safe pet, providing for a pet their whole life, animal advocacy, careers working with animals, and two units that encompass our SAFE Dog Bite Prevention Program (also sold separately).
She also understood very well the huge need to stop the overpopulation of animals by adopting spay / neuter procedures.
STOP the Overpopulation of Pets, Inc. believes that spaying and neutering are the ONLY responsible thing to do when a pet overpopulation crisis is the cause of millions of healthy, adoptable pets being killed in U.S. animal controls and humane societiOverpopulation of Pets, Inc. believes that spaying and neutering are the ONLY responsible thing to do when a pet overpopulation crisis is the cause of millions of healthy, adoptable pets being killed in U.S. animal controls and humane societioverpopulation crisis is the cause of millions of healthy, adoptable pets being killed in U.S. animal controls and humane societies every year.
Organizations like STOP the Overpopulation of Pets, Inc. (STOP) might volunteer to run the spay clinic in the animal control center.
FIREPAW principals, founders and researchers have designed and conducted numerous public seminars and workshops on the topics of «Stopping Animal Abuse», «Changing Our Perceptions of Captive Animals», «Animals as Economic Goods», «The Financial Benefits of Pet - Friendly Rental Housing», and «Stopping Companion Animal Overpopulation», as well as giving interviews on these topics to numerous print, web, and television media outlets.
The mission of the APS of Durham is to educate the public about the humane care, treatment and well - being of all animals, to help stop pet overpopulation through the promotion of spay / neuter programs, and to find adoptive homes for the animals in our care.
This covers the tragic results of pet overpopulation concerning puppy mills and the lack of laws and political will to make the changes necessary to stop animal neglect and abuse.
By considering adopting your next pet from an animal shelter, you are helping stop pet overpopulation.
LifeLine Animal Project is an Atlanta - based non-profit organization working on collaborative solutions to end pet overpopulation and stop the euthanasia of healthy and treatable dogs and cats in metro Atlanta animal sheAnimal Project is an Atlanta - based non-profit organization working on collaborative solutions to end pet overpopulation and stop the euthanasia of healthy and treatable dogs and cats in metro Atlanta animal sheanimal shelters.
Reducing the pet overpopulation and stopping animal abuse needs the support of the community.
STOP the Overpopulation of Pets is dedicated to paying for spaying and neutering of dogs and cats in order to eliminate the killing of healthy, adoptable pets at Alaska's animal control centers.
And it doesn't stop there... KVHS has a public spay neuter program to help reduce pet overpopulation in our community, we regularly conduct educational and outreach activities to teach citizens about our work and humane care for animals, and we have created programs to strengthen opportunities for our most vulnerable animals like feral cats and senior animals through ongoing support and fee waived or reduced adoptions.
Stopping Pet Overpopulation Together (SPOT), a program of the Southern Hope Humane Society, has a mission to reduce the number of animals impounded and killed in Atlanta area animal control facilities by: funding and providing low to no cost spay / neuters for pets of disadvantaged residents of the metro area (targeted geographical areas for spay / neuter programs include the metro Atlanta area and rural communities with no low - cost spay / neuter resources); providing community education / counseling services to individuals regarding the effects of pet overpopulation on the community, the benefits of spay / neuter, tenets of responsible pet guardianship and the importance of pet identification; promoting companion anOverpopulation Together (SPOT), a program of the Southern Hope Humane Society, has a mission to reduce the number of animals impounded and killed in Atlanta area animal control facilities by: funding and providing low to no cost spay / neuters for pets of disadvantaged residents of the metro area (targeted geographical areas for spay / neuter programs include the metro Atlanta area and rural communities with no low - cost spay / neuter resources); providing community education / counseling services to individuals regarding the effects of pet overpopulation on the community, the benefits of spay / neuter, tenets of responsible pet guardianship and the importance of pet identification; promoting companion anoverpopulation on the community, the benefits of spay / neuter, tenets of responsible pet guardianship and the importance of pet identification; promoting companion animal adoption.
Michigan: Adopt - A-Pet: Fenton (spay / neuter assistance) All About Animals Rescue: Eastpointe (spay / neuter assistance) Cascades Humane Society: Jackson (pet food, spay / neuter assistance) C - SNIP: Kentwood (spay / neuter assistance) Furever Full Food Bank: Macomb, Oakland, and Wayne counties (pet food) Furry Friends Food Pantry: Holland (pet food Thursdays) 616-499-7342, 616-399-5160 Humane Society of Genesee County: Burton (spay / neuter assistance) Humane Society of Huron Valley: Ann Arbor (pet food / litter, spay / neuter and vaccination assistance) Humane Society of South Central Michigan: Battle Creek (spay / neuter assistance) Kalamazoo Humane Society: Kalamazoo (pet food bank, dog houses, and spay / neuter assistance) K9 Resque: St. Claire (pet food) Little Traverse Bay Humane Society: Harbor Springs (spay / neuter assistance) Luce County Pet Pals: Newberry (spay / neuter assistance) Michigan Humane Society: Multiple Locations (spay / neuter assistance) Mission for Area People: Muskegon Heights (pet food assistance; licensing and vet records required) 231-733-9672 Northeast Community Lutheran Church, Little Kitchen Food Shelf Oakland County Pet Adoption Center: Auburn Hills (spay / neuter assistance) Oakland County Pet Food Pantry: Western Michigan (pet food and supplies) Stop the Overpopulation of Pets: Weymouth (spay / neuter assistance) Tail Wagger's 1990: Livonia (low - cost spay / neuter, vaccines, heartworm testing, microchipping, pet food assistance) Voiceless — MI: Lansing (spay / neuter assistance) Waggin» Tails Dog Rescue: Northville (pet food)
Local organizations try to help as many as they can, but the overwhelming task of rescuing animals while working to stop pet overpopulation is something they can't do alone.
Georgia: Carroll County Humane Society's West Georgia Spay / neuter Clinic: Villa Rica (spay / neuter assistance) Cherokee County Humane Society: Acworth (spay / neuter assistance) Daffy's Pet Soup Kitchen: Lilburn (pet food and supplies, spay / neuter assistance, temporary foster program, assistance for necessary veterinary medical care) Georgia Animal Project: North Georgia (spay / neuter clinic) Humane Society of South Coastal Georgia: Statewide (spay / neuter, vaccination, microchipping and pet food assistance) LifeLine Animal Project: Atlanta (spay / neuter assistance) PALS: Pets Are Loving Support: (veterinary care assistance programs for senior, disabled or ill pet owners) PAWS Atlanta: Atlanta (spay / neuter assistance) Project CatSnip: Atlanta (spay / neuter assistance) Spay Georgia: statewide (spay / neuter assistance) Stopping Pet Overpopulation Together (SPOT): Atlanta (spay / neuter assistance)
My first real mentors were Bonney Brown, Aimee St. Arnaud, who is now with the ASPCA and has an encyclopedic knowledge of the animal welfare movement, and Susan Feingold, one of the founders of SPOT (Stopping Pet Overpopulation Together) here in Atlanta, who later went on to manage Fulton County Animal Services from 2003 - 2008, and ran the DeKalb shelter from 2013 - 2015.&animal welfare movement, and Susan Feingold, one of the founders of SPOT (Stopping Pet Overpopulation Together) here in Atlanta, who later went on to manage Fulton County Animal Services from 2003 - 2008, and ran the DeKalb shelter from 2013 - 2015.&Animal Services from 2003 - 2008, and ran the DeKalb shelter from 2013 - 2015.»
The vote was non-binding, but the county commission has now approved a plan that would budget $ 20 million from increased taxes to stop the killing «adoptable» shelter animals and reduce pet overpopulation.
The mission of the APS of Durham is to educate the public about the humane care, treatment and well - being of all animals, to help stop pet overpopulation through the promotion of spay / neuter programs, and to find adoptive homes for the animals in our care.
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