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County gets ASPCA's help in reducing its euthanasia rates

Four animal groups are part of a initiative to get pets spayed, neutered and adopted.

By MICHAEL A. MOHAMMED
Published February 27, 2007


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BRANDON - As part of a three-year campaign to reduce euthanasia rates, the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals is sinking $600,000 into four Hillsborough animal organizations over the next three years. Aside from Animal Services, the Animal Coalition of Tampa, Humane Society of Tampa Bay and No More Homeless Pets of Hillsborough are participating.

The initiative, dubbed "Mission: Orange" after the color of the ASPCA logo, will try to overhaul animal services in Hillsborough County; Austin, Texas; Philadelphia; and Gulfport, Miss.

Mission: Orange will try to make these four areas more like San Francisco, said ASPCA president Ed Sayres.

There, an intensive program of spaying, neutering and publicizing animal adoption allowed the city to stop euthanizing healthy animals in 1994, said Sayres, who led the San Francisco SPCA from 1998 to 2003.

Hillsborough Animal Services euthanizes nearly 30,000 animals a year, giving it the highest per-capita rate of any Florida county.

That number, coupled with the existence of local animal rights organizations, makes Tampa a prime target, Sayres says.

"It's about need, and the ability to solve that need," he said.

It's too early to tell how the money will be spent, but Sayres stresses the importance of sterilizing animals. Hillsborough spays and neuters about five cats and dogs per 1,000 people per year.

To reduce its euthanasia rate, Hillsborough may have to triple the rate at which it sterilizes animals, Sayres says.

One possibility may be a spay-and-neuter truck to offer low-cost or free operations in pet owners' neighborhoods, or even to offer money to owners to get them to bring in their pets.

Mission: Orange will also try to promote adoptions as a more humane and practical way to get a pet. In Hillsborough County, only about 15 percent of new pets come from shelters, Sayres says.

Michael A. Mohammed can be reached at 813 226-3404 or mmohammed@sptimes.com.

 

[Last modified February 27, 2007, 06:10:54]


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Comments on this article
by Carolyn 03/04/08 02:50 PM
Those who care about animal welfare consider adoption fees a "donation" to help a cause. This insures that people who really care about animals will adopt. You NEVER want to give an animal away for free. This would make them vulnerable to abuse.
by Lydia 10/04/07 01:07 AM
People don't realize that the hillsborough county animal services also have purebred animals given up because the owner does not have time.Please go look at all the animal not just the ones up for adoption on that day. You will be surprised.Please
by thomas 05/11/07 09:07 AM
Adoption fees at the animal shelter are very high and people would rathe get their pet from a breeder or newspaper our shelter charges around one hundred fifty dollars to adopted a cat. no one wants to send that kind of money on a regular cat I know
by glenda 03/02/07 09:20 PM
I need help convincing that FREE ADOPTION is not the answer.MY hope is to convince the adoption fee donar to donate that money to the spay and neuter aspect of a new adoption.Any suggestions?
by MJ 03/01/07 09:38 PM
I love what you are doing for animals but I need to know your working hours so I can adopt a pet.
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