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Craftlady
04-12-2005, 08:35 AM
I'm posting this in dogs and cats general. Hoping people in area or near might be able to help. This is so sad.

Army Town Struggles to Save Abandoned Pets
Tuesday, April 12, 2005 7:25 AM EDT
The Associated Press
By RUSS BYNUM


The 32 dogs look up with sad eyes or wag their tails as animal control officer Linda Cordry walks the row of chain-link cages toward a door concealing a gas chamber.

"These guys are mine," Cordry says with weary resignation. "These are basically on Death Row."

Liberty County Animal Control and the humane shelter that shares its small cinderblock building have been crammed to capacity with dogs and cats since Army troops from neighboring Fort Stewart deployed to Iraq. Both agencies say it's no coincidence.

"I would say 95 percent of these animals come from military homes," says Beate Hall, who runs the humane shelter where dozens of soldiers and Army spouses began dumping pets during the holidays.

The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have prompted national efforts to alert deploying soldiers to alternatives to abandoning animals when they leave for war. But the hundreds of unwanted pets turning up in this southeast Georgia military town indicate many aren't getting the message.

Since the Fort Stewart-based 3rd Infantry Division deployed 19,000 troops to Iraq in January, animal control officers took in 321 abandoned dogs and cats. Of those, 119 have been euthanized.

Smells of dank fur, urine and bleach linger inside the Animal Control offices, where donated food in dented cans and torn bags are stacked in a corner. Dogs are doubled up in several of the 4-by-10-feet cages. Two of the 14 cat cages hold mothers with litters of nursing kittens.

Cordry says she's found an abundance of dogs in military neighborhoods _ from emaciated dogs in back yards of vacated homes to puppies left in Dumpsters.

Many of the abandoned pets are wearing collars, but with their tags removed. Animals with collars get up to 10 days before they're euthanized. Those without collars are spared for only three.

"We get in so many with personalities, we know they had to belong to somebody," Cordry says. "It's hard to say, `Today's euthanasia day _ let's load them up and go for it.'"

In Hall's case, soldiers and their families have come to the humane shelter in person to leave their dogs and cats. In some cases, single soldiers leave their pets because they have no one to keep them at home. Many animals are given up by spouses planning to stay with family while their soldiers are deployed.

Those pets won't be put down, but Hall only has room to keep 45 animals at a time. Though Hall has found homes for 118 pets since January, the shelter remains full.

"We didn't realize how bad it was going to be," says Hall, whose husband is retired from the Army. "I didn't think this many military families would just dispose of their animals because of the deployment."

Animal rescue groups say they've put a serious dent in wartime pet dumping, largely by using the Internet to find foster homes to care for soldiers' animals until they return home.

Steve Albin, president of the nonprofit NetPets, says he's found temporary homes for 8,000 military pets nationwide since starting his Military Pets Foster Program after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

"Even though this is available, there's still the 5 percent of the military, they say, `Nah, we'll get another pet when we get back,'" says Albin, a retired dog breeder in North Myrtle Beach, S.C.

In the Fort Stewart area, a small number of pet lovers have stepped up to foster dogs and cats that otherwise would have been euthanized by animal control.

Terry Wolf of nearby Savannah has taken in 85 abandoned dogs from Liberty County since January through her shelter, Southern Comfort Animal Rescue. She's found permanent homes for about 40, and foster homes for 25.

Wolf says she's looking for people who truly want a pet, rather than those seeking to make a patriotic gesture.

"I had one lady, she was very interested in a dog, say to me, `I want a soldier's dog.' And that made me question her commitment," Wolf says. "We're not putting yellow ribbons around their necks here. They're all dogs of war to me."

___

On the Net:

Liberty Humane Shelter: www.petfinder.org/shelters/GA21.html

Southern Comfort Animal Rescue: www.southerncomfort.petfinder.com

Military Pets Foster Project: www.netpets.org/militarypet/foster.php

IRescue452
04-12-2005, 08:44 AM
Thats sad. I wouldn't think so many soldiers would abandon their pets like that, especially in dumpsters or just leaving them in their houses to starve. I've heard of foster programs for soldiers and would love to help if I had my own house and was out of school. If they still need it I plan to help foster them when I get my own place.

elizabethann
04-12-2005, 09:18 AM
There's a national organization that will find foster parents to take the soldiers pets in until they return from active duty overseas. I don't remember the name. I'll look it up on the net. In fact, my sister signed up to be one of those foster parents. Though, I'm not sure if she's heard from anybody yet. I'll have to ask her.

jackie
04-12-2005, 10:31 AM
That is too sad. I don't understand how people can just throw away their family pets...

mruffruff
04-12-2005, 11:51 AM
A neighbor of mine tried to find someone to foster his dogs while he was overseas. He went to the local shelter but couldn't get any help. They didn't even know where he could get information.

He finally found someone willing to care for his 2 dogs. I took his cat. Sadly, the person 'lost' his dogs and his cat had to be PTS.

Shelters should know of these organizations so they can direct service people to those willing to help.

On the other hand, those willing to help need to be held to specific guidelines so the animals are taken care of properly. Not everyone who is willing is as dependable and responsible as those on Pet Talk.

Mary

elizabethann
04-12-2005, 12:02 PM
Here are a couple of organizations who will help foster military personnel pets:

http://operationnoblefoster.org/

https://www.netpets.org//militarypet/foster.php

I think my Sister signed up with the netpets.org organization but she hasn't heard from them. Perhaps they've been swamped with people wanting to foster? Not sure.