Devastating News at the City Shelter
There is a major issue brewing in the city of Buffalo. The Mayor's new budget just came out and it calls for cutting the staff at the shelter from 17 to 12 and eliminating all adoptions. That would make the shelter an animal control facility only and would basically cause all dogs and cats not claimed within the 5 day stray hold to be euthanized automatically. The local SPCA does not have the facilities to take all the adoptable dogs and cats to their facility. He has put a deadline of July 1st for the cuts.
We have a community meeting to discuss the issues tomorrow night and we will be attending the city budget meeting on Friday. Although the city does not do the best job in the world when it comes to adoptions and animal welfare the alternative is horrifying.
Please everyone - pray that we succeed in our fight to either keep adoptions at the shelter, or find an alternative that will keep the adoption program going. The problem with the SPCA is that they routinely euthanize Pit Bulls, German Shepard and Rottweillers because they are so difficult to adopt out. I am just in tears over these recent developments and we are all fighting hard to keep it going. :(
Common Council Statement - Long
Thanks Liz,
I will definitely be contacting them - for ideas if nothing else.
I am pasting a copy of the statement read at the Common Council meeting. I came away from the meeting feeling hopeful for the future. I truly believe that the Common Council is going to give us some time to work out some funding. We are looking at doing a major drive to increase the dog licensing within the city. Currently there are approximately 60,000 dogs with in the city limits and only about 10,000 are licensed. If we can increase that to 25,000 - 30,000 we will get the funding we need. The good news is the council seemed to embrace the idea.
Permission by author to post
[Draft document, 5/6/04, 1:51pm]
Statement Planned Before the Buffalo City Council (Friday, May 7, 2004)
— Save Our Shelter —
Tuesday night, reeling from a late-Friday announcement by the Mayor that adoptions will end at the Buffalo Animal Shelter on July 1, citizens packed a church and raised their voices in anger. Today, we wish not to be voices of anger. Today, we wish to be voices of reason.
I stand here today, representing not only myself, but also the many who stand behind me in these chambers. And each of us in attendance here also represents many more who could not be present today. Please know that I speak for a vast number of citizens who are concerned for the future of this great city.
Personally, I have spent long hours reviewing budgets, financial plans, revised financial plans, state laws, the city charter, and the law authorizing creation of the Buffalo Fiscal Authority, also known as the control board. I am not ignorant of the severe financial plight of the city. Nor am I ignorant of financial matters. I am currently a PhD candidate in UB’s school of management. I have handled budgets of multi-million-dollar grants. And I am a reasonable mathematician and an accomplished statistician. So numerical issues are by no means intimidating to me.
I come here today to propose that the Council find a way to take advantage of this great City of Good Neighbors. We ask only that this Council extend the current animal shelter program, including adoptions, for a period of 6 months, so that Buffalo’s many good neighbors have sufficient time to forge a solution to the care and adoption of Buffalo’s abused and homeless animals.
A few points we would like to make:
§ Barbara Carr and others at the Erie County SPCA are working now on a drive to increase dog-licensing compliance here in the city, an effort that will increase revenues, not just this year, but continuing in subsequent years.
§ Numerous volunteers contribute goods, services, and care at the current shelter – care that will necessarily fall to a reduced and under-prepared public works staff to carry out. These volunteers require no salary, no fringe benefits. They only ask for a chance to help.
§ The immediate elimination of three currently-filled animal welfare positions – director, administrative assistant, and kennel attendant – will prevent meeting minimum state and local standards of humane care or assessment of the animals brought into the shelter by animal control officers. The remaining two positions to be eliminated are currently unfilled and the savings already realized.
§ The movement to an ALL-KILL shelter with no safety net in place will cause countless animals to be abandoned on Buffalo’s streets – with the attendant health and safety consequences that will necessarily ensue: potential rabies outbreaks, dog bite cases, strewn garbage and more.
§ The skeleton shelter staff and volunteers who work so hard at an admittedly inadequate city shelter have had some excellent successes over the past year. Numerous animals are moved to non-profit animal welfare and rescue organizations, adoptions are up with adopt-a-thons conducted in the community, people from across the state of New York search the Petfinder adoption website for their new companions, as evidenced by the 80,000-plus hits the shelter has received since only January of this year on its adoptable pets postings.
§ Finally, the Mayor’s budget has myopically failed to consider the revenue side of this decision. Adoption activities are revenue-generating. Adopters pay not only for the adoption, but also for vaccinations, spaying/neutering, and (in the case of dogs) a license that generates a continuing revenue stream for the city. A careful examination of the Mayor’s revenue projections fails to correct for the loss of these revenues. It further fails to account for anticipated increases in both direct and indirect costs of an ALL-KILL policy. And, although the Mayor speaks of shifting responsibility to a county-wide level, the revenues gained from licensing and adoptions will also shift.
We ask only for a small amount of time – for ourselves and for the animals. In return, this City of Good Neighbors will mobilize to increase licensing, to contribute monetarily and otherwise to the shelter, and to work for a truly regional solution that maintains the quality of life for all creatures of this great city.
Thank-you,
On behalf of numerous concerned citizens in this City of Good Neighbors