August 04, 2007
Mason set to take over animal shelter
# Some animals still need homes
By Alison Knezevich
Staff writer
Mason County commissioners will take over control of the county’s overcrowded animal shelter Aug. 15 after the shelter’s managers said they wouldn’t euthanize any animals.
On Thursday night, commissioners unanimously voted not to renew their contract with the Mason County Animal Shelter Group Inc., said County Commission President Rick Handley.
For about a year, the county had contracted with the group to manage the shelter. But the group’s no-kill policy had led to overcrowded and “very inhumane” conditions, he said.
More than 300 dogs and lived at the shelter, which was designed for no more than 50 animals. Last week, commissioners announced they would find a team of veterinarians to assess which animals at the county’s shelter should be euthanized and which can be adopted.
“We had no choice,” Handley said. “One hundred [animals] became ... 300.”
In May, representatives of the Humane Society of the United States visited the shelter and recommended that a team of veterinarians look at the situation and possibly use euthanasia to reduce overcrowding.
On Wednesday, Teresa Lynn Chagrin, an animal care and control specialist for the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, sent a letter to county commissioners urging them to follow the Humane Society’s recommendations.
“Animals are dying at [overcrowded] shelters, though not from painless injections given by shelter staff,” Chagrin wrote. “They are suffering slow, painful deaths every day...”
The county will hire two current shelter employees to manage the facility, Handley said.
Angela Roach, president of the Mason County Animal Shelter Group, said commissioners have ignored the Humane Society’s recommendations to provide more funding and improve the facility.
Since last week’s announcement about the impending euthanasia, hundreds of people have contacted the shelter to adopt animals, Roach said. “We’re down to about 130 dogs,” she said.
People from as far away as Minnesota and Maine want to adopt the animals, she said. Today , rescuers are scheduled to take 54 cats to North Carolina.
“We’ve been working really hard,” Roach said. “It’s just a matter now of getting them to all these different places.”
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