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Title: | Meower Power is Valuing Differences |
Notice: | FELINE_V1 is moving 1/11/94 5pm PST to MISERY |
Moderator: | MISERY::VANZUYLEN_RO |
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Created: | Sun Feb 09 1986 |
Last Modified: | Tue Jan 11 1994 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 5089 |
Total number of notes: | 60366 |
1868.0. "NPR report on Chicago Animal Care and Control Center" by TOKLAS::FELDMAN (PDS, our next success) Thu Oct 13 1988 17:43
Did anyone else hear the NPR report last weekend on the Chicago Animal
Care and Control Center? I've held off noting it, because the report
was so moving and so sad.
This center is not a no-kill center. Apparently Chicago has serious
problems with wild and stray animals, and they simply cannot cope any
other way. They seem to be able to place about 10% of the animals they
take in. The rest, well, you know. We're talking hundreds of animals
a week. This center, which is relatively new, is one of the largest of
its kind, and is considered a model center.
The report was very sensitive to the feelings and care that the
workers there give to the animals. I won't go into the details
(the details made me cry), but they did give two examples of the
way workers showed their love to animals that were soon to be put
down. Even so, some local humanitarian societies complain that
the animals should have more human contact. One of the doctors
or managers there countered that the employees would quickly go
crazy if they allowed themselves to get any more attached to the
animals that were being put down. As much as the whole concept
distresses me, I'm inclined to agree with him.
I will relate a somewhat more humorous anecdote from the report, as
best as my memory will allow. It seems that they get a fair number of
reports of wild dog packs. A typical call might go like this:
Caller: I wish to report a pack of wild dogs.
Shelter: Could you describe the dogs, please?
Caller: Well, there's an Irish Setter, a Collie, a Lab, and
so on.
Shelter: That's no pack. That's a bunch of yuppie dogs, whose
yuppie owners let them out during the day. They're just hanging
out (like a bunch of yuppie teenagers), and they'll head on
home to their yuppie houses at dinner time.
Actually, mild-mannered household dogs will become more agressive
when they form a pack, but they're still not as bad as a true pack
of wild dogs. Phone calls like this are distracting, since they
barely have the resources to handle the dangerous packs.
Gary
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1868.1 | Maybe it did a little bit of good | MAMIE::RUSSO | | Fri Oct 14 1988 10:27 | 11 |
| Yes, I also heard the report. I'm glad to hear that I wasn't the
only one brought to tears. It was the small buff colored kitten
story that really got to me. (he was put to sleep in the kindest
way possible) I give the people who work at these shelters a lot
of credit. I don't think that I could handle it. It was one of
the most moving reports I'd ever heard. Maybe some of the people
who don't think that it's important to have their pets fixed heard
it and will become more responsible.
Mary
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1868.2 | Hope that report helps | EMASA2::HUDSON | | Fri Oct 14 1988 11:50 | 11 |
| I,m glad I didn't hear or see this report and I thank .0 for not
going into it to much. It doesn't mean I don't care it's that I
care to much and I feel terrible when I hear these things or see
them. Like I said in an earlier note I wish I could hit megabucks
and do more for these shelters than I'm limited to. Some people
get upset because we don't donate to people charitys, but I say
animals don't make their own problems people make them for them
and someones got to help.
P.S. I do give weekly to the United Way so I do give to people
charities.
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