Pittsylvania pups go to N.Y. no-kill sanctuary

» 3 Comments | Post a Comment

The Animal Welfare League of Pittsylvania County would like to see improvements at the county’s animal-control facility. But the organization has taken steps of its own to find sanctuary for some of the area’s unwanted pets.

Since early this year, the league has been working with the Martinsville-Henry County Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals to transfer puppies from Pittsylvania County to the North Shore Animal League America rescue facility in Long Island, N.Y., said Tonja Reynolds, vice president of the Animal Welfare League of Pittsylvania County.

The Long Island facility is the largest no-kill shelter in the world, said Leslie Hervey, executive director of the Martinsville-Henry County Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

Reynolds hopes the league’s efforts will help alleviate the area’s problem of having too many animals.

“We just have a huge pet overpopulation problem,” Reynolds said.

Reynolds and Hervey hope the Pittsylvania County Animal Control facility will partner with their organizations to send of its animals to North Shore.

Coy Harville, chairman of the Pittsylvania County Board of Supervisors, has appointed a committee to look into making improvements at the facility. The committee, including Harville, Chatham-Blairs Supervisor Hank Davis and Dan River Supervisor James Snead, will meet with the league and county staff to discuss options.

County Administrator Dan Sleeper said the county recently closed on the purchase of land and a small house near the shelter. The house could possibly be used to keep animals, Sleeper said.

The league has asked the county to make several changes at the facility, including allowing transfers to state-approved rescue organizations at no charge, open the animal-control facility on Saturdays to increase chances for pet adoption and reduce the facility’s kill rate, which was at 84 percent in 2007. Franklin County and Campbell County had kill rates of 40 percent and 31 percent, respectively.

The league, a nonprofit organization, has sent about 20 puppies so far to the North Shore facility via the Martinsville-Henry County SPCA, Reynolds said. The league hopes to one day become a rescue organization, Reynolds said. 

The Martinsville-Henry County SPCA has so far covered medical costs for the league, Reynolds said. The Martinsville-Henry County SPCA also takes in pets from Patrick and Franklin counties and rescue organizations in North Carolina, Hervey said.

The Martinsville-Henry County SPCA transfer program is designed to prevent litters of puppies from being given away and further multiplying only to end up abandoned or in animal-control facilities, Reynolds said. It also allows puppies to be spayed or neutered before they’re adopted. 

Martinsville-Henry County SPCA, also a no-kill shelter, has had puppies transferred to North Shore since 1992 and sends 40-60 there every two weeks, Hervey said.

Puppies must have two sets of shots — at no cost to the owner — after the owner signs a release to the Martinsville-Henry County SPCA. The pups must also be de-wormed and pass a check-up from a veterinarian before going to North Shore.

“In order to go into the program, shots should be started by 8 weeks of age,” Reynolds said. “The owner of the puppies is requested to keep the puppies until they can be transferred to Martinsville into the North Shore program.”

Dogs with hair loss — an indicator of bad health — will not be accepted, Hervey said. 

Owners of the mother dog, and the father if available, are also provided a low-cost spay/neuter for the pets, Reynolds said. 



 

Advertisement

 
View More: No tags are associated with this article
Not what you're looking for? Try our quick search:
 

Advertisement

Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by Melanie S on June 20, 2009 at 10:50 pm

The North Shore program is one that has saved many puppies from certain death in rural shelters in the South, but unfortunately, nothing is perfect, as one reader has already commented.
  However, I totally agree with the other read, re Tonja Reynolds and the Animal Welfare League of Pittsylania County. They have done, and continue to do, many great things. The fact that the Board of Supervisors is now involved in enacting change at the Pittsylvania County Animal Control Facility is nothing short of a miracle. As Bill Fox stated recently at the BOS meeting, the time for change has definitely come. AWLOPC members have their heart in the right place….and I hope the community will continue to support them.

Flag Comment Posted by hello24586 on June 20, 2009 at 8:14 pm

tonya reynolds…no matter what comments people put on here..i think you done a wonderful job with the group you have started so far..thanks for the good work

Flag Comment Posted by dusty53 on June 20, 2009 at 5:46 am

From what I understand, the other shelters in New York do not like this program—North Shore refuses to take back the puppies after a month if the adoption doesn’t work out, so shelters are overrun with older puppies from the South that they must scramble to find homes for or euthanize.
Too bad this new group has chosen this route.

Post a Comment(Requires free registration)

The commenting period has ended or commenting has been deactivated for this article.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

GoDanRiver: Place an Ad | Buy Photos | Subscribe | Email Us | Email Alerts | Mobile Alerts | Make Us Your Home Page | Site Search
Partners: GoDanRiver is a service of the Danville Register Bee, the Eden Daily News, the Reidsville Review and the Madison Messenger.
Regional Partner Links: Lynchburg News & Advance | WSLS | Winston-Salem Journal | headlineVA.com