Skip to main content

What?



At times, we hear the strangest things regarding our operations.  But recently an email was sent to our city council and city manager that questioned our practices.  They were so far away from our actual procedures that initially we disregarded them. However, upon reflection I realized that if one person perceives our organization that way, others in our community may as well.   

Thus the blog.  

The new Edythe Elizabeth Stauffer Center for Pets is run by the Lynchburg Humane Society.  Our adoption center is open to the public; our intake area in the back of the building houses dogs/cats being held for stray periods, court cases, or those pets awaiting medical or behavioral evaluation, or necessary medical treatment.   This back section is leased by the city for use and is unavailable to the general public in order to minimize animal stress, for public safety and for disease control.

In an email to our city council and city manager, a person wrote the following: 

 “There is a concern that the city's Animal Control will become the new "kill" shelter since it is closed to the public.  If the pets in this area are not seen by the public and not on Petfinder, their chance of being adopted are very low.   If the Humane Society does not pick them to go to the adoption area, then how will they ever have a chance to find homes.  LHS will be interested in "pulling" the more adoptable pets from the Animal Control Intake area so that means older and larger dogs including pits, and cats that are ill will not have a chance.  It would be a shame if Lynchburg City Animal Control became the new "kill shelter”

The Lynchburg Humane Society works very hard to be a transparent organization, and we want to clarify our stance in case others might be confused.   The Lynchburg Humane Society is committed to saving 94% or more of the animals in our care.  That is our goal.  For all of the animals that come into the entire shelter and for whom we provide care for -there is no “kill shelter” or “section” in our Center for Pets.  

Animals are in the back waiting for room on the adoption floor, or to become available to be placed for adoption, and once they are adoptable their photos will appear on our website as available pets.  Regardless of location in our building, all of the animals in the facility are considered our pets.  We are interested in pulling all of the animals up to the adoption center that can be adopted.   There is no “more” adoptable or “less” adoptable designation.  They are either able to be placed or not, based on behavior or medical reasons. 

We never discriminate based on the age of our pets either.  We love to place the senior dogs and cats with minor manageable medical problems!  And for those that are ill, we treat, and they do have a chance.  

The correspondence from the person mentioned earlier is descriptive of the operations and relationships you would see with a private shelter or rescue such as Roanoke SPCA or Amherst Humane Society.  With these specific organizations, there is an animal control side and a humane society side, and they are operated by two separate organizations.  The humane society pulls from the animal control side and then they place those animals up for adoption.   But please note, we are not suggesting that these organizations don’t pull old or ill animals that need treatment.  We are sure they try and help as many as they can as any animal organization would. 

The Lynchburg Humane Society is not run by two different organizations - we are one organization with the same mission and vision, to save 94% or more of the pets in our care.  

If you ever have any concerns or questions about the operations of the Lynchburg Humane Society, please reach out to those in charge of the different areas so they can be addressed.  Condemning us publicly or to city management and never allowing us to hear your feelings directly, seems disingenuous to the motivation to cause harm to an organization that has done a lot of good for the pets and people of this community.  

Everyone may not always like the choices we make or how we operate, and we are always looking for ways to improve so we welcome feedback.  But I believe that the 94% of the animals who left last year to homes would say we are doing a pretty good job, which was made possible by this community's support!

Here is a link to the different departments and who can answer your questions.  

http://www.lynchburghumane.org/about-us/board-and-staff.html

Comments

  1. It is always a mistake to voice a negative opinion or comment publicly before taking the concern directly to the personal or organization in order to avoid spreading a misconception. Certainly, in this case, it would have been better to ask the staff at the Humane Society and allow them to explain the reason for separate accommodations.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Since I decided last August to quit merely writing checks and to give to the Lynchburg Humane Society in other ways as well (photography, supporting the LHS Facebook page, offering encouragement wherever I can, etc.), I have witnessed a totally blind kitten, an old surrendered dog no longer wanted by his owners, and an old dog whose owner had recently died experience not the death sentences one might have expected in many cities, but instead an outpouring of compassion from LHS and its supporters and amazingly quick adoptions into loving homes. Case in point: the accompanying photo in Makena's blog is Cowboy, a 10-year old beagle. He has a little trouble with stairs because he is a senior. Yet he has not given up on someone falling in love with him and giving him what he and all the dogs and cats at the Center desire the most: a HOME. And LHS has not given up on him either. Let us all focus not on the 6% of the animals who are--heartbreakingly--too sick or otherwise to be adoptable, and concentrate instead on heading over to the New Center for Pets to save the lives of their amazing dogs and cats and give them all the Second Chance they so deserve.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thanks for all that you do.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

IS LHS UNDER ATTACK?

In 2013 the Lynchburg Humane Society (LHS) ended the year with a 92% save rate for the animals in our care, the highest year end figure since we began down the path to No Kill.   We were able to reduce the number of cats we took in by 294, compared to 2012, due primarily, we believe, to our spay/neuter efforts.   YOU made this possible.    We believe the Lynchburg Humane Society is about to be embroiled in a controversial attack by another humane organization because of all the great work we are doing.   We want our community and our supporters to know why and to be informed about this controversy because without you we could not do what we are doing.   You all are partners in our efforts.     This is long so please hang in there and read it in its entirety because there is important information throughout that you probably don’t know.    In April PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) sent us a letter askin...

They know what they know so don’t give them the facts.

I had the pleasure of having an interesting conversation with a member of another humane organization this past weekend. They are an SPCA that takes in animals for a number of localities and operates as the pound for their area. She asked how we were doing in Lynchburg and I, of course, was excited to tell her about our recent success about our save rate being 84% and having no healthy animal lose their life in our shelter in 2010 and how much the community has embraced the changes as we move toward becoming No Kill. She immediately went to defense mode and asked me loaded questions to prove I was wrong and of course explain to me how our programs wouldn’t work for them. The appointment system, wouldn’t work – pet owners aren’t responsible enough to do the right thing. People must be just “dumping” their animals in other localities.” Fact : The counties that reported their stats for 2010 in the Lynchburg area saw a reduction in the number of animals they took in and more...

When the tables turn

It is not unknown for people to be scared of dogs. Animal shelters throughout history were built on that fear. Dog catchers were employed to capture packs of nuisance dogs that were roaming and pestering communities. Pounds were built on the edge of towns near the dump to remove stray dogs from towns and in most cases, destroy them to prevent public endangerment.   Fast forward to now and shelters are referred to as centers, instead of strays we say adoptable, we don’t say animals we say pets, and dogs are family members. Getting a dog without a home into a family is a community effort and #adoptdontshop is a movement.  So how strange it is that the COVID-19 pandemic has made us fear being too close to people and has increased our desire for pets?  People want to foster or adopt pets, now more than ever! At the Lynchburg Humane Society’s Center for Pets there has been an increase of 85% more pets in foster care than at this time last year. The Lynchburg Humane...