HELP US!! KENTUCKY IN DESPERATE NEED!!!!

July 28th, 2010 by admin2

*****ANIMAL LOVERS, WE NEED HELP FAST!!!! MANY OF OUR DOGS COME FROM THIS POUND!!*****

STAR, a 501c3, needs help fast…please readShare. Monday at 7:52pm
www.petfinder.com/shelters/KY251.html

Crossposting appreciated!

Morehead, KY: one hour east of Lexington on i-64

Today we were hit with the bills for the past month. They are in excess of $7000. We do not have enough money to pay the all bills. We will be unable to pull any dogs from the Rowan pound or help any dogs

 


We’ve had 2 seriously injured beagles (see Copper on the website), too many hurt and sick dogs, too many in boarding, and a situation in Carter county with an elderly woman letting dogs breed unchecked. We spayed her dogs to stop the cycle but she would not let them go to rescue.
The fuel costs alone for driving dogs to rescues and back and forth from the pound and vet and boarding have gotten totally out of hand.
The recent floods have caused people to dump dogs at a rate we have never seen.
STAR is a 501c3 and donations are tax deductable.
 

 

Address for checks is STAR, 123 Oakwood Drive, Morehead, KY 40351
STAR paypal is sdcreasap@roadrunner.com (at roadrunner.com)
There are also ChipIn’s on the homepage of the site.

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I am sorry that I am always the bearer of bad news. It seems every time I send an email out it is another desperate situation in KY.


I also have a balance on my personal rescue account of $275 for a dog that had a broken leg. He has already been adopted and it is hard to get donations for a dog that has already been sent to safety. The adoptor did pay the biggest portion of it but I still have that balance. If anyone can help with that, you can call my vet at the Morehead Vet Clinic at 606-780-7387…Julia

 

A Tribute To 2 Of My Loving Dogs …….

July 24th, 2010 by admin2

For All The Rescuers……. Thank You <3

July 22nd, 2010 by admin2

No More Turning Away…….

July 22nd, 2010 by admin2

Profit Trumped Principle

June 23rd, 2010 by admin2

Neighborhood Uproar Over Lowell Officer’s Senseless Killing Dog!!!

June 7th, 2010 by admin2

LOWELL — A police officer killed a pit bull with a bullet to the head on a Centralville sidewalk as the dog ran toward him through the open front gate of the owners’ house yesterday afternoon.

The shooting, which took place in front of a crowd on Lilley Avenue, many of them children, infuriated the dog’s owners and neighbors who were alarmed by the shots.

Police officials said the shooting appears to be justified, calling the unrestrained dog a threat to the officer and to residents.

T.J. Farrell, who lives down the street, said he heard two gunshots and ran out of his house in time to see the officer fatally shoot the pit bull as the dog, wounded from two earlier shots, lay on the sidewalk outside 19 Lilley Ave.

“You never know what’s going on around here and then you find out it’s a cop shooting. That bullet could have ricocheted off the ground and hit somebody,” said Farrell, who feared for the safety of his two 2-year-old twin daughters. “The dog didn’t even bite nobody.”

Deputy Police Superintendent Arthur Ryan said the dog tried to attack the police officer, who had been called to the house to help a city animal-control officer remove the dog, which was unregistered, from the home at about 1:30 p.m. Ryan said the officer was outside as the pit bull came running down the front stairs of the house and through the gate toward him. The

Alberto Marbert shows shell casings left behind after a Lowell police officer shot his pit bull dead outside his family’s home at 19 Lilley Ave. yesterday afternoon. The officer, along with an animal-control officer, had come to take the unregistered dog, named Ashes, for an examination, according to city officials.

Sun staff photos can be ordered by visiting our MyCapture site.

officer fired two shots at the dog, which fell to the ground.”Frankly, it appears that if the officer hadn’t acted the way he had, the unrestrained dog would have injured him and could have hurt anyone else who was there,” said Ryan. “Any time the officer has to use his firearm, it’s a serious matter. It’s certainly something no officer on the Lowell Police Department wishes to do. Clearly this is a stressful situation that happened.”

Ryan said the officer and the animal-control officer decided to euthanize the pit bull with the third and final bullet to the head as the dog lay on the sidewalk.

A mangled .40-caliber slug and two spent shell casings were all that was left outside the home shortly after the shooting. There

Alberto Marbert denied that his 2-year-old pit bull, named Ashes, tried to attack a Lowell police officer. FAMILY PHOTO

Sun staff photos can be ordered by visiting our MyCapture site.

was a divot in the asphalt sidewalk from one of the bullets.”They waited two minutes later when he was lying down and they shot him in the head,” 18-year-old Alberto Marbert, who owned the dog, said through tears.

Marbert, who lives at 19 Lilley Ave., denied the 2-year-old dog, named Ashes, tried to attack the police officer.

“My dog! My dog! I can’t believe this!” screamed Jane Marie Marbert, his 16-year-old sister, who sobbed outside their home.

Consuelo Cruz, who runs a day care out of her home next door, said she was terrified hearing the gunshots. She cares for two girls, ages 3 and 5, who saw the scene as their mother was picking them up and were shaken up.

“He didn’t do anything and all of a sudden (the

A tearful Alberto Marbert lashed out at police for shooting his pit bull to death in front of his home at 19 Lilley Ave. Two initial shots stopped the dog. “They waited two minutes later when he was lying down and they shot him in the head,” he said. SUN / JON HILL

Sun staff photos can be ordered by visiting our MyCapture site.

police officer) shot him three times. Pow! Pow! Pow!” Cruz said. “The kids are nervous.”Cruz’s 17-year-old son, Daely Betacourt, said he watched the incident from the window of his house.

“He shot the dog in the head for no reason,” said Betacourt.

Ryan would not release the names of the officers involved while the incident is under investigation. Lowell police policy requires that an internal investigation be conducted when an officer fires a gun. Ryan said there is no indication department policy was violated, and the officer remains on duty.

Department policy allows officers to use deadly force on animals who are an immediate danger to humans or other animals and on severely injured animals in order to relieve their suffering, Ryan said.

“The dog was a dangerous animal and dogs, in particular, don’t act the same when they’re injured and tend to get very defensive and dangerous,” Ryan said.

Assistant City Manager T.J. McCarthy, who oversees animal control as head of public works, said the Marbert family had been fined $75 within the last month for failing to register the dog. He said city officials didn’t immediately seize the dog because he was confined to the home and not roaming the streets, and gave the owners several weeks to register the dog.

“Obviously, we want to try to work with owners,” said McCarthy.

When an animal-control officer stopped by the home yesterday, the dog was still not registered and the officer planned to take the dog to Wignall Animal Hospital, the city’s contracted veterinarian, for an examination and care until the owners had registered the dog, according to McCarthy.

Jane Marie Marbert blamed the police officer who responded to the scene for leaving the front gate of the home open.

Said Ryan: “However the gate got left open doesn’t change the fact that if the officer hadn’t acted, we would be talking about an officer getting mauled. Nobody wants to be involved in these situations.”

Last month, Lowell officials euthanized two 16-month-old pit bulls after they attacked David Spaulding, a 68-year-old Chelmsford Street homeowner. Spaulding’s neighbor, Bruce Briere, has been credited with saving his life by breaking down a padlocked fence that confines Spaulding’s backyard and throwing pickets from the fence at the dogs, named Venom and Rampage, until they fled back into the house’s enclosed porch.

Erin Smith, The Lowell Sun 6/7/10,

AUGUST 21, 2010: International Homeless Animals’ Day 2010

June 2nd, 2010 by admin2

HELP US!! FLOODED POUND NEEDS OUR HELP!!

May 6th, 2010 by admin2

Animals As Angels

January 1st, 2010 by admin2

Delta Society – Animals Helping People
A story from the frontline: how a dog can improve therapeutic intervention

Guest blogger Amy Johnson is a counselor, lecturer, founder, and program director of the non-profit organization, Teacher’s Pet: Dogs and Kids Learning Together. Her blogs can be found on the American Counseling Association web site.

“Sandy Urkovich is a counselor in Sanibel Island, Florida and a recent graduate of an online animal assisted therapy certificate program. With her clients, Sandy uses her own dogs who have helped not only ameliorate relationships, but often provide a temporary deflection of feelings of pain, or offer a shoulder to cry on. Here is what Sandy has to say about her dog Duke: “Duke came into my life when he was two years old…after being ‘forgotten’ once the children of his human family were born in his former home in Chicago. I flew him to Florida in 2002 and he has been a very relevant part of our family ever since.

Initially quite shy and traumatized by the flight, he did not have an appetite for a few days so I had to hand feed him to sustain him. It took nearly a month for him to warm up to his brothers, Murphy and Riley. His phobic behaviors included a fear of tile floors and swimming in the pool, which made me wonder what happened to him. It turned out he had fallen down a flight of stairs when he was a puppy and was thrown into a swimming pool. Duke loved to sleep in our bed, curling up between my husband and I and our other Chocolate lab, Riley.

I immediately began taking Duke to my very small, closet sized office with me. He greeted people instantly at the door since the small space didn’t provide him room to go anywhere else. His size was intimidating for some, but after being lovingly kissed by this gentle giant, they would soon relax. Duke was apprehensive around big men and often stood back, until one day a new client came to the office, visibly troubled. He was tall and muscular and could have easily taken Hulk Hogan in a wrestling match! The man sat down and Duke cautiously walked over to my side and sat next to me.

As the man began explaining his situation, he suddenly burst into tears, put his head down and put his hands over his face, and sobbed. The room was quiet, except for his muffled sobs. Duke watched the man intently and very slowly walked over to him…with deep concentration. Duke then put his nose under one arm and started nudging the man to pick up his head. It took just a few moments for my client to figure out what was going on, but when he raised his head and Duke’s tongue reached out and kissed his wet, tear stained face, the man smiled. He put his arms around Duke’s neck and moved to sit next to Duke on the floor where they sat in silence for the next five minutes.

As I watched this scene unfold, I was near tears myself. This dog who had built in fears of large men was sitting next to a pained individual who was leaning on Duke for support. After about fifteen minutes, the man got up and sat on the sofa, but left his hand on Duke’s head. Duke did not move. Jokingly the man said he owed Duke a couple pounds of dog biscuits for letting him hold onto him. I replied that Duke gave him what we humans wish we could give – that high level of unconditional love and understanding.

Sometimes, long moments of silence can seem awkward for therapists or clients, but to allow a client the time to just cuddle with a dog…where there is no pressure or feelings of obligation to speak….it can allow the client the time needed to process or just sit for a moment and experience his emotions. He can just “be.” At this moment, he is not sitting alone, potentially uncomfortable with the therapist waiting to determine when to speak or who will be the first to speak. The bond that is formed here between the dog and the client just cannot be done at the same level between therapist and client, but it can open the client up to the therapist for the healing process to begin.

After that incident, I knew that Duke was a therapy dog, without degrees, he earned the role of my assistant. He has never missed a day coming to the office. Small children lay on him; adults let him lie on their feet. Everyone that comes in will say hi to Duke before addressing me. Duke has shown everyone who enters my office the love that so many times one may never experience in life. He understands when someone doesn’t want him near, but eventually will work his way into their hearts. Duke allows children to walk him along with me and our new therapy dog, Troy. Troy is learning the ropes and he copies whatever Duke does. He greets people at the door, and escorts them to the session room. He then lies down and waits for us to be finished and will walk the client back to the front reception room. I could not imagine my practice without them.”

Amy Johnson
Guest Blogger

Pawsitive Stuff for 2010

January 1st, 2010 by admin2

The final lap for greyhounds in Mass.

Voters spoke, so Raynham to end dog racing today

By Eric Moskowitz, Globe Staff  |  December 26, 2009

The greyhounds will bolt from the gate for the last time in Massachusetts today, marking the end of 75 years of live dog racing in the state.

Voters last year elected by a wide margin, 56 percent to 44 percent, to ban the sport effective Jan. 1, 2010. Wonderland held its last race in September. Raynham Park stages its final race tonight. Both will continue to offer simulcasting – enabling patrons to wager on televised dog and horse races conducted elsewhere – at least through July 31, as a result of recently enacted legislation.

The end of racing here is part of a national trend, driven by a mix of animal-rights concerns, waning attendance at dog tracks, and new statutes enacted by legislatures and voters.

“I just thank Massachusetts voters for giving greyhounds a second chance,’’ said Christine A. Dorchak, president of GREY2K USA, a national advocacy organization based in Somerville that grew out of a 2000 effort to ban racing in Massachusetts, which lost by a razor-thin margin. “We have finally reached this wonderful day.’’

The last race at Raynham, previously known as Raynham-Taunton Greyhound Park, also marks the end of live dog racing in New England, for now at least.

Live racing has ceased in recent years in Maine, New Hampshire, Connecticut, and for now Rhode Island – where its future at Lincoln’s financially strapped Twin River is in limbo – and after today will exist at just 23 tracks in seven states, 13 of them in Florida, according to GREY2K. There were 49 tracks in 15 states when GREY2K began in 2001.

Attention now turns to greyhound adoption and to the financial future of the state’s two dog tracks, whose owners hope to stay in business as slot parlors – a possibility that will be debated on Beacon Hill in the coming months, along with the prospect of full resort-casinos.

In the debate over racing, proponents of the ban deemed the sport cruel, calling attention to the cages where the dogs were kept and the 800 injuries suffered by racing greyhounds in the preceding six years. Racing supporters countered that the dogs were well protected and fed, said only a small percentage of dogs were injured, and called the ballot measure a move to put dogs over people, warning of up to 1,000 layoffs.

George Carney, Raynham’s owner, told the Globe earlier this month that he was laying off about one-third of his 600 part-time and full-time employees with the end of live racing but could sustain the full workforce if slot machines were allowed. At the same time, he and others are also mourning the end of an era.

“The more you think about it, the worse the news gets,’’ he said. “So many people have benefited from the track – it’s a hard pill to swallow but you have to take it and move on.’’

Many of the dogs, maintained by a network of kennels, will move on to race in other states, but several hundred will be looking for new homes. Raynham is working with GREY2K and the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals-Angell Animal Medical Center to aid their adoption.

“People who voted to end dog racing should step forward now and take a dog home,’’ Dorchak said. “This is the happy ending we all worked for, and these dogs make wonderful pets.’’ 

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