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Agenda - 09-19-2006-7b
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Agenda - 09-19-2006-7b
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9/2/2008 4:28:37 AM
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8/29/2008 9:48:57 AM
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BOCC
Date
9/19/2006
Document Type
Agenda
Agenda Item
7b
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Minutes - 20060919
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\Board of County Commissioners\Minutes - Approved\2000's\2006
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Qrange County Animal Services Sheltering Practices and Philosophies '7'7 <br />Spay/Neuter Receives Grant, National Attention <br />By Barbara Blake, Asheville Citizen-Times <br />POSTED: June 10, 2002 11:09 p.m. <br />ASHEVILLE -While the WNC Humane Alliance Low-Cost Spay/Neuter Clinic has <br />quietly been saving thousands of cats' and dogs' lives since 1994, the nonprofit <br />has also been gaining a national reputation for excellence and has became a <br />model across the United States. <br />"They're a leader in this country -I can verify that," said Esther Meckler, director <br />of Spay USA, a nationwide network and referral agency for spay-neuter services. <br />"I'm very impressed with the work they're doing, and they're already a model for <br />other clinics trying to get started." <br />The Asheville clinic recently received a $15,000 grant from the Community <br />Foundation of Western North Carolina and will be featured in the July edition of <br />the 25,000- circulation Spay USA Magazine. <br />Visitors from as far away as Yugoslavia have visited to see how the clinic <br />operates, and it will host a conference for spay-neuter volunteers and <br />professionals next year to offer more detailed information about the clinic's <br />successes. <br />The staff of 11 at the clinic, located just west of the Three Brothers Restaurant on <br />Haywood Street downtown, has narrowed its focus to provide one important <br />service -sterilizing cats and dogs sa they cannot contribute to the devastating <br />overpopulation of unwanted animals. <br />The clinic works with 35 animal welfare organizations in 15 WNC counties, and <br />offers a free transport service to outlying areas where sterilization services are <br />difficult to access. "They have established a "super clinic,' devoted exclusively to <br />reducing the numbers of cats and dogs," Meckler said. <br />The spay/neuter clinic was founded by William H. McKelvey, with a single <br />mission: reduce the number of animals killed each year by sterilizing cats and <br />dogs instead of euthanizing tens of thousands of offspring. <br />The clinic spayed and neutered 3,000 animals that first year; that number will <br />grow to 15,000 this year, and the positive results are becoming clear, McKelvey <br />said. <br />Considering the fact that one pair of cats, in seven years, can be responsible for <br />300,000 offspring, and one pair of dogs can produce more than 125 offspring in <br />five years, the sterilization of 77,000 animals can have a staggering impact. Dr. <br />
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