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Animal Shelter Statistics - 05-2007
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Animal Shelter Statistics - 05-2007
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Animal Services Monthly Report May, 2007 <br />5 <br />To work toward the desideratum o f ending euthanasia as a means of population control, it <br />is thus essent ial to posit ively impact the number of animals that come into Orange <br />County’s Animal Shelter in the course of the year. Essent ial to this is a communit y <br />spay/neuter program for animal companio ns such as dogs and cats that promotes <br />responsible pet ownership and enables all communit y members to spay and neuter their <br />own pets. Developing such a program through the County’s Animal Services <br />Department, in coordination with the Animal Services Advisory Board, remains a <br />fundamental and realizable object ive for the foreseeable future. <br />No less essent ial is progressive legislation that is enforced in an effect ive, fair and <br />reasonable manner. A starting po int is what is sometimes referred to as “different ial <br />licensing”—that is, licensing or registration fees that are much lower for spayed and <br />neutered animals than for intact animals. Other legislative options include an extra <br />redempt ion fee for intact animals recovered fro m the Animal Shelter, which may be <br />refunded if they are sterilized within a given time period, and permit systems that require <br />a permit for dogs and cats that are going to be bred. <br />Moreover, there is an overwhelming need to address the deepseated problem of feral cats <br />in Orange County. Month after month feral cats (as defined by their communit y history <br />and/or observed behaviors in the context of the shelter) are the largest single group of <br />animals that are euthanized. In May, 61 feral cats were euthanized, and they comprised <br />70 percent of all cats euthanized during the month (and 38 percent of all animals <br />euthanized). <br />The euthanasia of feral cats is not in fact a “shelter problem,” but rather a communit y <br />problem that needs to be addressed as such. There is a great need for init iatives in the <br />area of public educat ion to raise awareness insofar as euthanasia is the end result for <br />many of these creatures, and their presence must be considered in relation to the risk of <br />rabies, given the ongoing and endemic nature of socalled “raccoon rabies” in our County <br />and region. Thus addressing the problem o f feral cats must beco me part of a strategic <br />plan for the County’s Animal Services Department, again working in coordination with <br />our concerned cit izenry through the Animal Services Advisory Board. <br />These are illustrations o f the kinds of the positive and proactive approaches that are <br />needed to address the problem of pet overpopulation as a communit y problem. In <br />working to reduce the number of unwanted animals that must be sheltered in our own <br />communit ies, we would also expect improvements in so me o f the outcomes of our <br />sheltering practices. We should all look forward to the day when there are very good <br />numbers of adoptions and “live releases” but no less notable ongoing decreases in the <br />number of animals that come to our shelter. <br />Rabies Cycle, Rabies Prevention and Rabies Control <br />Wit h respect to rabies control—historically a core function of animal control—we have <br />continued to see positive rabies tests based upon public reporting and our surveillance of
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