Showing posts with label Lenny's Brigade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lenny's Brigade. Show all posts

Friday, June 13, 2014

Why Phideaux’s Flea Market Matters

Aiken County Animal Advocates

THE VOICE OF PAWS

(Palmetto Animal Welfare Services, Inc.)

By Joya DiStefano

This Aiken County Animal Advocates Columns was posted in the Aiken Standard on 06/13/2014

“The continued use of euthanasia to control the size of its cat and dog populations is a choice a community makes, not a necessity.” – Peter Marsh, author of Getting to Zero

What is the cosmic connection between the routine killing of dogs and cats to a Saturday flea market?  The answer lies in an illustrative tale.

Palmetto Animal Welfare Services, more commonly known as PAWS, has a program called SNYP (Spay Neuter Your Pet).  In partnership with the Aiken SPCA, SNYP offers “free” spay/neuter surgeries throughout Aiken County for qualifying households.  

Humans call SNYP volunteers on behalf of their companion cats and dogs and SNYP volunteers work to assure the pets get fixed.  The co-pay is $20 and includes rabies vaccine and a micro-chip. No one is turned away.  

Some get referred to one of the voucher programs, or Lenny’s Brigade for cats, but everyone who calls can get a deal on preventing unwanted litters.  

The conversations are warm, supportive and take a positive problem-solving approach.  Most applicants prefer to self-schedule directly with the SPCA Clinic, but PAWS will transport if necessary.

SNYP costs money, but begging and pleading wears on relationships.  So when the SPCA offered PAWS a spot to raise funds at their monthly Phideaux Flea Market and Dog Wash, we figured that we would give it a try.  

What could be so hard about getting all that stuff out of closets, attics, storage, garages, and selling it?  Well, the answer is if it was that easy it wouldn’t be accumulating in all those handy spaces.

Flash to North Augusta where Todd and Jeannie thought that it was going to take six or eight months to sell their house while their new house was being built.  Yes, the real estate market is soft, so who would have predicted that their house would sell in 29 days and they would be in a crunch to get rid of all that “stuff?”  

Voila!  We start our maiden voyage as flea marketeers with a horse trailer full of yummy stuff.  You have to see the nearly new Mongoose stunt bicycle, and “Clemson-opoly?”  Truly, a find.

But the synchronicity of the last-minute need to empty a house under contract, and an inaugural attempt to turn cast-offs to cash, symbolizes more than the affirmation of one effort.  

Palmetto Animal Welfare Services exists to insist that if we work together, we can save them all.  And I personally believe that if the first step you take is the right one, the road will rise to meet you.

PAWS was founded to address chronic and counter-productive gaps and rifts among a broad array of stakeholders in animal welfare issues in our county and the surrounding region.  As our Facebook page and website claim, “PAWS is a vocal advocate to assist any and all animal welfare efforts in and around Aiken County to end the unnecessary killing of shelter animals.”

We began by forming PAWS as an “umbrella” 501(c)(3) non-profit by uniting a consortium of animal welfare efforts within the corporation.  We also constituted PAWS governing body with people who were already doing the work to which PAWS committed: getting and keeping animals out of shelters.  

Affordable and accessible spay/neuter through SNYP (Spay/Neuter Your Pet) serves the entire county.  SNYP is PAWS core program.  Then Shelter Animal Advocates Aiken Foster Network provides short-term foster care bridging the time between the county shelter and private rescue groups.  Heartbeats raises the funds (averaging $600) to treat dogs who test positive for heartworm while impounded, so that they can be pulled for a partnering rescue.  LEASH Squad in Wagener rescues and rehabilitates dogs that have been victims of cruelty and who need the kind of care few places are equipped to give.

All animal welfare efforts need the support of their communities to function.  Achieving tax-exempt status with the IRS by becoming a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation, an expensive and time-consuming process, encourages and expands the essential support by validating the mission of the public charity.  The PAWS group received a letter from the IRS recently informing PAWS that its tax-exempt status should be official by the end of August.  Perhaps it represents another sign we are on the right road.

Tomorrow PAWS will join other flea-marketeers and crafters at the SPCA’s Albrecht Center for Animal Welfare from 8 am until 2 pm.  Should you care to stop by and shop, or deliver some prized item for us to sell, or browse and chat you may find yourself inspired.  

Join the No-kill movement.  Help us “get to zero” with unwanted pet prevention, well-homed pet retention, and pro-active rescue. 


A retired organizational problem-solver and radical educator, Joya Jiménez DiStefano is an artist, Servant Leader, co-founder of FOTAS, and founder of PAWS, Inc.


Sunday, October 6, 2013

Lenny’s Brigade: a Better Way for Community Cats

Aiken County Animal Advocates

THE VOICE OF PAWS

(Palmetto Animal Welfare Services, Inc.)


By Joya DiStefano


She found the skeletal white and brown tabby kitten in the middle of a four-lane highway in Lancaster County.  An upper respiratory infection had clotted his eyes, blinding him.  He let her lift him.  She wiped his eyes, cleared his nose, and stopped at a Dollar General for a can of cat food and a small bowl. He ate, groomed his face and paws, and lay down on the dashboard for a nap while she drove back to Aiken.  He rallied for about two days in the care of this retired cat veterinarian, and then he crashed. When it looked hopeless, she put him to sleep as he lay in her lap.  His name was Lenny.

Lenny inspired Dr. Kathy Bissell to yield to the urging of a colleague and do something about the plight of community cats in South Carolina, her new home.  That initiative became Lenny’s Brigade, a small dedicated advocacy group helping residents of Aiken County take more effective, humane approaches to unowned, outdoor-living felines, AKA “community cats.”

Shelter intake and euthanasia represent two of the ugliest numbers faced by animal advocates in Aiken County.  One of the largest contributors to these relentless demoralizing statistics are unowned cats.  Across the country you will find the same problem, shelter euthanasia rates have fallen dramatically, but the gains are almost entirely on the dog side of the equation.  Look at the vision FOTAS has brought to our new County Animal Shelter – to never have to euthanize an adoptable pet.  Yet even the FOTAS in Jackson County, Oregon (the original model for our Aiken FOTAS), who claim to have achieved that goal, will admit, “That is, if you don’t count cats.” Perhaps, when it comes to cats, the term “adoptable” is the heart of the problem.  Community cats are already “home.”

Here are some little known facts related to our feline friends and neighbors when it comes to shelter programs:
·       More than 75% percent of Americans believe that only sick or dangerous animals should be euthanized at shelters;
·       In most US communities there is no legal mandate to impound every unowned cat;
·       The population of unowned cats exceeds that of those with homes;
·       More than 50% of all cats have to be euthanized and 75% have to be altered to impact the overall population;
·       Cats are more likely to be returned to owners or adopted to new homes by means other than a shelter;
·       The vast majority of stray and unowned cats are healthy; AND,
·       Cats are the only species for which it is routinely argued that in the cat’s interest a certain death today is preferable to a possible future hazard.

Cats are amazing, resourceful creatures that have evolved to be able to straddle nature’s challenges and man’s ingenuity.  They make delightful and endearing pets, and can thrive in the wild where they find shelter and a food source.  Picking them up and killing them serves no useful purpose, and that is where our Lenny’s Brigade enters the picture.

Lenny’s Brigade is a public charity initiative.  Lenny’s Brigade addresses county resident concerns with community cat colonies, like the one at the Wagener Feed Store, or the one behind the New Ellenton Post Office, on a small farm in Windsor, and behind Kalmia Plaza.  Lenny’s Brigade volunteers help “colony sponsors,” (citizens providing food, shelter, or even spay/neuter surgeries to unowned cats) bring colony numbers under control.  Through a national policy initiative called TNR (trap-neuter-return), cats are treated and returned to their “home” colony.  In barely one year, under the passionate leadership of Dr. Kathy Bissell, Lenny’s Brigade has altered 160 community cats.  With public awareness, and support for leading edge public policy regarding these cats, our county can lower our shelter euthanasia rate, and elevate our humanity. Lenny’s Brigade hotline: (803) 507-6315. Dr. Kathy Bissell is a Servant Leader.


Joya DiStefano is a retired organizational problem-solver and radical educator, Joya DiStefano is a local Servant Leader, writer, and artist who lives with eleven dogs, one amazing cat, and a husband who is a saint.