Thursday, November 10, 2005
Remembering Katrina - Top 16 Posts
- #16 Into the Void
- #15 Federal Incompetance
- #14 Railing on the Feds
- #13 Lessons, Observations
- #12 Homecomings
- #11 Pet Rescue
- #10 Lakeview by Canoe
- #9 A Vast Wasteland
- #8 Uptown
- #7 NOLA Ain't Dead!
- #6 Answering Questions
- #5 Full Report
- #4 Anarchy
- #3 1st Full Text Description
- #2 Text Message after levees broke
- #1 The Storm
New Orleans Resources
- GulfLatitudes.com
- Friends of West End
- Flood Congress
- Times-Picayune
- The Dead Pelican
- Craig's List NOLA
- New Orleans WIKI
- SAVE THE WETLANDS
- WWOZ-Community Radio
- New Orleans City Government
- Lakeview Civic Association
- Preservation Resource Center http://troyagilbert.wordpress.com/
The New Orleans PTSD Web
- Troy Gilbert
- b.Rox
- Adrastos
- Vatul Blog
- Chris Rose
- Humid City
- Blogometer
- Ray in NOLA
- Suspect Device
- Wet Bank Guide
- After the Levees
- Right Hand Thief
- Poppy Z. Brite's Blog
- Voices of New Orleans
- Metroblogging New Orleans
- The Third Battle of New Orleans
- NOLA BLOGROLL
Previous Posts
- After laying off a third of nola fire dept today,...
- On Looking Forward To Becoming Trailer Trash
- Dwi's no more. Cheers from st. Joe's.
- What I Will Wear (Eventually) In My Grave
- Amidst The Rubble
- My New Favorite Post Katrina Story
- Credible Sourced Rumours
- Tom Benson Is A Douche Bag
- Halloween In New Orleans
- Either the black mold or the absinthe has got me. ...
Archives
- August 2005
- September 2005
- October 2005
- November 2005
- December 2005
- January 2006
- February 2006
- March 2006
- April 2006
- May 2006
- June 2006
- July 2006
- August 2006
- November 2006
- July 2007
- August 2007
- August 2008
- September 2008
- March 2010
- August 2010
Help Support Local Authors
Technical Support
3 Comments:
Thanks Michelle & Troy & silent bar guy!
I think I got that secret pet rescue message of the day. (Audioblog is so much more crackable than morse.)
Thanks again, Michelle, for the good work.
Text of above Press Release:
State of Louisiana Blocks Animal Rescue While Thousands of Pets Face Starvation in New Orleans, Say Animal Rescue Groups
11/10/2005 1:19:00 PM
To: National Desk
Contact: Claire Davis, 435-899-1231 or KatrinaCatRescue@yahoo.com
BOGALUSA, La., Nov. 10 /U.S. Newswire/ -- Two animal rescue groups are issuing a call for the state of Louisiana to stop blocking attempts to save the thousands of sick, injured, and traumatized dogs and cats who still wander the streets of New Orleans.
The state has announced that the Hurricane Katrina rescue phase is over. Out-of-state veterinarians are banned from volunteering their services on behalf of the animals of greater New Orleans. Rescuers have been threatened with arrest if they attempt to give food and water to animals in Orleans Parish. Outside rescue groups are told they should turn all operations over to local authorities and leave the state.
Meanwhile, the pets who survived Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath are dying on the streets -- sometimes right next to food and water bowls that the handful of remaining rescuers couldn't fill in time.
AnimalRescueNewOrleans.com (http://www.animalrescueneworleans.com) and Alley Cat Allies (http://www.alleycat.org) are calling for the state to reverse its course and accept outside help in the form of veterinarians and more volunteers.
"We are literally seeing animals on the streets starving to death," says Jane Garrison, director of AnimalRescueNewOrleans.com, one of a handful of rescue organizations still in the city. "We need more volunteers to feed and water the thousands of traumatized animals still on the streets, we need to keep trapping animals so we can reunite them with their guardians, and we need a massive spay/neuter program."
Garrison coordinated the animal rescue program for six weeks as a volunteer for the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS). Since HSUS pulled out October 1st, she has been running her own program. With a steadily dwindling force of volunteers, Garrison races against time trying to provide food and water at more than 2,000 sites in the New Orleans area, as well as fielding a constant stream of owner rescue requests.
"Many of these animals are people's companions who escaped their homes when doors and windows blew open. It would be completely unethical to allow them to die on the streets," she says.
The state claims that local authorities can handle the problem, but rescuers on the ground know this is not the case. One of the hardest hit areas, St. Bernard Parish, has no active animal control agency or functioning animal shelter. The Louisiana SPCA, in charge of animal control in Orleans Parish, does not have anywhere close to the staff, space, or resources required to address a problem of this magnitude.
As bad as the situation is now, in a few months it will be even worse. Despite the horrific conditions, the dogs and cats on the streets are still breeding, and rescuers are starting to see puppies and kittens born after Katrina. Statistics show that one unspayed female cat and her offspring can produce more than 59,000 cats in five years.
"If the state government doesn't allow us to feed, treat, and find homes for the thousands of animals struggling to survive now, it is in for rude awakening the beginning of next year," says Becky Robinson, national director of Alley Cat Allies (ACA). "The number of free-roaming cats and dogs will be devastating."
ACA, a national cat advocacy group now running a cat rescue operation from a base in Bogalusa, Louisiana, has plans for an immediate, large-scale spay/neuter program for the street cats of New Orleans. This program requires the services of about a dozen veterinarians experienced with high-volume surgery. Many out-of- state vets have offered their services, free of charge.
But the state of Louisiana is standing in the way. Louisiana Governor Kathleen Blanco, acting on advice from Assistant State Veterinarian Martha Littlefield, has refused to extend an executive order giving out-of-state veterinarians permission to practice in Louisiana. That order expired October 25. Any out-of- state vet practicing in the area now would do so at the risk of jail time and thousands of dollars in fines.
Despite the state's claims that local veterinarians can fulfill the need, ACA has been unable to find local vets who can provide consistent care for the cats housed at its temporary shelter, let alone enough to conduct the type of large-scale spay/neuter program that is so desperately needed.
"This nation's animal rescue community can help Louisiana meet this crisis if the state will simply acknowledge the problem still exists and allow us to work," Robinson says. "This is not only humane and ethical; it is in everyone's best interest."
For more information, please contact Claire Davis at 435-899- 1231 or KatrinaCatRescue@yahoo.com, or visit http://www.alleycat.org and http://www.AnimalRescueNewOrleans.com.
http://www.usnewswire.com/
-0-
/© 2005 U.S. Newswire 202-347-2770/
Please click here to write to the State Vet and Gov. Blanco regarding out-of-state vets
Post a Comment
<< Home