Our politicians may hold the key to ending pet overpopulation

September 27, 2009

Every once in a while a bill is presented by our legislators that I can really get on board with, and I hope you will also.  The ASPCA Advocacy Alert sent out a notification that Congressman Thaddeus McCotter (R-MI) is sponsoring a bill in the House of Representatives called the HAPPY Act, or the Humanity and Pets Partnered Through The Years (“HAPPY”) Act, which is legislation to allow individuals to claim tax deductions for qualified pet car expenses.  The bill would allow any taxpayer who legally owns one or more domesticated animals to take an annual income tax deduction of up to $3,500 for pet care expenses, including veterinary care costs.

Pet care can be expensive—and in these trying economic times, families all over the country have been forced to give up their pets because of financial hardship. The HAPPY Act is important because it will help Americans provide their pets with the medical attention and quality of life they deserve, while also ensuring that more pets get to remain in their loving homes and don’t wind up on the streets or in the already overburdened shelter system.

What You Can Do

Use the letter below to mail your U.S. representative now and urge him or her to support and cosponsor the HAPPY Act, H.R. 3501! Please keep in mind that personal comments strengthen the impact of your letter, so adding your thoughts to the words we have provided will add additional impact to your letter:

Please Help Pet Owners: Support H.R. 3501, the HAPPY Act

Dear Congressman (add name here),

As a concerned constituent, I am writing to urge you to support and cosponsor H.R. 3501, the Humanity and Pets Partnered Through the Years (“HAPPY”) Act. This important legislation would allow an annual tax deduction of up to $3,500, per taxpayer, for qualified pet care expenses. “Qualified pet care expenses” include veterinary care costs for individuals who care for legally owned, domesticated live animals.

Pet care can be expensive–and in these trying economic times, families all over the country have been forced to give up their pets because of financial hardship. The HAPPY Act is important because it would help Americans provide their pets with the medical attention and quality of life they deserve, while also ensuring that more pets get to remain in their loving homes and don’t wind up on the streets or in the already overburdened shelter system.

* Please personalize your message by inserting your comments here

Sincerely,

Your name

Your address

Your city, state, zip

For the greatest impact nothing beats a letter sent through the mail.  However, if you don’t have the time go to TailTalk.org and I’ll have a link to the ASPCA.org website where you can enter your zip code and you can email your letter directly to your legislator.  No matter how you decide to contact them, please take a moment and make that contact.  We can all use the help with taking care of our animals and when the government is willing to get on board and help us by putting money back in our pockets at the end of the year, then I’m all for it.

And never forget, it is only through you that the Randolph County Humane Society continues to save lives, one by one.


Bait dog brought back from the brink through kindness and love.

September 19, 2009

I received an email about a dog that was injured in a dog fighting ring, the wonderful animal hospital that took care of his physical wounds and the family that adopted him from the animal hospital that took care of his emotional wounds.  Many of the animals that are adopted through the Randolph County Humane Society shelter are brought back from abuse and make the same jump to loving companion as told in this story:

Oogy, the former bait dog.

Oogy, the former bait dog.

When Oogy was four months old and weighed thirty five pounds he was tied to a stake and used as bait for a Pit Bull. The left side of his face from just behind his eye was torn off, including his ear.. He was bitten so hard a piece of his jaw bone was crushed. Afterward, he was thrown into a cage and left to bleed to death.
I am not a religious man, but I can only conclude that at that moment God turned around and paid attention. The police raided the facility, found Oogy, and took him to Ardmore Animal Hospital, where Dr. Bianco stitched him up and saved him.

This coincided with the last weekend of life for our cat, Buzzy, who was 14 at the time. My sons and I had taken Buzzy to AAH for his last visit. The staff had gathered Buzzy in when out comes this pup that looked like nothing more than a gargoyle. He covered us with kisses. The boys and I fell instantly in love with him.

Life goes out one door and in another. ‘This is one of the happiest dogs I’ve ever met’ Dr. Bianco said. ‘I can’t imagine what he’d be like if half his face hadn’t been ripped off.’ Then, Dr. B said, ‘I am not going to tell you the things this dog has been through.’  Dr. B’s assistant, Diane, took Oogy into her home for several weeks to foster him and make sure he was safe and to crate-train him.

Once Oogy came into our house, for my sons, then 12, it was like having a little brother. Whatever they did and wherever they went, there was Oogy. Oogy had to get involved in whatever the lads were doing. He became known as The Third Twin.

Dr. B thought Oogy was a Pit or Pit-mix and would get to be about 45 pounds.. By the time of his first checkup, Oogy weighed 70 pounds. When we walked in the door for the visit, one of the women who works at AAH exclaimed, ‘That’s a Dogo!’ I asked, ‘What’s a Dogo?’ She said, ‘I’m not sure.’

We went online and learned that the Dogo Argentina is bred in Argentina to hunt mountain lion and boar. Oogy can run about 30 miles an hour, all four legs off the ground like a Greyhound. His leg muscles are so strong that, when he sits, his butt is a half-inch off the ground. Dogos hunt in packs. Dogos hurl themselves against their prey and swarm it.

Oogy has a neck like a fire hydrant to protect him when he closes on his  prey. He is built like a Pit Bull on steroids, with white fur as soft as butter and black freckles. Fully grown, Oogy is 85 pounds of solid muscle, but he does not know this and sits on us. He absolutely craves physical contact. He is full of kisses and chuffs like a steam engine when he is happy. He has a heart as big as all outdoors. One of the traits of the breed is that they fully accept anyone their family does. It is not unusual to come home and find three teenagers on the floor playing a video game and Oogy sprawled across their laps like some living boa.

Oogy hated the crate, and would bark and bark whenever we put him in. This puzzled me because I had been told by people with crate-trained dogs that their pets love the crate and feel secure in its confines. When Oogy was about eight months old, we hired a trainer who also happened to be an animal ‘whisperer.’ We introduced her to Oogy and she sat on the floor for a full five minutes talking to him. We could not hear a word she said. When the trainer lifted her head her eyes were brimming with tears. ‘Oogy wants you to know’ she said ‘how much he appreciates the love and respect you have shown him.’ Then she asked about his routine. I started by showing her where he slept in the crate. She said immediately, ‘You have to get him out of that box’. ‘Why?’ ‘Because he associates being in a box with having his ear ripped off.’ It was a smack-myself- in-the-forehead moment. Oogy never went back in.

Given what Oogy endured and what he is bred for, people are constantly astonished  that he loves animals and people as much as he does. Walking with Oogy is like walking with a mayoral candidate. He has to meet everyone. A number of people we encountered in the neighborhood early on told me they were afraid of Oogy because when they would walk or jog by the house, Oogy would bark at them and trot parallel to them, and given his size and looks… But everyone falls in love with Oogy. By the end of their initial encounter they are rubbing, petting, even kissing him on the nose. Oogy kisses them back. Because of the way he looks, when people meet him for the first time they almost always ask if he is safe.  I tell them, ‘Well, he has licked two people to death.’

For the first year and a half of his life, part of Oogy’s face was normal and the other part looked like a burn victim’s. People who saw him in passing could not grasp the duality. As Oogy grew, the scar tissue spread. He could not close his left eye, so it wept constantly; his lip was pulled up and back. Dr. B said Oogy was in constant pain. So, in January 2005, Dr. B. rebuilt Oogy’s face. When all the scar tissue was removed, there was a hole in Oogy’s head the size of a softball. After removing the scar tissue, Dr. B took grafts and pulled the flaps together and sewed Oogy back up. Now Oogy has a hairline scar, but other than that looks just like any normal one-eared dog.

Because some of his jaw bone was removed in the initial surgery, some of Oogy’s lower left lip droops and a repository for dust and dirt. It is second nature to us to pull the detritus off his lip when we sit next to him. One day I told my sons that when they tell their children about Oogy, they will remember this routine act of kindness. I think that, on some level, every day we try to atone for what happened to him. Last summer Oogy had ACL surgery; his body ultimately rejected the steel plates and developed an infection so his leg had to be opened up a second time and the plates removed. When I went to pick him up following the second surgery, the Technician who brought Oogy out said, ‘This is a great dog. I really love him.’ I said, ‘Yep, we’re lucky to have him’. The Tech looked at me and said, ‘No, you don’t understand. ! I see hundreds of dogs each week, and every once in awhile there is a special one. And you have him.’   When I related that story to Dr. B he said, ‘But we already knew that.’

On a recent Saturday afternoon Oogy was curled up on the couch asleep, his head in my lap, and I was thinking about his life is now as opposed to the way his life had been before. Would he have sensed he was dying? Was he conscious when the police put him on a rubber sheet and took him to the Ardmore Animal Hospital?  Oogy went to sleep in a world of terror and searing pain and awoke surrounded by angels in white coats who were kind to him, who stroked him gently and talked softly to him. Instead of people who baited and beat and kicked him, he was surrounded with healing mercies.  I realized then that Oogy probably did not know he had not died and gone to heaven.  So I told him. I said, ‘Listen pal. It only gets better after this.’

They are unconditionally your friend, your child, your comforter, your defender, always your puppy…
you are their life, their love, their safe haven, their leader.
They will be yours, faithful and true, to the last beat of their heart.
You owe it to them to be worthy of such devotion.

Never forget, it is only through you that the Randolph County Humane Society continues to save lives, one by one.


My first run in with the law and other musings about shelter dogs

September 12, 2009

I felt last week’s Tail Talk needed additional explanations because I left something out, something so very important that if I didn’t get it said some very good people would walk away without understanding there is a place for them and the animals in the shelter would suffer because of it.  There are many, many people that can’t deal with going in to the shelter and seeing the suffering of the animals that have no one, and if you are one of those people that’s okay.  You don’t have to volunteer at the shelter to be a viable part of the Humane Society.  I am one of those people.  I cry like a baby when I see the animals in the shelter.  I want to take them all home with me, and I can’t do that.  From my first visit to a shelter close to 50 years ago to today my reaction hasn’t changed, from the moment I hit the door I turn into a huge blubbering idiot.  When I was a little girl growing up in O’Fallon, IL  animal control was a cage back by the sewage treatment plant.  My best friend and I found a mama dog and her puppies locked up in the cage so we set them free and took them to my house, much to my mother’s chagrin.  She had to call the police department to tell them who had robbed the animal control facility and I was sent to my room for two weeks.  So I stay away from the shelter itself and do as much as I can from afar.  If you are able to help them at the shelter they need volunteers there more than anywhere, and if you offer your help there make sure you follow through.  If you find it’s not for you, you won’t be the first, just tell them but don’t abandon them by not showing up for your appointed shift.  But otherwise you can volunteer for things like our upcoming rummage sale October 1, 2 and 3rd.  They desperately need items donated and they need volunteers to set-up, to work the sale, and tear down.  We aren’t able to have one of our most enjoyable fundraisers this year, the wine tasting at one of the local wineries, due to a lack of volunteers.  We have a presence at most of the local fairs during the summer so call the shelter to see if you can volunteer when it’s time for one in your town.  Be proactive.  You don’t have to suffer to be of service.  You can actually have a good time.  You’ll make new friends, you’ll forget your problems, and you’ll walk away with a feeling in your heart that you helped the least of them among us, the shelter dogs.

October 1, 2 and 3 is the Annual RCHS Fall Garage Sale.  Times are 8 am to 4 pm on the 1st and 2nd and 8 am to 1 pm on the 3rd at the St. John’s Church Pavilion on N. Market Street,  Sparta, IL.  Call the shelter at 618-443-3363 to donate or volunteer.  And never forget, it is only through you that the Randolph County Humane Society continues to save lives, one by one.


Volunteer today to make a difference in the life of a shelter dog.

September 5, 2009

Being the only no kill shelter that accepts owner surrenders in the immediate Southern Illinois area puts a special kind of strain on the Randolph County Humane Society.  You see the names of other no kill shelters in the area, but what you probably don’t realize is they only accept animals that come through their doors from animal control so any animal lovers in their county have to either find someone to take their animals themselves, take them to a high kill shelter, or bring them to the Randolph County Humane Society.  I wonder how many people really understand what it means to volunteer for the Randolph County Humane Society.  This isn’t pleasant work.  These animals, through no fault of their own, are forced to stay in cages through out the day when there is no one around to let them outside should they need to relieve themselves.  If the volunteer shows up late for the evening shift these animals not only have gone hours without relieving themselves, they haven’t been fed at their normal time and they’re hungry.  Think about how you would feel if you were locked up in a building, dependent on the kindness of strangers to come to your aid, to unlock a door so you could relieve yourself, then wait until they fill your bowl with food and water so you can eat and drink.  The cages are given a perfunctory cleaning, then the cycle starts all over again until the day crew comes in, the people that, during the week anyway, dedicate their lives to these animals.  And for all of the dedicated folks that come in on the weekends and in the evenings, please, please don’t take offense.  I’m speaking to those that don’t understand the obligation they’ve committed themselves to, those that don’t understand how little these animals have and how much their presence and intervention into their lives means to them.  It is critical that you understand that when you volunteer to work at the shelter that means you are going to work harder than you have ever worked before.  You are going to see things that are going to break your heart.  You will clean up disgusting messes.  It will be necessary for you to clean up dogs and cats because they don’t deserve to live in the filth that someone less caring than you felt was okay for them because after all, they’re just animals.  It takes people with hearts filled with love that are willing to make the extra effort to take care of the least of them among us.  But the rewards are the satisfaction of knowing you have helped the most vulnerable during their greatest time of need.  And perhaps if you extend your hand now when you find that you are in need and have to extend your hand to ask for help there will be someone there that will lift you up.  They need you now.  They need you to come into your shelter and help out, but they need you to be committed and be there when you say you will, doing the work you committed to, offering a hand up to lift them out of this place they find themselves through no fault of their own.  Help the people that have the only no kill shelter that helps the owners that find themselves in a situation they never thought they’d be in, whether through sickness or death in the family or whatever brings you to the shelter door.  The Randolph County Humane Society works miracles but remember, it is only through you that they continue to save lives, one by one.


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