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PAWS IS OVERLOADED WITH ANIMALS! HELP!

PAWS takes in over 30,000 animals a year. Yesterday alone we received 54 cats - and only had about 12 adoptions. We need to amp up our adoption rates, now! Spread the word! There are hundreds of beautiful, adoptable cats and dogs at PAWS! Here's just a sample of some of the beautiful animals who need homes. Please, cross-post this and spread the word. The animals need you!




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SEE MANY MORE OF OUR ADOPTABLE ANIMALS HERE:
http://www.petfinder.com/shelters/…



IF YOU CAN FOSTER OR ADOPT AN ANIMAL: Come to the shelter (111 W. Hunting Park Avenue) immediately. A staff person or foster care volunteer will be thrilled to help you find the right animal(s) for you to take into safety. Foster care and adoption hours are 11 am to 6 pm every day of the week.



Directions to the shelter are available here: http://phillypaws.org/Directions/d…




PAWS, the Philadelphia Animal Welfare Society, is a donor-funded division of the Philadelphia Animal Care and Control Association (PACCA) dedicated to saving the lives of Philadelphia's homeless, abandoned and unwanted animals. Taking in nearly 30,000 animals each year, PAWS is dedicated to making Philadelphia a city in which all healthy and treatable animals are guaranteed a home. Supporting PAWS helps fund lifesaving initiatives including adoption and foster care programs, spay and neuter surgeries, low-cost vaccinations, and other community-based programming, all of which help reduce and will ultimately eliminate the unnecessary killing of Philadelphia's animals. For more information, please visit: www.phillypaws.org.





Help make Philly a No-Kill city:
http://phillynokill.com/NoKill/Wel…
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This is SO Important! Please READ!

RIght now, there is a lot going on with Animal Control in Philadelphia.  PACCA is in danger of losing their contract with the city, as the health dept has put out an RFP on a contract to start Jan 1 2009, even though PACCA's contract is through June 30, 2009.  Philly PAWS and PACCA have gone leaps and bounds beyond what animal control in philly was doing 5 years ago, and that can't stop. Philly must be No-Kill. There is no lifesaving language in the current RFP, it only calls for "disposal of animals."

Read more here - http://phillypaws.org/savelivesnow/

Join the cause here - http://phillynokill.com/NoKill/Wel…

And contact these people, too!  http://www.phila.gov/health/Commis…

Please, the only thing that will save the 30,000+ animals that come through animal control each year are concerned citizens.

I know not everyone can adopt or foster, but EVERYONE can write letters, email, and call!  Please please please do!
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SAVE A KITTEN!

i don' t know who reads this, but if you do....

Right now, PAWS has over 40 litters of kittens - literally, hundreds of kittens - who need to get out of the shelter. There are way more kittens than cages, and they need to get into foster care RIGHT NOW if they are going to get out of the shelter. Please come in and take a litter if you can fit it into your life and your house in any way. You will not only be saving the lives of the kittens you bring home, but the next litter who can be put into that cage space. We really need to get at least 20 litters out tonight - they cannot stay in the shelter tonight. This is a plea to anyone who has ever loved an animal, or had an animal pass away, or saw a cute picture of a kitten. Please foster. Please help them!




Someone will be available until AT LEAST 8 PM tonight - please come to the shelter! We have never had a more urgent need for foster parents!






IF YOU CAN FOSTER AN ANIMAL: Come to the shelter (111 W. Hunting Park Avenue) immediately. A staff person or foster care volunteer will be thrilled to help you find the right animal(s) for you to take into safety. Someone will be at the shelter to help you until 8 PM tonight - just tell the front desk you're there for foster and either Natalie or Alanna will be there to help you.






To make special arrangements to come at another time of day, please email Natalie at natalie@phillypaws.org (please email only as a last resort; Natalie is inundated. It is best to just come directly to the shelter.) Directions to the shelter are available here: http://www.phillypaws.org/hours_directions.cfm




More information about foster care is available here: http://www.phillypaws.org/foster_parenting_faq.cfm



SPREAD THE WORD: Even if you can't bring a foster animal home, you can still make an enormous difference and help save countless lives.





PAWS, the Philadelphia Animal Welfare Society, is a donor-funded division of the Philadelphia Animal Care and Control Association (PACCA) dedicated to saving the lives of Philadelphia's homeless, abandoned and unwanted animals. Taking in nearly 30,000 animals each year, PAWS is dedicated to making Philadelphia a a city in which all healthy and treatable animals are guaranteed a home. Supporting PAWS helps fund lifesaving initiatives including adoption and foster care programs, spay and neuter surgeries, low-cost vaccinations, and other community-based programming, all of which help reduce and will ultimately eliminate the unnecessary killing of Philadelphia's animals. For more information, please visit: www.phillypaws.org.



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thoughts

 Let me just say that PAWS is in crisis mode. We are getting 100-150+ animals a day. Animals are being put down, and quickly. We are past capacity. If you can foster, adopt, donate, or volunteer, you need to do it now!!!!  I am so serious about this. If you can take home one kitten, one cat, keep one litter of kittens in a bathroom or a dog crate, foster one dog, one puppy - if you can make the time and the room in your life, there are animals dying who need you right now.  email natalie@phillypaws.org or go to the shelter at front and hunting park.

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aww this is such a great idea!!

http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2008-03-17-pet-boarding-shelters_N.htm


A haven for abuse victims who keep their pets close
Rose Terry, 55, a resident of the Shade Tree women and children's shelter in Las Vegas, visiter with her six-year-old Norwegian Forest cat Byron at the shelter's "Noah's Animal House."
   
Rose Terry, 55, a resident of the Shade Tree women and children's shelter in Las Vegas, visiter with her six-year-old Norwegian Forest cat Byron at the shelter's "Noah's Animal House."
 GUIDANCE FOR SHELTERS
American Humane's 40-page guide for planning and launching on-site pet boarding at shelters can be downloaded at the organization's website, americanhumane.org.
By Sharon L. Peters, Special for USA TODAY
When Rose Terry finally resolved to leave her abusive boyfriend, she knew she'd have to live in a shelter for a few weeks before she could start life anew. She had no reservations about that.

But she anguished over Byron, the cat who had seen her through the awful times. None of her friends could take the female feline (the family was first told she was male, hence the name), and she couldn't bear the thought of placing her in an animal shelter until she got back on her feet. "I was desperate, weeping," Terry says. "She's my family."

When Terry learned one Las Vegas domestic violence safe haven, Shade Tree Shelter, had just built a pet-boarding facility on its grounds for residents' animals, "I was in such relief." Terry packed up her suitcase and her cat just before Christmas and checked in. "It's just so good to get to visit with Byron every day," says Terry, 55, who has a new job and nearly enough savings to lease an apartment and start over. "It helped so much that I didn't have to worry about her."

Domestic abuse shelters have long recognized that abused families, often kept so isolated that pets are their only friends, won't leave the abuser because they know animals left behind may be harmed as a power play or retaliation. So shelters have worked with animal-welfare groups that provide temporary pet care to ensure that everyone gets out of the situation.

Today, the emerging alternative is for domestic abuse shelters to provide on-site pet boarding. So far, fewer than a half-dozen such shelters exist, says Allie Phillips, director of public policy for the non-profit American Humane Association. But the numbers are certain to increase, as efforts are afoot on two fronts.

American Humane has just compiled and distributed a how-to guide, and Phillips' goal is that by year's end, at least 15 shelters will offer or will soon offer on-site pet boarding. Doorways for Women and Families Safehouse in Arlington, Va., will be the first to use American Humane's Pets and Women's Shelters (PAWS) Program start-up guide — officials there are in final planning to provide pet housing later this year — but Phillips has been contacted by others seeking advice.

"Shelters are overworked and underfunded, and the last thing they feel they can do is add more to their plates, even though they might be inclined toward having on-site pet care. My goal was to simplify everything, answer all the questions, debunk all the myths and walk them through the process, from how to raise money to fund it … to how to keep the people and animals safe," says Phillips, a former prosecuting attorney who was presented with hundreds of domestic violence cases and spent nearly a year putting together the guide.

Having a blueprint that reduces to minutes or hours the animal-care planning discussions that heretofore would probably have taken weeks "removes a lot of the obstacles" that have prevented many shelters from launching such a program, Phillips says.

'Enormous' need for service, comfort

Concurrent efforts are in the offing from Staci Columbo, a Las Vegas marketing executive who launched Noah's Animal House, the pet facility at Shade Tree. She's developing her own guide "to take to other communities" this year. Her goal: "at least six across the country in five years." The need, she says, "is enormous."

Noah's, which accommodates up to 15 cats and 18 dogs, has drawn so many pet-owning families since its opening in October that it is full most of the time. Expansion plans already are being discussed.

Some abuse victims are satisfied with placing their pets temporarily in an animal shelter. But there are downsides: Sometimes the shelter is full, and some animals don't adapt well to that environment. And often, the already-stressed families are further troubled by their pets' absence, and they're not allowed to visit the animal for fear the abuser might track them there, putting people and animals at risk.

"When a person is in the midst of nothing familiar, the comfort a pet can provide is enormous," Phillips says.

"We had the experience with several women who would arrive with a garbage bag full of possessions and a pet in tow and refuse to check in when they learned that we would find a safe place for the animal, but it couldn't stay here with them," Columbo says. "We've known of women who lived in their cars so they could keep their pets with them and women who stayed in a shelter but kept their pet in the car parked on the street, and, of course, women who wouldn't leave their abuser because of concern for the safety of their animals. Each situation like this tore your heart out."

Benefits vs. concerns

Still, many say there are good reasons for not housing pets in domestic violence shelters — concerns about allergies, noise and bites; debates about whether pets on the grounds may put everyone at risk by attracting the spurned partner; and worries that a pet's presence may prevent a victim from focusing on addressing her own issues.

Marci Sanders, director of the Shelter for Abused Women & Children in Naples, Fla., says her staff had to consider all those questions when contemplating providing on-site care for residents' pets. But they moved ahead five years ago, "and the benefits so outweigh the negatives," she says. It costs less than $1,000 a year to care for about 100 pets annually in crates in an out-of-the-way room. And although "we've had a dog that dug holes in the yard, and one that barked for a while," she says, "in the big picture that is nothing."

Phillips hopes that within 10 years, "these kinds of arrangements will be commonplace." She placed a petition seeking support of on-site pet facilities at domestic abuse shelters online Feb. 23 at thepetitionsite.com; it has attracted more than 18,000 comments.

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RIP Dr Wiesel

Henri Wiesel, one of the best loved professors in the CIS department, passed away. I'm not sure what happened, but he was one of the sweetest professors ever, always willing to help and accomodate students. He was always friendly and smiling. I saw him yesterday morning and now I wish I'd given him a hug.

Rest in peace, Dr Wiesel. You are loved and missed.
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Donate to Philly PAWS while you shop!

In my never ending quest to save the kitties, I came upon this site - http://www.igive.com/phillypaws/

Basically, you sign up, and whenever you shop at a participating online store (and there are a ton of them) it donates a percentage of your purchase to your organization - in this case, Philly PAWS. You can install their little thingie, which seems totally legit, or you can just shop through their site. It seems like a pretty cool and effortless way to help out.

Also, they're having a contest based on page visits, not purchases right now, so if you sign up and click on 10 different stores every day, it'll help the shelter with a chance to win $1000!!

It doesn't cost you anything and everyone shops online. They have tons of big stores  - ebay, bestbuy, apple, AE, Kohl's, JCPenny's, QVC, so do some homeless animals a favor and sign up. Tell your friends, tell your families (everyone's mom shops online, seriously, and if you don't use ebay, you're not an american) and make a difference!!
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SOOOOO i went to volunteer at PAWS today and i came home with a mommy kitty and 5 babies to foster. Chris named her Juno, because she's really really young to be a mommy. They're SO CUTE. i can't even stand it. it warms my heart just being at the shelter and seeing how hard people work to save animals. Chris had a good time wrangling dogs, and I played with some kitties.

Pictures on facebook - loookie lookie at the adorrrrable kittens!  http://temple.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2175444&l=a30a3&id=8202040

That claims it's a public link if you're not my facebook friend.

i am so happy.

I am saving the kitties, a handful at a time.