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Supporting Humane Education In Our Nation's School
YOU
Have The Key To Make Any and All Changes Necessary To Help
The Animals !! People just do not realize the
potential we have by giving just a bit of our day to doing
something different in lieu of the same or related
thing. It actually opens up various avenues that leads
to the same goals. Some of these newly discovered venues
will be noticeable improvements from the road taken by
everyone else.
We just have to be open to change, smart
enough to recognize when change is necessary and determined
enough to make a few of these changes in spite of the
conflicts from others.
Ignoring these new avenues
is the simple largest factor in the animal movement not moving
forward in a more productive manner.
I find the today
that the politicians do not look at things the way we
do. Even one of the county commissioners in Champaign
County, Ohio, told me straight up "we do not have time for
animal problems - we have human problems which are more
important. At least that is all we hear from our
constituents.
I hear that from my working
partners in politics all around the nation as well.
Because the animal people are so busy working on today's
animals which stem from yesterday's problems, they don't take
the time to recognize that it is actually tomorrow that can
and will make the changes that everyone really wants."
It's not through the large animal organizations that
anything of any measurable amount can be achieved. I believe
that has been proven substantially over the decades.. With the
ever growing number of communities across the nation who are
killing 80% of the animals that come into the city or county
run pounds, how many of them have actually been approached by
one of the larger animal orgs offering guidelines or financial
assistance to make the necessary changes in local laws,
implementing a humane education program or changing the
elected officials to garner the necessary support required for
these plans to work?
Politicians forget who out they in
office - the people - and the people have concerns (when they
learn about them) in which they are interested. They
really do listen to the voters - it is, after all, how they
secure re election votes. If enough people around the
nation had suddenly begun to believe that the color red has
negative properties and that blue was the better alternative,
you better bet your last dollar that any and every candidate
across this nation would be seen with blue in their outfit -
completely void of any red.
Politicians need to be educated as well. They are
always looking for ways to save money. So, it's up to us
to show them the facts. In New Hampshire, a statewide program
cut the cost of neutering pets to $10 for poor residents. The
state saved $3 in animal control costs for every $1 spent on
the program. And it saved animals' lives. Over an eight-year
period between 1993 and 2001, the state recorded a nearly 75
percent drop in the number of dogs and cats killed.
Cities that manage to stem their animal kill rates don't stop
with sterilization. They often pair those services with
extensive public education. Those efforts let the public know
the size of the problem and what happens to thousands of
unwanted pets every year. Cities have taken out billboards,
allowed euthanasia to be recorded and shown by news media,
and walked shelter dogs wearing the dates they'll be killed if
they aren't adopted.
2004 is an election
year. The question I hear most is "are you pro life or
pro choice?" This is a good question for people running
for national office, our U.S. Senates and U.S.
Congressman. It has nothing to do with state, county and
local government. Why are we not asking the state,
county and local politicians if they are in favor of humane
education in our schools and if they favor adoption programs
as opposed to euthanasia of animals? These are
issues that state, county and local politicians have say
over. Clearly, if these two topics were hammered into
their heads now, they would appear in their platforms for
election campaigns later on. "We don't think we need to
shock the community by showing them 50 dead animals," The city
of Charlotte, then took on a more gentle approach and it was a
downright pure undeniable failure. $4 million a year to catch,
house and kill animals, it has done little to address the
cause of the problem. When a local group convinced one of the
network TV stations to air live euthanasia during their eve
news each night for a full week, the message was clear and
they experienced a drastic decrease of 50% in the following
weeks that continued until a new program could be
implemented.
Elected officials do everything in their power not
to upset any voter or offend any one of their
constituents. It may cost them votes. So, it will
become very clear as to which ones are actually 'on board'
with saving the animals by their actions.
Clearly
stated by a county commissioner in Mohave County Arizona, if
everyone in rescue and/or animal rights would ask these
questions of their local politicians, we would change the face
of local government. Clearly, there are millions
and millions of people involved in rescue and rights
across the nation. If we all voted for candidates who
are in tune with our issues, we could change the face of local
government.
His brother is in government in another
state as well as his brother in law.
They would both
tell everyone the same thing.
People do not realize the
power that is within their grasp. This is what I think
would do more that anything else. If the animal people would
just simply assert themselves to the elected officials and
state two things clearly, not only would they have a say in
the government's decisions since the politicians want to be
re-elected, they would actually see those changes come
about. They (the animal people ) would actually have
more of a voice in the government than any lobbying effort
known today - including the NRA and others
combined.
The two things would be to enforce and clean up
existing animal protection laws and the implementation of a
mandatory humane education curriculum in our schools.
There is no other way to start the ball rolling. If the
next generation grows up with the same ignorance that this
generation has grown up with, then not only are rescuers going
to be facing the same level of unwanted animals in the
shelters around the nation and on the streets, they will
likely be facing even more since the population is
growing.
Example: From 1992 to 2002, Americans
spent over $20billion on animal protection related taxes and
donations to various organizations to protect and solve. We
are talking about millions and millions of people involved
here. How much can you honestly point to on a nationwide
scale that is a noticeable change resulting from these
tremendous figures? Reason? Each effort is
singular in nature, non communicative of other efforts,
many times duplicated in corruptive overlaps and many times
this combination simply fails to fill in the gaps that would
make these efforts more cohesive and successful.
Cities and counties which have seen successful
results and saved tax-payers dollars as well have all
implemented the following programs:
* Increase sterilizations and public education,
especially in low-income areas. • Increase the number
of animals adopted from the shelter. • Embed
microchips in animals who leave the shelter so, if they're
picked up as strays, the owners can be
identified. • Trap and neuter feral
cats. • Help pet owners train their adopted animals so
they don't develop behavioral problems and get returned to the
shelter.
Once we elect governments in tune with the
issues, we can confront them and educate them that spending
millions of dollars in shelter contract and euthanasia
projects is money should be use for public education and
no-kill shelter facilities. Maybe a little expensive at
first but will pay for itself in the near
future.
Example Clark County, Nevada is spending 1.2
million a year to run the current shelter. The new
contact for 2005 (20 year contract) is 1.6 million per
year. Multiply that by every shelter or pound in
this nation. Yes, some have smaller budgets but
the major cities are spending a lot more just to kill the
animals. 2002 the city of Las Vegas and Clark County euthanized 24,500 animals. This county has no humane
education in the schools at any level. So they will
always be facing this same problem. This county
also has no plan to attempt to adopt out more dogs and cats
through programs that other cities have successfully
implemented, so they are not operating anything less than a
facility to kill animals. Clark County is Las Vegas. To spend
this amount of funding on nothing more than killing animals is
an unconscionable waste of life and a needless drain on public
money." Not one of the animal orgs came forward with an offer
to help or any real life suggestions. They are all worried
about yesterday's problems today and securing funding to stay
afloat.
Local and national projects of educating the
children is very important. Neither of these ideas takes
money. They only take communication and persistence to
educate those who can and will make these issues become
laws that are sensible and enforceable. These ideas then
become law at the voting booth. Plain and
simple.
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