4 Legs & a Tail LK Fall 2020

Page 11

WCHS and other VT shelters work with our trusted partners, St. Hubert’s Animal Welfare Center in New Jersey. One reason we love transporting with St Hubert’s is that they work with the sending shelters in the south to improve their overall operations. Every dog brought north for adoption results in a $25 payment to the sending shelter in the south. St. Hubert’s staff visits with these shelters to help improve their daily operations and has also sent shelter staff to national conferences for professional development. While brick and mortar shelters in Vermont honored the ban, not all rescues did. If you are looking for a dog online, here are some recommendations to help you choose wisely:

Choosing The Right Rescue

• Do your research and make sure the organization is truly a non-profit. Don’t take their word for it on their website. Check them out on the IRS webpage or look them up on Guidestar to see their financials, mission, and more. Any group transporting dogs that is not a non-profit might be taking dogs from puppymills and marketing them as “rescued” to profit from the sale of dogs. • All pets being transported over state lines are required to have a health certificate. It should be signed by a veterinarian within 10 days of transport. Ask any group you are working with if they are aware of and comply with this requirement • While many places will list their animals as located in Brattleboro, the dogs are often actually somewhere down south. Some rescue groups are doing great work pulling dogs from shelters and ensuring that adopters get excellent postadoption support. Some, however, have no staff or foster homes in New England. Ask any group you are working with to share their policy for post-adoption support and ask what happens if the adoption does not work out.

Annie Guion - Brattleboro, VT

If you choose to adopt with Vermont’s brick and mortar shelters, you can rest assured that the animal came from a shelter and not from a puppy mill, that all n 2019, 55% of dogs and 30% of cats the required regulations around transport were followed, that your adoption fee coming to the Windham County Humane will support all of our programs, and that we will be here if things don’t work out. Society (WCHS) came via transport. WCHS Adopting a new family member is a huge undertaking. It’s not always a perfect fit is not an anomaly in that regard. Most right from the start. We are here to make sure that you, your family, and your pet shelters in New England transport ani- are all doing well and navigating your new lives together successfully. mals both to meet the desire for families who want to adopt and to save the lives of animals in places where euthanasia is still a way to deal with overpopulation. New England shelters transport these animals while still meeting the needs of local animals. This is largely due to progressive practices, most notably providing affordable spay and neuter services, which led to a decrease in the local pet population. The pandemic resulted in a ban on the importation of animals into Vermont. This was a wise move on the state’s part, because due to a lack of laws around importation, many large trucks come just over the border to hand puppies and dogs out to eager adopters. This practice was leading to large groups of people gathering in parking lots. The problem is, no one is monitoring those large trucks, some of which have 200 dogs on board and come to VT every week. Some are viable, reputable rescues. However, there are reports from police of trucks that don’t have a current transport license or health certificates for every dog, as required by law. Some of these trucks are transporting dogs for organizations that look like non-profits on their website, but are not a registered 501©3. There is some concern that some of these dogs are coming from puppy mills while being marketed as “rescues”.

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Fall 2020

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Proven Ways to Keep Cats and Wild

4min
pages 62-64

Pets and Infectious Diseases in Children

4min
pages 60-61

John Muir's Dog, Stickeen Kate Kelly

9min
pages 56-59

Meal or Whole Meat?

2min
pages 54-55

For Pet's Sake: Adopting Any Pet Requires a

6min
pages 52-53

The Purrfect Story Tanya Sousa

3min
page 51

Pup With A Purpose Karen Sturtevant

6min
pages 48-50

An Unexpected Visitor Karen Sturtevant

7min
pages 44-47

I Am Afraid of Anesthesia for My Pet

5min
pages 42-43

Your Pet May Be In Pain M. Kathleen Shaw, DVM

8min
pages 34-37

Alternatively Speaking: Pets Have Anxiety Too

6min
pages 38-41

International Dark-Sky Association: Keeping The

4min
page 33

2020: The Year of the Chipmunk? Scott Borthwick

3min
page 32

Love is Blind Gerda Silver

4min
pages 30-31

Friends, Family, or Farm Animal? Dorothy Crosby

4min
pages 28-29

Therapeutic Riding During a Pandemic Susan Miller

4min
pages 22-23

In The Moment: Horses and Mindfulness

7min
pages 24-27

Litter Box Training Your Rabbit Crystal Milbauer

2min
page 19

The Unexpected Snap

3min
pages 20-21

Veterans Wanted

3min
page 18

National Fire Pup Day

2min
pages 16-17

The Four-legged Friend Behind This Year's

3min
page 7

Bentley's Big Improvement Caitlin Richard

1min
pages 14-15

The Importance of Microchipping Your Cat

3min
page 10

The Donkey Days of Summer Found Their Way to New England

2min
pages 5-6

Choosing The Right Rescue Annie Guion

3min
page 11

Charity Begins at Home Marina Kinney

4min
pages 12-13

Monadnock Humane Society Seeks Quantum

4min
pages 8-9
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