Tribute to Diamond

As many of you supporters know, we have two hotlines to leave messages, an office phone number where counselors take calls Monday – Saturday, but I bet not many of you knew that I use my phone to receive text messages for help.  The pet owners who text me are often experiencing homelessness, and text me at all hours of the day.  Surprisingly, very few text me outside of normal business hours.  Usually, pet owners want to know where they can get services, and I never hear from them again. Then there are the pet owners who text me often, sometimes to let me know they are ok, other times to let me know that they need someone to text them messages of support and hope because they are feeling alone and hopeless. Worse case scenario, I receive a text from a friend, letting me know that a pet owner has passed away, and they need us to find a home for the pet of the deceased client.

I remember getting the text from Diamond’s owner around 5:00AM on June 10th, letting me know that he had died.  For the past month, we all knew that Diamond was ill, diagnosed with high proteins in his liver.  He was not able to keep food down, and had been vomiting.  In fact, Diamond had another appointment at the animal hospital the day he died.  Counselor Amanda called his owner, and learned that she had walked to the animal hospital with his body, and had waited outside until the hospital opened because she wanted to make sure to have his body cremated.

Diamond’s owner sent me a text the following day. ” Thank you SO very much for all you’ve done for my Fur-Baby Diamond & I. Far most important to myself is being here for me in my time of need and wrenching loss.”                                                 Sometimes there is no one who understands what it’s like to grieve after the death of a pet, especially when one is homeless.  I continued to check in with her via text to see how she was doing, and to make sure she understood that she had people who cared.  The loss threw her into a deep depression. As she opened up to me, she explained that she had a devastating loss in 2006, losing two adult children in a bus accident.  She told me that people around her didn’t get why she was still so sad, telling her, “He was only a dog.”  For her and everyone at DDR there is no such thing as “only a dog”. We understand, our dogs are our family. Being together 24/7, she didn’t need to explain their bond to me.

I’m happy to report that I received another text recently, thanking all of the […]

Keeping Chiquis where she belongs

Dagoberto and his beloved Chiquis

Senior citizen Dagoberto visited our Watts Pet Resource Center, looking for help last month. He was being harassed by the manager at his senior living apartment building because of his dog, Chiquis.  Despite being spayed, vaccinated, and microchipped, the manager was requiring proof that she was healthy, or she had to leave.  The description of the proof was very ambiguous, and sounded like a way to force him to move out, since giving up Chiquis was never an option.

One of first clients of the morning. They arrived at 6:05 AM for an 8:00 AM clinic

These pet owners brings their dogs every month for flea & tick prevention

Like many of the pet owners we meet through our programs, they often believe that they don’t have options, feeling stressed out and desperate.  Thanks to our partnership with HEART LA we were able to connect him to free legal services.  The manager received a letter, stating that Chiquis is not violating any rules, and she is allowed to stay with Dagoberto. Despite the rain last Sunday, he came out to thank us at our free dog clinic at Fred Roberts Park.  The worried look on his face was replaced with a smile, as he communicated to us how truly grateful he was for our help.

 

Chiquis was one of the more than 170 puppies and dogs who came out in the rain to receive free services.

Each month, we spay/neuter, vaccinate, microchip, deworm, and provide flea and tick prevention for upwards of 200 dogs who live in South Los Angeles

It’s through your generosity that we are able to help pet owners like Dagoberto keep their pets where they belong – in their homes!

Thank you for your support

 

Happy 7th Anniversary Shelter Intervention Program

On April 6, 2013, with one counselor, and a goal of maybe preventing 400 pets per year, our South LA Shelter Intervention Program was launched.  Today, as we did back in 2013, we ask one simple question, “How can we help you keep your pet?” Today, our this program is run as a full time, six day a week program, thanks to a generous grant from the Michelson Found Animals Foundation, partnering with Los Angeles Animal Services, we have assisted more than 11,000 family pets stay in their first home – forever home.

Most of the need is medical services, which range from a vaccination, to a tumor removal surgery, relief from a chronic eye, ear of skin condition, and all types of medical treatments, including crisis care for parvo and pets being hit by cars or attacked by another animal.

All of our pet owner are low income, most living at, or below the poverty line.  Some live pay check to pay check, with little or no extra money in their budget for a pet emergency.  While others are experiencing homelessness, and their cat or dog is their best friend, and they have no money to pay for any services.

This model has spread to three other shelters, run by two other non profits. Home Dog LA runs the North Central program and Rescue Train runs both the East and West Valley shelter programs.

Imagine a day when every shelter has this type of program.  A pet owner would never have to surrender their pet to the shelter because they could not afford to pay for a spay/neuter surgery, a dog license, redemption fees, costs associated with a notice to comply, humane euthanasia, and all types of medical care.

While this program is not 100% free to the pet owner, we ask each person to pay what they can, offering them assistance in raising money, finding solutions to cover the costs involved.  DDR pays what the pet owner cannot afford.  This is more than a shelter diversion program, or program to reduce the numbers of cats and dogs being euthanized at shelters due to space.  Shelter Intervention is about helping people, many who are in a personal crisis that involves far more than their pet.  Many tears, both happy and sad, have been shed at the shelter intervention table, over these past seven years, some stories too personal to write on this blog or share on social media.  Not every case has a happy ending, but to offer a pet owner options, to offer hope, to let people know that someone cares about them and their pets is the priceless gift that our counselors give Tuesday – Sunday at the South LA Shelter #becauseweallneedhelpsometimes

Stories from the shelter intervention/prevention program

Romeo is homeless and relies on our shelter intervention /prevention program to feed his dog Snoopy. There are many families who start off in desperate situations with their pets, thinking they have no choice but to surrender their pet to a shelter.  Many get through the crisis and they need monthly pet food and other supplies. Thanks to a generous donation from The Urban Pet we were able to distribute dog food last week.

We meet families who are transitioning out of homelessness and are living in a motels.  There are many motels that are very low cost and Pups saved through SIPcharge by the week, allowing pets.  When Roscoe was diagnosed with parvo, despite being close to two years old, his family barely had enough money to pay their weekly motel fees. Taking him to a vet was not a possibility. With no money and no transportation DDR was the only place for his family to turn to.  Another one of our special families, who also lives in the motel, gave Roscoe’s family a ride to the vet where Roscoe was treated.

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In partnership with The Rescue Train, we have expand our program to serve the East Valley Shelter.  Here is a story from last week.  Look at the smiles on this mom and son’s faces, THEY FOUND THEIR BIRD! They went to the East Valley Shelter looking for their bird, they found him, but they didn’t have the $17 to redeem him. DDR paid the fees so their bird could go back home.

Downtown Dog Rescue now oversees two shelter intervention/prevention programs at South LA Shelter made possible by Found Animals Foundation and East Valley in our partnership with the Rescue Train.  We appreciate LA Animal Services for trusting us to run this program and for all the support we receive from LAAS staff and volunteers. Over 5000 pets have been prevented from entering a shelter since we started in April of 2013.  We believe that every person deserves a second chance, an opportunity to learn and have options to make informed decisions.  By giving pet owners options, we will continue to see less animals surrendered to shelters.

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Get Ready for GIVING TUESDAY November 25th

If 1000 Downtown Dog Rescue Supporters donate $10 each, you can help us reach our goal of raising $10,000! 

When you donate at least $10, you are part of the positive change happening at the South LA Shelter, where families like Angie and her daughter, who needed help paying a pet deposit so that “Barley” could stay in his home, with his family, instead of being surrendered to the shelter.

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Most of the families that we meet do not want to surrender their pet. In fact, most have tried everything they know, to keep their pet out of the shelter. Poverty is the main reason thousands of pet owners that we have assisted, consider surrendering their pet to the South LA Shelter.

Downtown Dog Rescue pays for medical treatment, pet deposits, pays for dog licenses, offers free weekly dog training classes in Compton and sponsored more than 10,000 free spay/neuter surgeries, for dog and cats living in some of the most under served communities in Los Angeles County.

NOVEMBER 254th is GIVING TUESDAY  We need you and 999 other supporters to donate at least $10 to help us reach our goal.  Click here to donate  http://www.gofundme.com/DDRSHELTER

 

 

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