Stop the Killing
The Tompkins County SPCA is located in Ithaca, New York.
Tompkins County SPCA maintains an animal control contract with
the city of Ithaca as well as all ten townships in the county.
The semi rural/urban county has a population of 100,000 people.
Tompkins County SPCA has a full-time staff of twelve, an annual
budget of $616,000 and takes in approximately 3,000 animals per
year.
On June 11, 2001, I started as Executive Director of the
Tompkins County SPCA. Before I shared with the staff my
philosophy and approach to animal sheltering, I wanted to give
them an opportunity to show and tell me their own, unencumbered
by fear that it would conflict with mine. What were their views
of releasing feral cats after neutering? How did they temperament
test dogs for aggression? Could people who surrendered animals
put in a "call before euthanasia" in the event their pet could
not be placed? Should we release animals to rescue groups? I
could have told them what I was planning, but I wanted to see
where they were, what their experience was, whether they had
experiences that were different from my own? My plan was to spend
the first two weeks learning how they cleaned the kennels, fed
the animals, treated them for illness, tested dogs for
aggression, took animals in, adopted them out, investigated
cruelty complaints.
On June 12, my staff informed me that our dog kennels were full
and that since a litter of six puppies just came in, I needed to
decide who was going to be killed to make space. I asked for Plan
B. There was none. I asked for suggestions. None were
forthcoming. My plan to be the silent observer came to an end. It
was time for a staff meeting.
I introduced myself formally, told them about my background and
experiences, and shared with them my view of what it takes to be
a successful shelter. Success, I said, is defined by how many
animals go home alive, period. Of course, we want to make sure
they are going into responsible, loving homes-anything less would
mean that the animal would come right back, taking us further
away from, not closer, to our goals. I told them that hard work
was expected to make sure we saved them, but hard work was not
enough. At the end of the day, everyone would be measured by
results. The rest would fall into place: community support, new
resources, and the programs that follow. To get the results, we
needed the desire to succeed, the creativity to come up with
solutions, and the flexibility to implement them.
As a former prosecutor, I learned in the courtroom that context
matters greatly. That concepts like "truth," "guilt," "reasonable
doubt," were often meaningless abstractions devoid of a clear,
articulable concept. Who can forget the famous quip "if it
doesn't fit, you must acquit?" Jurors can grasp that. So, without
context, "desire," "flexibility," "creativity" were meaningless
abstractions, the kind of jargon batted around by self-help
gurus. So I used the full cages scenario to provide context to
these concepts: What will we do with the puppies? Should we kill
dogs to make room? Do we have foster homes? Is there something we
haven't tried? I got nowhere. "We don't have anywhere to put
them." "We don't have any foster parents who would take dogs or
puppies." "This is how we have always done it." Day two and my
experiment with trying to build consensus came to an end.
"Volunteers do not bring home a paycheck," I said. "They do what
they do for the sheer love of the animals and for no other
reason. If they throw up their hands and say 'there is nothing we
can do,' I will accept it from them." I looked around at the
blank stares. "Staff," I continued, "are paid to save lives. If
they throw up their hands and say 'there is nothing we can do,' I
may as well eliminate their position and use the money more
constructively to either hire someone who will find a solution or
for something else like temporary boarding space at a local
kennel. So, what are we going to do with the puppies that doesn't
involve killing animals?"
And a solution was found: horse troughs for puppies in the lobby
next to the front desk. What better way to showcase those little
gems, keep a loving vigil over them while they play and sleep and
ensure much needed socialization during their tender critical
period? This simple change - giving staff responsibility for
finding alternatives to killing - has since resulted in many such
innovations, but the process took time.
The next weekend, 70 kittens were relinquished to the shelter,
above and beyond the regular cadre of incoming dogs, cats, and
other assorted animals (including 16 mice left out by our
dumpster). As the humane officers informed me that they had just
raided a residence and were bringing in 30 sick cats, I overheard
one staff member say to another "maybe now he will euthanize some
animals." Back to square one. I explained that killing for space
reasons was no longer an option, and again, appropriate
alternatives were found.
Not all staff were supportive of our newly achieved no-kill
status. Over the next five months, seven of the twelve full-time
employees on staff moved on, eventually replaced with new
co-workers who shared our vision of a no-kill Tompkins County. In
the meantime, not a single animal was killed for lack of
space.
Taking the Community No-Kill
How does a traditional shelter make a community No-kill? In Tompkins County, we did it with a simple, yet highly effective three-step process:
- Stop the killing.
- Stop the killing.
- Stop the killing.
I am not joking. No-kill starts as an act of will.
On February 6, 1901, the Tompkins County SPCA was incorporated
and opened its first shelter three years later. For the next one
hundred years, the SPCA would act in the primary capacity of
pound master for Tompkins County, a beautiful rural community in
Central New York. Like so many shelters with animal control
contracts, the Tompkins County SPCA would rely on the fiction
that the only solution to pet overpopulation is the "blue
solution," and continue to blame "irresponsible owners" for the
fact that so many animals would go out the door in barrels rather
than in the loving arms of families. Like so many other shelters,
it never once saw the killing as its own failure to find
solutions, meet its mandate, or live up to the very real but
often ignored shelter credo that "every life is precious." A new
Board of Directors decided to make a change. It was time to take
some personal responsibility.
Next year, the Tompkins County SPCA will celebrate its 100th
birthday, no small achievement. But to highlight the centennial
would be an exercise in elevating form over substance compared to
the real celebration: the first traditional shelter that serves
as an animal control agency that takes in every stray animal and
has not killed a single healthy animal, feral cat, or sick or
injured treatable animal since June 11, 2001. And that includes
goats, chickens, bunnies, guinea pigs, and other assorted
critters, in addition to dogs and cats.
I have worked for many no-kill organizations including the San
Francisco SPCA, where the concept of creating a partnership
between municipal animal control and a private no-kill agency was
developed. Such a model is now touted as the way of the future.
Unfortunately, the model not applicable in Tompkins County where,
like so many other rural/semi-urban areas, there are no other
shelters in the community. Nor are there any prospects for
one-small counties do not, as a general rule, prioritize animal
sheltering for public funding. Like many other rural/semi-urban
communities, the Tompkins County SPCA is the only animal
organization in the county, aside from a few dog or cat fanciers
that also do rescue. If we were to relinquish our contracts, the
alternative would be a pick up truck and someone's barn. Dogs
would be slaughtered by the thousands. We would have to find
another way.
Over the next five months at the Tompkins County SPCA , I
developed a flurry of programs to increase the number of homes,
reduce birthrates, rehabilitate injured animals, and keep animals
with their loving, responsible caretakers. We plead our case
before the public and asked for their help. The result?
In 2001, the death rate in Tompkins County plummeted by 78%
during our peak summer season, the number of animals sterilized
prior to adoption went from 10% to 100%, we went from a dozen to
140 regular volunteers, and from a handful of foster homes to 196
during our busy summer months. And the level of community giving
skyrocketed. What happened? We went from excuses to answers, from
blaming to solving. We went back to the basics.
The Keys to Our Success
There is no magic formula to saving lives in Tompkins County. We started with a commitment: to stop the killing of healthy and treatable animals. To make the dream a reality required accountability, services that get results, and the community's help. These are the programs that worked for us:
- Volunteers. When I arrived in Tompkins County, the then-shelter manager informed me that it was her view that "volunteers were more trouble than they were worth." That view would be simply ludicrous if it were not so disturbing. We increased our volunteer core to 140 from about 10-by asking people for their help, and telling them what their help would accomplish.
- Foster Homes. Foster parents are free to adopt their own animals or find homes for them. If I trust them to bottle feed baby kittens for four weeks around the clock, I am going to trust them to place them with loving, responsible caretakers-after we spay or neuter them.
- Off site adoptions. The Tompkins County SPCA attends every neighborhood fair, grand opening, Church bazaar, community event, or simply sets up shop at corner malls, stores, and neighborhoods. Over 10% of all our adoptions occur off-site and the number is steadily increasing. Once the community began to learn about the lives being saved at the TC SPCA, the offers to help by hosting events began pouring in.
- Public Access Hours. The Tompkins County SPCA is open seven days a week until 5:30 pm giving working people an opportunity to reclaim lost pets or find new ones.
- Pre-Release Sterilization. No animal goes home unaltered so that we do not contribute to overpopulation or kill the offspring of pets we ourselves adopt out.
- Work with Local Veterinarians. We offer free and low-cost spay/neuter thanks to partnerships with local practitioners, and get vastly discounted fees on care for our sick and injured animals.
- Get the word out. The Tompkins County SPCA is either on the radio, television or newspaper an average of 20 days out of every month without paying for a single ad. Get those press release, events, stories out daily!
- Ask for help. Once you give us support, we will be unrelenting. You can say no, but we will always ask. And people generally always give. Ask, ask, ask. We speak at community groups and always end by asking them "to support our lifesaving work by opening your hearts and wallets to the needy animals who make their way to the shelter."
- Treat volunteers and staff at the end of the day, but only for a job well done. Hard work alone doesn't save lives. Hard work, effective programs, and results save lives. Reward that!
- Come in under budget on one line-item and one line-item only: euthanasia drugs. Fundraise and meet your line-items for the rest.
But the bottom line is this: we evaluate and treat each animal
as an individual and stay flexible. Too many shelters lose sight
of individual animals as they stay rigid with their shelter
protocols, believing that these are engraved in stone. They are
not. Protocols are important because they ensure accountability
from staff. But protocols without flexibility can have the
opposite effect: stifling innovation, causing lives to be
needlessly lost, allowing shelter employees who fail to save
lives to hide behind a paper trail.
Come what may, you are only successful if the animals go home
alive. The number of children reached through humane education is
nice, the number of volunteer hours amassed is nice, the size of
the endowment is nice. None of it amounts to much if the save
rate (the percentage of animals going home alive) is not steadily
increasing every year. In Tompkins County, by sheer will, hard
work, creativity and flexibility, this year 9 out of every 10
dogs and 8 out of every 10 cats will go home alive!
And we did it, not with a big shelter, not with lots of money,
but with a commitment to stop the killing and the flexibility to
see it through. It started with six puppies in a horse trough.
Today, it involves hundreds of animals in foster care, hundreds
more traveling to off-site adoptions, a coalition of breed
specific rescue groups, local veterinary participation, and a
community that has faith in its shelter and wants to support our
lifesaving results. Is each life precious as every shelter tells
us? Only if we believe that at the end of the day, every death of
a healthy, treatable sick or injured animal or feral cat is a
profound failure. And only if the shelter director acknowledges
that the responsibility for the death is his or hers alone.
© Nathan Winograd
Shelter Website: Tompkins
County SPCA
Email: winograd@spcaonline.com
Nathan Winograd is the Executive Director of the Tompkins County SPCA in Ithaca, New York. Nathan has been instrumental in developing groundbreaking programs for feral cats for more than ten years at institutions like Stanford University and the San Francisco SPCA. Nathan has also worked with the Animal Legal Defense Fund, the Greyhound Protection League, the Palo Alto Humane Society, Farm Sanctuary, Alley Cat Allies and the ASPCA. In a former life, Nathan was a criminal prosecutor
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