Tag Archives: spay

Successful TNR Program Boosted by Local Veterinarians

By Bob Gordon, FOTAS Director of Communications Aiken veterinarians Holly Woltz and Cindy Brown are helping FOTAS with its Trap/Neuter/Return (TNR) program and have already fixed close to 300 community and feral cats for local residents.
“I became partners with FOTAS and the County Shelter because I’ve seen the gut-wrenching consequences of cat overpopulation,” said Dr. Woltz, Chief of Staff for Veterinary Services. “The numbers are still too high with these feral cats, and the shelter has a limited budget…stretched to a tiny thread to meet many needs. Since we can spay/neuter these animals for FOTAS at a very low price, I volunteered our services. FOTAS needs every penny!”
TNR is regarded as the most humane and effective way to control feral cat population growth. Using this method, all the feral cats in a colony are trapped, neutered/spayed and then returned to their territory, where they continue to thrive on their own. Young kittens that can still be socialized, as well as friendly adults, are placed in foster care and eventually adopted out to loving homes. Dr. Brown, who practices at Aiken Animal Hospital, also began volunteering her practice’s services to FOTAS late last year, and says by all accounts TNR seems to be working.
“Any time that FOTAS volunteers or the County Shelter calls for help, we accommodate their needs whenever possible to help the stray animal situation in Aiken,” she said. “I cannot stress enough the importance of education to aid in the [cat overpopulation] problem and we will continue to help spay and /or neuter as many stray animals as we can,” she added. Since launching the TNR Program in 2013, FOTAS has paid for the surgeries of more than 870 community cats. “The TNR program is a socially responsible and compassionate approach to serving these cats and the public,” said Dr. Woltz. “As a result, cats live healthier and more peaceful lives.”
The County also provides traps and can do a limited amount of spay/neuter surgeries for feral and community cats. If you need financial assistance with spay/neutering your domesticated cat or dog, the County has vouchers you can apply for at the shelter and FOTAS can also help through the Fix-A-Pet Program. Please donate to FOTAS to support the TNR and Fix-A-Pet programs, as well as provide other assistance to the homeless animals at the County Shelter. To make a donation, you can go to our website, FOTASaiken.org, or bring your contribution to the shelter at 333 Wire Road in Aiken. And while you’re there, visit our adoptable animals. The shelter is still at full capacity and the steady stream of homeless animals being brought through our doors has not let up. If you are looking for a cat (or dog), NOW is a great time to find a furry companion at the County Shelter. Their lives are in our hands…
Holly Woltz DVM
Holly Woltz DVM
Cindy Brown DVM
Cindy Brown DVM
                 

FOTAS partnership with PetSmart boosts shelter cat adoptions

By Bob Gordon, FOTAS Communications Director

Audie Murphy, Felix, Tiffy, Avalon, Kiki, Pip and Pickles are each in their own cat carrier after being examined, vaccinated, microchipped, and given a final flea treatment. Once the pre-prepared adoption forms and other paperwork is checked over and put into folders by Aiken County Animal Shelter (ACAS) staff members, the seven cats and kittens are ready to begin their short journey from the shelter to the PetSmart store on Whiskey Road.

An ACAS adoption assistant transports the chorus of meowing felines to the Aiken PetSmart, and upon arriving is greeted by Store Manager Butch Hampton or one of his friendly employees. The PetSmart team is always happy to see new cats come in and takes pride in its role of helping adopt them to customers.

“Things are going great with the work we are doing with FOTAS and the County Shelter,” Butch said. “Everybody is fully engaged and committed to this partnership, and I think we make a good team.”

The ACAS representative makes sure all of the felines are settled into their PetSmart cat apartments located in the back-left corner of the store. Then, the PetSmart staff takes over, ensuring that any interested customers receive the information and paperwork needed to adopt the cats. The adoption fee is $35, which includes spay/neuter, vaccinations and microchip.

Before FOTAS began its direct partnership with PetSmart, the adoption fee for the store’s cats was about twice as much as it is now. Also, adoptions were managed by a rescue that required a home inspection of potential adopters. While a worthy precaution, this added stipulation could take a lot of extra time. Now, folks can adopt a cat and take it home right away.

It is a mutually beneficial relationship. The cats draw customers to PetSmart and the store serves as a second venue for the shelter to showcase its adoptable felines. But the real winners of this collaborative effort are the cats themselves. With the effective teamwork between the organizations, the shelter cats are finding homes quicker, making space for more cats to get their chance at being adopted. Since just mid-December, more than 35 shelter cats have been adopted at the PetSmart store. Since the partnership was initiated, the Shelter has replenished PetSmart with new cats every week.

Also fully committed to the goal of saving the shelter’s cats and finding them forever homes are eight volunteers that help keep the PetSmart cats clean, watered and fed. They follow a strict schedule, making sure that someone comes in to maintain the cats’ living area twice a day, every day. Some volunteers stay for hours to play with the felines, helping to socialize and prepare them for their future forever homes.


“I think having the County’s homeless cats at both the shelter and PetSmart helps the Aiken community see how many beautiful and loving cats are available,” said Volunteer Judy Albert. “They all need permanent and loving homes.”

Their lives are in our hands.

For more information about the PetSmart cat adoptions, please go to www.fotasaiken.org and be sure to check out the shelter cats available for adoption at the ACAS, 333 Wire Road in Aiken or at the Aiken PetSmart, 2927 Whiskey Road.

Why you should spay or neuter your pet

By Joanna D. Samson, Vice President, FOTAS

Last year, 4800 animals passed through the door of the Aiken County Animal Shelter. 3000 of those animals were saved. 1800 did not leave the Shelter alive.

The vast majority of these animals did nothing wrong. They were victims of owners who brought them into this world and then washed their hands of them, leaving the rest of us to pay for their neglect.

And while 3000 is a record number of animals saved thanks to the efforts of the County and FOTAS, make no mistake: it is impossible to re-home all 4800 animals in a pet-saturated community like Aiken or in the communities served by our rescue partners in other parts of the country.

The only way to reduce the shockingly high number of animals consigned to the Shelter is for every Aiken County pet owner to spay and neuter their pets.

Plus, it’s good for your pet. In addition to lowering intake at the Shelter, your pet will live longer. Spayed or neutered animals have significantly less health problems.

Spayed or neutered animals also are less likely to roam, which means they are less likely to catch diseases from other animals, get lost, fight with other dogs, or get hit by a car (it has been estimated that 85% of dogs hit by cars are unaltered).

Spaying your female before she is 6 months of age means you can avoid the messy, noisy heat cycles that typically occur twice a year and that wreak havoc among the neighborhood’s male canine and feline populations.

Your cat or dog will be a better pet – spaying and neutering eliminates unpleasant spraying and marking.

Neutering your dog decreases potentially aggressive behavior to other animals and people – particularly children, who are by far the most frequent victims of dog bites.

Plus, it’s cheaper for the community as a whole. If everyone fixes their pets, it will dramatically reduce the number of homeless and abandoned animals that must be cared for with taxpayer’s dollars in the public shelter system.

By the way, if you are worried that spaying or neutering your dog will make him less protective, don’t be. Dogs are naturally protective by nature, particularly if you love and feed them.

Nor will altering you pet make it fat and lazy – only a bad diet and lack of exercise will do that.

Moreover, the cost to spay or neuter your pet has never been more affordable. Aiken County has a voucher program, supplemented by FOTAS, to provide low-cost spay/neuter services to residents who need financial assistance. The vouchers are distributed at the County Shelter at 333 Wire Road.

Make arrangements to spay or neuter your animal today. Convince your neighbors, friends and family to spay and neuter their pets, too.

There are so many loving, deserving animals in the Shelter that need a home – why bring more animals into a world where their safety and care is so uncertain?

Their lives are in our hands.

Love your pet? Then fix your pet!

By Joanna D. Samson, FOTAS Vice President. 

What do Lucy, Skye, Olivia, Zeus, Roberta, Harley, Andrew, Bane, Butch, Zach, Dante, Buster, Milo, Brees, Leroy, Triscit, Biscuit, Snowhite, Alberta, Rowdy, Axel, Rory, Destiny, and Tamara have in common?

Other than being canines who ended up at the Aiken County Animal Shelter through no fault of their own, they are energetic, muscular, sleek, barrel-chested, short-snouted, square-headed people-pleasers with big goofy smiles, long tongues and irresistible urges to chase balls and curl up next to their humans on a couch to watch Living Dead reruns.

In short, they are all pit bulls or pit bull crosses.

They are also all lucky, because most of these dogs have found homes and humans to adore. However, because they are pit bullish, they spent a longer time in the shelter than their cute, fluffy, floppy-eared shelter mates – a seriously perilous position in a public shelter with limited space.

And in the County shelter, like other public shelters around the country, many of their brethren are not so lucky. Pit bulls are deemed unadoptable and euthanized at much higher rates than other breeds before they even get to the adoption floor.

Yet often the very people who are attracted to pit bulls refuse to spay or neuter their pets. They say it is cruel and unnatural to take away their manhood or breeding capacity.

Really? In my book, it is unspeakably cruel and unnatural to bring pit bull puppies into the world when there are thousands upon thousands of deserving, homeless pits across the country who are likely to be killed without ever having known the love of a responsible human. Really.

The truth is, in an animal-rich environment like Aiken, it’s impossible to adopt your way out of this problem. Last year in the County alone, excluding the City, 4500 animals passed through the shelter and 50% of those were euthanized. Those are grim numbers.

The only way to meaningfully reduce the euthanasia rate is to reduce the intake rate, and the only way to reduce the intake rate is to eliminate the overpopulation of unwanted animals, and the only way to reduce overpopulation is for every citizen, and their families, and their friends to spay and neuter their animals. Period.

There are no legitimate reasons not to spay and neuter your pets. Research has proved that animals who are “fixed” live healthier, longer lives, are easier to control and make better family-members.

What’s more, you don’t need to breed your dog so your children can experience the “miracle of birth” – you can foster one of our many pregnant mamas. You and your children will get to experience the joy of birthing and caring for the puppies, FOTAS will provide food and medical supplies, and when the puppies have been weaned, you can hand them over to be sent to their new homes knowing you have done a great deed.

Spaying or neutering your pet has never been easier or more affordable. Plus you may be eligible for financial assistance through the County or City voucher program or FOTAS Fix-a-Pet.

Call us today at (803) 514-4313, and we’ll help you get it done.

Please don’t wait. Their lives are in our hands.

PETS OF THE WEEK

TIA   Female, Hound, 1 year old, 32 lbs — $70.00

EMMA   Female, Domestic short hair, adult   — $9.00