Beloved Pet Fast Tracked to Kill Room at Hillsborough Co Pound

Besides the most obvious reason shelters should not fast track owner surrendered animals to the kill room – that is, these pets have the right to live – there’s this:  The person presenting himself as the owner may in fact not own the pet being surrendered.  People who are most likely to pose as owners when taking someone else’s animal to a pet killing facility include pet hating neighbors, abusive spouses, and spiteful family members.

Such appears to have been the case with Bella, a Florida cat surrendered to Hillsborough County Animal Services by a family member of the owners in July.  Bella was fast tracked for killing because she was an “owner surrender” even though the real owners loved her very much and were looking for her.  Bella’s owners arrived at the shelter within 48 hours of her surrender but it was too late as Hillsborough Co had already killed her.

Local pet advocates are using Bella’s case to shine a spotlight on needless cat killings and bad policies at the Hillsborough Co pound.  Director Ian Hallett responded to critics in this Tampa Tribune article:

[…] Hallett ended a practice of allowing rescue groups to put after-hours holds on individual animals scheduled to be killed the next day. Bella could have been saved by an email or phone message the night before she was euthanized because animal rescue groups were aware she was there.

In fact, members of two rescue groups were looking for Bella late on the afternoon the day before she was put down, but shelter employees said they couldn’t find her in the cages. Time ran out and there was no after-hours option.

[…]

Hallett said he initiated the overnight holds on a pilot basis but it didn’t work out.

“In one week, 80 cats were placed on hold without any subsequent plans to get them out of the shelter,” Hallett said. “That caused a bout of illness in the shelter.”

Let’s be clear:  Allowing rescuers to place overnight holds on cats does not cause cats to get sick.  And killing to prevent the possibility of illness is unethical.

Local advocates want Hallett to end the 2 cat limit on adoptions which he seems to believe prevents rescue groups from hoarding.  Newsflash:  The overwhelming majority of rescuers do not hoard animals and the tiny fraction who do will not be cured by your 2 cat limit.  Another policy which animal advocates take issue with is the killing of pets while cages sit empty.  Hallett defends this practice using the outdated notion that empty cages prevent disease.  Yeesh.  It’s 2013.  We have hundreds of open admission shelters all over the country saving 90% or more of their animals.  And the Hillsborough Co director is stuck on Dead Pets Don’t Sneeze.  This from the guy Hillsborough Co brought in from Austin to reduce the killing.

Hallett defended his policies Thursday, saying he had reduced the cat euthanasia rate this year to 68 percent from 80 percent last year. The shelter takes in about 10,000 cats a year and, Hallett said, the numbers on any given day must be kept down to prevent disease.

As for the five-day hold period on stray animals, Hallett said it is required by state law.

“But if the owner brings it to us there is not a legal requirement to hold the animals,” Hallett said. “At that time, the shelter makes the best possible decision given the available resources.”

If killing is your best possible decision, I would say your best possible decisions suck.

I hope local advocates continue to push for reform at the pound.  Killing a little less is better than killing a little more but it’s still killing – which is the opposite of what shelters are supposed to do.

(Thank you Clarice for the links.)

7 thoughts on “Beloved Pet Fast Tracked to Kill Room at Hillsborough Co Pound

  1. TNR would not have saved Bella, and will not save any future “owner surrenders”. There is something, a lot of “somethings”, terribly wrong at Hillsborough. Bella’s story is one of many horror stories to come out of that place. Follow the page, Urgent Cats at Tampa Bay, and you will see what I mean. The nightly fight to save the lives of cats on Death Row; cats sometimes placed on that list with little or no warning for rescues or adopters to save them. I know, it isn’t the only place like that. Isn’t that the point? We have to do something, anywhere we can.

  2. It’s funny that many of you mention TNR as the “answer” for everything! I TNRed all of the cats in my Tampa neighborhood, at great expense to myself I might add, and now I am receiving threats in the form of courtesy notices from Hillsborough County Animal Services advising me to “stop feeding outside cats now.” If you don’t believe me, feel free to email me at snowielady@yahoo.com and I will be happy to email you copies of the recent courtesy notices I have received. So, we should spend the money to TNR these feral and free-roaming cats so long as we don’t feed them once they are returned?! Don’t let them fool you! Hillsborough County doesn’t give a rat’s ass about TNR or the plight of animals at our county shelter!

  3. “Let’s be clear: Allowing rescuers to place overnight holds on cats does not cause cats to get sick. And killing to prevent the possibility of illness is unethical.”

    That about sums it up.

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