By Michelle Burawski
Those of us who are
animal lovers would find it very difficult to imagine a community where there
are hundreds of unwanted animals literally abandoned like trash at dumpsters
and in the streets, simply because there are no shelters or animal welfare
services whatsoever!
One such community is in Burke County,
Georgia, a mostly rural area with a population of about 23,000 people. The county is the
size of Rhode Island. Concerned
residents and animal rescuers have pleaded with the county commissioners, the
decision-makers in that community, for many years urging them to allocate
funds for a desperately-needed shelter and animal control services, but their
pleas always fall on deaf ears! It
is very well known and visible in that community that unwanted animals (dogs,
cats, puppies, and kittens), are abandoned daily, struggling to survive!
Ironically, that
community refers to itself as the “Bird Dog Capital of the World,” and even has
a cemetery for bird dogs. However,
many residents say it is more like the “Stray Dog Capital of the World.”
Old
Fella Animal Rescue, a 501(c)(3)
non-profit, one of only two in that community, has a handful
of very dedicated volunteers who have taken in hundreds of abandoned dogs and
puppies. (No rescue group exists
for cats; however, people often leave food for them). Old Fella, founded in 2008, provides veterinary
care and places the dogs in foster homes. When ready for adoption, volunteers arrange transportation (with Puppy Pipeline of Georgia, Inc.), to a wonderful shelter
in Salem, Massachusetts called Northeast Animal Shelter. This particular
shelter takes in all of the animals that are rescued by Old Fella! http://www.northeastanimalshelter.org/
Donations and local
foster homes are always needed. Although Old Fella does receive a small grant from
the county for their spay and neuter program, it is often a struggle to keep
their rescue going.
Jimmie Jenkins, a retired teacher and volunteer liaison for
Old Fella, participated in rescuing animals in New Orleans after
Hurricane Katrina. Jenkins said, “I have heard and seen a lot, but volunteering with
Old Fella was certainly an eye opener. In some respects, this situation is worse than New
Orleans after Katrina! I know that’s hard to believe, but when you get call
after call about animals inside or around a dumpster, it just blows you away!
Just to be a part of that kind of rescue is a feeling like no
other.”
Part of
Jenkins’ role is to handle donations, provide information about the spay and
neuter vouchers program, take cruelty calls, and along with other volunteers,
arrange for dog food to be delivered to pet owners who fall on hard times.
One dog that Old Fella
rescued from a dumpster in 2009, appropriately named Bingo, turned out to be
their 2000th rescue, and he found a loving home up north! Since
then, Old Fella has rescued countless more, and there seems to be no end of animals that need saving!
“The most rewarding thing about rescuing animals is seeing them get their forever families and knowing the suffering has ended," said volunteer Margie Riggs.
So while residents wait anxiously for the county to provide animal welfare services, saving the animals is left up to rescue
groups like Old Fella, as well as kind-hearted souls who cannot bear to do nothing.
There is currently petition created by South Carolina resident and animal advocate, Lisa Floyd. The petition, on www.change.org urges Burke County Commissioners to step up and approve funding for a shelter and animal control services. Please
sign and share!
Finally, please visit our Facebook page, created for the cause, at the link below:
https://www.facebook.com/Animaldumpburkecoga. A GoFundMe account for the rescue groups is available there.
Michelle Burawski is a Georgia-based writer and animal lover.
1 comment:
Thanks for sharing this and I'll share on my network and make donation on behalf of my beloved Beagle Jazz that I lost a few months ago. Thanks for spreading the word. Breaks my heart how these poor helpless animals are left abandoned. And all they give us is their love and loyalty.
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