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> Out of the Cage! > Spring
2007 > The Oklahoma Alliance for Animals: Making Life More OK
for Tulsa's Animals
The Oklahoma Alliance for Animals: Making Life More OK
for Tulsa's Animals
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The Oklahoma Alliance for Animals
(OAA) is working in the Tulsa area to reduce euthanasias,
increase adoptions and spay/neuters, and educate the
public and government agencies on animal cruelty issues. |
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by Jane Warshaw
If you think that the problems of homeless animals
in New York City are vastly different than the problems in Oklahoma,
think again: Cats are cats and dogs are dogs and many of the problems
they face if they're homeless aren't limited to any zip codes.
The Oklahoma
Alliance for Animals (OAA) is concerned with the overpopulation
of cats and dogs in the Tulsa metropolitan area. Not surprisingly,
its mission is "to transform the city's area shelters into
facilities whereby no Tulsa (and Greater Tulsa area) dog or cat
of reasonable health and temperament is euthanized merely because
they do not have a home."
Sound familiar? The Oklahoma Alliance was modeled,
in part, after the Mayor's Alliance for NYC's Animals. Jamee Suarez-Howard,
President of the OAA, was visiting shelters across the U.S., hoping
to find solutions to the pet overpopulation problems in Tulsa, and
she came to New York City. She liked the Mayor's Alliance best because
it involved collaboration among city government, rescue, and veterinary
communities. Jane Hoffman, President of the Mayor's Alliance, helped
her overcome her skepticism about the Tulsa community being able
to accomplish an overwhelming task. And so in 2004, the Oklahoma
Alliance for Animals was established.
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OAA President Jamee Suarez-Howard
met with Mayor's Alliance for NYC's Animals President
Jane Hoffman to learn which Mayor's Alliance programs
might also be effective in reducing euthanasias in the
Tulsa area. |
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Tulsa's Mayor then was on board and favorable to
work towards a no-kill Tulsa. Unfortunately, the Tulsa Animal Shelter
was not ready to embrace a partnership with OAA. It took two years
before the OAA and the city shelter could develop a positive working
relationship. The Tulsa Animal Shelter wasn't the only organization
slow to get on board. Area animal rescues were not inclined to collaborate
with one another, and there was a lot of misunderstanding about
what the OAA was trying to accomplish. Surprisingly, rescue organizations
in rural communities were the first to sign on to the idea of no-kill.
The OAA teamed up with Spay
Oklahoma and created an annual "It's Hip to Snip"
spay and neuter campaign to raise public awareness about the overwhelming
pet overpopulation problem in Oklahoma by helping low-income pet
guardians to spay and neuter their pets.
The OAA and the Tulsa Animal Shelter developed a
better working relationship by 2006 and that relationship has continued
to flourish. OAA and the Tulsa Animal Shelter are collaborating
on several projects, including the "Adopt A Little Okie"
program. They began showcasing adoptable shelter pets in large-scale
events one Saturday every month. They're planning to expand the
program to be held every Saturday, and to hold off-site events as
well. OAA is assisting the shelter in developing an essential volunteer
program to help with things like socializing animals and basic administrative
work.
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A collaboration between the
OAA and Tulsa Animal Shelter, monthly "Adopt a
Little Okie" events feature adoptable shelter pets. |
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OAA currently has 10 Member Organizations and many
more interested in joining the alliance. Suarez has had some difficult
times, particularly the sudden death of her husband in an accident
and a change in the mayoralty that made animal issues less of a
priority in the new administration. But OAA has worked hard and
formed a new partnership with the office of the current mayor to
address the needs of the Tulsa Animal Shelter. Low-cost spay and
neuter programs continue statewide, including a mobile outreach
program.
Oklahoma has some unique problems. Although Tulsa
is definitely an urban area, it's surrounded by a rural population
with many people living at or below the poverty level. It's been
a hard road to get animal welfare issues seen as a serious problem
when people themselves are in such need. And unlike New York, with
a population over 20 million people and 50 licensed dog dealers,
Oklahoma has a population of 3.5 million people and 271 licensed
dog dealers. It's the second largest "puppy mill" state
in the country. Surprisingly, it's the only state that has not a
single state regulation covering those facilities. Suarez says,
"There is both an unwillingness and lack of funding to enforce
what few regulations exist with regard to responsible pet ownership
and the ethical treatment of animals. This, of course, creates an
unmanageable number of animals left unwanted, which our community
shelters are ill-equipped to deal with."
Besides crowding the shelters, it creates large
numbers of animal neglect cases. Oklahoma is the seventh poorest
state in the U.S., with a population that's declining, not growing.
Animals' needs, animal cruelty, and the enforcement of neglect cases
are often forced to take a back seat to the needs of the human population.
And, of course, a smaller tax base has contributed to the problems
of the Tulsa Animal Shelter.
Not surprisingly, Oklahoma is also one of the top
five states with documented domestic violence. And it's third nationally
in the number of people imprisoned for violent crime. The OAA is
beginning to make people aware of the correlation between domestic
violence and violence against animals and the need for law enforcement
agencies and other humane organizations to intervene in these cases
more quickly.
The Tulsa Animal Shelter remains a problem when
it comes to getting other animal organizations to work with the
alliance. The shelter was built to be an animal control facility,
not an adoption facility. Last year, it took in over 18,000 animals
with no way to separate adoptable animals from the rest of the animal
population, so even the healthiest animals are at risk. That makes
many larger rescue organizations reluctant to take animals from
there. Some vets do have space to quarantine animals, but that space
isn't always available. The OAA is committed to solving the problem,
since the goal is no unnecessary euthanasia. They are determined
to make the Tulsa shelter a healthier place for pets to be kept
temporarily. When they have that problem solved, other rescue groups
will be more likely to take adoptable animals from the shelter and
collaborate with the OAA.
If you step back and look at Oklahoma as a whole,
it's easier to understand the problems faced by the OAA. Statewide
there exists an environment that tolerates violence against humans
and animals. More than half of the state has no animal shelters
at all. And in rural areas, 91 percent of the shelters that do exist
refuse to let even a single cat in the door, period. People bring
their animals to Tulsa and abandon them there. The OAA is trying
to reach those communities to educate pet owners about responsible
pet ownership and also to provide spay/neuter services and cruelty
prevention programs.
Despite the large number of animal cruelty and neglect
cases, which have to be handled by legal authorities, many communities
don't have the money to take these cases to court. And Oklahoma
has only half the level of rural law enforcement officers compared
to the national average. The OAA has stepped in where the lack of
resources would have allowed animal cruelty cases to fall between
the cracks. Here are some of the things they've been involved in:
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Funding the necropsy of two
horses who died of starvation, helping to reverse a decision
of a local prosecutor who had declined to press charges. |
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Establishing an emergency fund to feed over
1,000 goats, sheep, cattle, and horses seized for neglect
on a northern Oklahoma ranch. |
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Providing ongoing information and resources
to Oklahoma police officers about how to identify animal neglect
and abuse. |
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Setting up the first animal cruelty information
table at the Oklahoma Sheriff's and Peace Officers Conference
in 2007, the largest law enforcement officers conference held
in Oklahoma. |
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In conjunction with the Oklahoma Humane
Federation, partnering to provide information on the correlation
between domestic violence and animal cruelty at the Court
Appointed Special Advocates Conference held in Oklahoma City. |
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Actively partnering with a growing number
of community interest organizations and agencies to create
greater awareness of the impact and consequences of animal
cruelty. The OAA is the first organization in Oklahoma to
do so. |
Suarez and other members of the OAA are active on
the boards of several animal rights and welfare organizations, like
the Animal Welfare Committee of the Oklahoma Veterinary Medical
Association (as a non-voting member) and the Oklahoma Humane Federation.
That helps them network with other animal advocates working on statewide
issues to move Oklahoma in a more humane direction. Ruth Steinberger,
an active member of OAA, gave testimony recently and made recommendations
concerning regulating the high-volume breeding done in puppy mills.
They've also developed solid partnerships with members of the media
who are eager to publicize the importance of responsible pet ownership
and the serious problem of pet overpopulation.
The OAA says, "We truly believe that we are
on the verge of something great in Tulsa and the state of Oklahoma."
Jamee Suarez-Howard, Shelli and Bill Handi, and
Ruth Steinberger of the OAA were all very helpful in providing information
for this article.
Jane Warshaw is a freelance
writer and former advertising copywriter whose work has appeared
in Time Out New York, New York Press, Our Town,
West Side Spirit, and Times Ledger newspapers, and
HuffingtonPost.org, TheMorningNews.org, NYC Plus, and New
York Family. She writes a monthly pet column for Our Town.
Jane lives with Benton, a retired racing greyhound, and Monty and
Tonto, two rescued cats.
The Oklahoma
Alliance for Animals was established by Tulsa area
citizens to form a coalition among the area's animal rescue groups,
veterinarians, and the community, with ultimate goal of transforming
the city's area shelters into no-kill facilities, whereby no Tulsa
(and Greater Tulsa) dog or cat of reasonable health and temperament
is euthanized merely because he or she does not have a home.
To this end, the OAA is developing creative solutions to animal
care and overpopulation concerns: Developing a partnership among
animal rescue organizations, veterinarians, municipal animal shelters,
and the community to increase the number of adoptions of homeless
dogs and cats; increasing the number of spays and neuters; and reducing
the occurrence of euthanasia of adoptable animals.
For more information about the Oklahoma Alliance
for Animals or to find out how you can support its vital mission,
visit www.AnimalAllianceOK.org.
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