Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
First off, this is not a solicitation for a donation. If you want to help abansoned and rescue animals please donate to Doodle Rescue Collective, Inc. Judy and I work with DRC, Inc to rescue Doodles and with the American Maltese Accociation Rescue to help Maltese find new homes.
I am posting this Youtube video to give you an idea of the conditions in some shelters which are funded by the taxpayer. Please do all you can to help dogs and cats in this type of shelter. SEAACA provides Animal Services to the cities of: Bell Gardens, Bellflower, Buena Park, Downey, Lakewood, La Palma, Montebello, Norwalk, Paramount, Pico Rivera, Santa Fe Springs, South El Monte, South Gate and Vernon in Los Angeles County.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FfIEahZsS3E
Yesterday after Judy and I, working with the American Maltese Rescue picked him up from the vet. He was too weak to raise his leg to urinate. He would fall over when he tried. However, today he is feeling better. He spent a total of six days in vet care.
However, I would like to give Kudos to the Animal Shelters at Apple Valley, California and Hesperia, California. Both of these shelters have the welfare of their animals as their priority.
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Richard -
Is SEAACA a private contractor providing these services?
No, Andy. SEAACA stands for Southeast Area Animal Control Authority, and it is a public animal control facility, fully funded by taxpayers. The workers there are local government employees and receive salaries and all the benefits that public servants enjoy, on the taxpayers' dime. You can see how dedicated they are by this video, which illustrates their job performance and the level of care they give the animals who are under their supervision.
Like all animal controls, SEEACA functions for the health and welfare of the people, not the animals. Their function is to get these nuisances strays off the streets where they might hurt someone, or make someone sick from their nasty dirty animal selves. And of course, they have to take any dog that anyone wants to dump. They also have to take dogs from cruelty cases and dogfighting raids.
There are 334 "adoptable" animals currently at this shelter, and God only knows how many more in holding. And people wonder why rescues make a big deal out of things like spaying & neutering and casual breeding.
Here is a link to SEAACA's website. Notice their adoption requirements. What a joke. A dog would be better off on the streets than in this shelter.
http://www.seaaca.org/reportanimalabuse.htm
That video just breaks my heart.
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