Tuesday, September 20, 2005

An Urgent Call for Help for Katrina Animal Victims - How You Can Help

From another list.

DawnWatch


Television specials, such as last night's Dateline, focus on the happy reunions. Below is a letter, a plea, from Jane Garrison, who is heading up the food and water program from the Gonzales shelter for New Orleans. It tells a different story -- animals dying daily for lack of people to get to them and feed them. I forward her letter knowing that many of you, bless you, have contacted the major organizations saying you wanted to volunteer but have been told that your unskilled services aren't needed. Jane's letter, from the front lines, makes it clear that if you can get yourself to Gonzales, and are willing to sleep in uncomfortable conditions in a tent or car or RV, you will be saving lives every day you are there.

Below her note I will paste the shelter address and a list of supplies recommended. I do recommend going through the official means, such as volunteering through the HSUS website, www.HSUS.org. But their volunteer web-page, which still includes questions such as, "Can you stay in the area for five days?," (as if a three day stay would not mean life or death to however many animals you can feed in three days) still has a tone likely to discourage people. Please don't let it discourage you. And if the HSUS office is overwhelmed and cannot get back to you quickly, please don't let animals die while you are caught in red tape. I am sure Jane's letter below will convince you that if you show up willing to help without having successfully jumped through all the right hoops, she will not turn you away.

FROM JANE GARRISON:
---------------------------------------
Subject: I am begging the animal community

Dear Friends:
I have been at the hurricane scene in New Orleans for over two weeks. In this time
I have organized search and rescue teams and food and water teams (for the
animals on the streets). I have personally pulled hundreds of animals from
roof tops, attics and houses. It has been amazing to me that these animals
are still alive. I got a dog off a roof a few days ago who should have
weighed 90 pounds but was down to 40 pounds from being stuck on that roof
with no food and water. These animals want to live and are showing us this
everyday.

Here is the problem.

We still have 3,000 addresses of homes where animals are trapped. These are
addresses where people have called either HSUS or LASPCA and asked for us to
rescue their animals. I know that there are thousands of other homes where
animals are trapped that no one called about. I know this b/c I have rescued
hundreds of animals from homes after hearing barking that were not on our
lists.

CONSIDER THIS: Amazingly we are finding that half of the homes we get into
have animals still alive. With a MINIMUM of 3,000 addresses that is at least
1500 animals who are waiting behind closed doors for a loving hand to rescue
them. With the current teams we have now we can only get into approximately
300 homes each day. The animals will NEVER be alive if we continue at this
rate. I am begging each and everyone of you to get to New Orleans to help.
It does not take a "certified disaster rescuer" to break into a house and at
last provide fresh food and water (to sustain that animal until someone
qualified can get them out). We only have a week at most to save some of
these desperate animals. Please do your part...we are all the animals have.
Jane Garrison
JaneGarrison@comcast.net
(END OF JANE'S NOTE)
--------------------------------------
GONZALES SHELTER CONTACTS:

Louisiana SPCA Shelter established at:
9093 St. Landry Rd.
Gonzales, LA 70737
225-647-0712 (This number may not be answered.)

Food and water volunteers should report to Jane Garrison outside the volunteer food tent by barns 1 and 2. There is a 6am briefing every morning.

Note: Large air-conditioned vehicles in which animals can be transported are still needed. But Jane's note makes it clear that anybody with transport for him or herself, who can go to houses and feed animals, regardless of being able to transport them, is needed. If you don't have your own transport, but can get yourself to Gonzales, you will be paired up at the daily 6am briefing meeting with somebody who has transport. OR -- the shelter desperately needs people to work there.

FEMA now has a large air-conditioned tent in which volunteers can sleep. (Though it is safest to bring a tent just in case.)

VOLUNTEER PERSONAL SUPPLIES LIST (IDEAL)
Some dogs on the ground have become dangerous. Some risks are due to
contaminated water. Animals who have consumed this or stood in the water for
long periods may be sick. You may also be exposed to water/mud yourselves. You
also need protection from mosquitoes and wild animals. Overall, depending
upon where you travel, you need to come self-sufficient, as if preparing for
a camping trip.

current Hepatitis vaccinations
current Tetanus shot
pepper spray
hand sanitizer
insect repellent
sunscreen
first aid kits

thick "bite-proof" work gloves
sturdy, waterproof (rubber) work boots/shoes
waders
long sleeve shirts
long pants
belt (to hang gear/supplies from)
mouth coverings (surgical masks, bandannas)
eye protection (sunglasses)

flashlights
containers full of gasoline
waterproof walkie talkies
D batteries
toilet paper
other personal-care items
----------------------------------------
Kate Danaher, who has just come back from Gonzales, has sent the following note:
"I just returned from 7 days on-site at the Lamar Dixon Expo Center in Gonzales, LA. Volunteers are desperately needed to clean shelter cages and walk dogs, to drop food and water to feed animals in the streets and stuck in houses, to do data entry of notes from the field, to clean crates, and do general site organization and clean-up. If you are interested please call me. I can brief you on my experience and give you directions on what to expect and how to get right to work when you arrive.
Do not need supplies. Need strong loving and patient people to work very very hard under very challenging circumstances.
You are NEEDED.
Please consider this call for help.
I look forward to hearing from you."

Kate recommends bringing spray paint, for marking and dating houses with food and water drop dates (what you did at the house) and also water markers to mark your vehicle as LASPCA, pad and pen for field notes, a crowbar for breaking in if necessary, and maps of New Orleans. She is happy to provide guidance for anybody ready to go. Her number is:
415-459-1149
katedanaher@animalearthhuman.org

Brenda Shoss at Kinship Circle is also an excellent resource for information on volunteer efforts at the various shelters.
Her email is info@kinshipcircle.org
desk: 314-863-9445
cell: 314-795-2646
----------------------------------------------------------

(DawnWatch is an animal advocacy media watch that looks at animal issues in the media and facilitates one-click responses to the relevant media outlets. You can learn more about it, and sign up for alerts at http://www.DawnWatch.com. If you forward or reprint DawnWatch alerts, please do so unedited -- leave DawnWatch in the title and include this tag line.)





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