In the News
Every now and then these efforts make the news.
I’ll start posting articles or video clips here.
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Stories about NICO:
Courtesy of the PETCO Foundation:
http://www.petcoscoop.com/2009/09/journey-to-rescue-%E2%80%93-installment-1/
Courtesy of the Humane Society for Hamilton County:
http://www.hamiltonhumane.com/events/nico.htm
From the 11:00 PM news on The Indy Channel
August 29, 2009
Click this link: LINK to Aug 29 newcast
It will open Windows Media Player. You must have version 9. Slide the timer bar to 15:30. As soon as we get this edited, I’ll post the video in this page instead of this link. In the meantime, enjoy!!
Courtesy of the LA Times Blogs:
Rescue success story: Hard work, perseverance and one amazing photo save Nico the Dogo Argentino
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From the March 2009 Fluffy Dog Newsletter
(click on image to be taken to the original):
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Volunteers hit the road to save animals
By Isabel Sanchez
Albuquerque Journal
Friday, June 19, 2009
http://www.abqjournal.com/vet/192116321387vet06-19-09.htm
The passengers: two black Labs whose owners in Santa Fe lost their home to foreclosure, a mixed breed found in a Hobbs ditch, filthy and covered with ticks, and maybe 100,000 other dogs across the country, from Connecticut to California.
Their rides: volunteers from coast to coast who give up their weekends, and often more, to transport dogs and the occasional cat from near death, such as their scheduled euthanization, to a good life.
Their tickets: the Internet, news groups, e-mail and the old standby, the telephone.
“This sweet precious girl is out of time,” writes a rescue volunteer whose post appears on an animal welfare news group, NMpetrescue. The dog, a border collie mix, is in Oklahoma.
Where she goes, and with whom, could be left to chance, in hopes someone somewhere reads the post and offers to give the dog a home. But volunteers whose mission is to save pets, even one at a time, have developed a system.
That system is a series of one- or two-hour legs between towns, in which driver and passengers go to city A, meet another volunteer who drives the animals to city B, and so on. Organizing such transports is also the work of coordinators like Kelly Gibson, a San Diego accountant who saves lives by never leaving her desk. The transport system could not exist without the Internet.
Out there, in the real world, are thousands and thousands of dogs and cats marked for death, for no other reason than they’ve been abandoned in one way or another. Some people literally leave them behind. Others let them go.
Also out there are hundreds, maybe thousands, of people determined to ensure the dogs and cats get to good homes. Many belong to rescue groups, some concentrating on certain breeds, that patrol the shelters for pets about to be put down. Many operate independently, finding homes for the dogs or cats they foster. All are connected by the Internet: news groups like NMpetrescue, e-mail, Web sites.
“These three were thrown away and now they face dying very, very soon,” says a post (“Yes, I am still begging for someone to help save …”) by Terry Lynn Fisher, a rescuer in Burns Flat, Okla., who fosters more dogs than she can keep. “They were picked up in an abandoned house … along with 11 other dogs” that were later taken in by rescue groups.
In short, what saves the dogs is what the Internet so instantly provides: information.
Fisher’s plea to save the three dogs was answered, she says — after three years of salvaging dogs that others gave up, “I’ve not lost one yet.” She says she’s saved 800 or so dogs in the three years she’s been involved with transports.
Gibson spends about 100 hours a week, she figures, creating routes and coordinating volunteers. A recent transport of two beagles in Georgia that were to go to homes in Phoenix, and a “puggle,” or pug-beagle mix, in Tulsa, Okla., that was to go to San Diego, took 22 legs. The run sheet Gibson posted, with a request for volunteers for legs from Amarillo to Tucumcari, has 22 entries that look like this:
LEG 16: Tucumcari, NM to Albuquerque, NM
2 beagles & puggle girl
176 miles; 2 hrs 30 min
3:30 PM – 6 PM MDT
Filled — thank you Charlie!!
The run sheet contains more — “passenger information,” about shots, temperament, crate size — and contact numbers and e-mail addresses for the receivers, who might be rescue groups, a no-kill shelter with room for more animals, a foster home or potential adopter.
Gibson coordinates at least one transport a weekend, sometimes two or three or four. That’s “thousands” of animals over the past three years, she says. “That’s just me alone. With everybody combined, and there’s about 40 coordinators that I know of, it’s hundreds of thousands.”
The numbers of volunteers who do the driving is unknown — the system is efficient but informal.
“It’s organized chaos,” says Dave Sarver of Tijeras. “Kelly Gibson is an absolute master at this.”
Sarver was just back from a trip to Clovis and back, thinking he’d pick up two dogs that were to be euthanized at a shelter there, but wound up with four dogs and three kittens. He left Albuquerque at 5:30 a.m. and returned at 8:30 p.m. to meet the next driver on the transport. Sarver’s trip is not typical — although Gibson at first scheduled six-hour legs and now limits them to an hour or two.
Susan Renick, meanwhile, takes her family along. Renick, of the Sandoval County-based Second Chance Animal Rescue, also fosters dogs before they find permanent homes.
There’s a great need for more people in New Mexico to volunteer, she says, and when you combine a transport with a family outing, it’s fun.
“A lot of people, once they do it the first time, they get hooked,” Sarver says.
“It’s so, so easy. It’s the absolute easiest way to save a life.”
Copyright 2009 The Albuquerque Journal











9 responses to “In the News”
Betterhave
June 21st, 2009 at 16:03
Great article ! I would strongly encourage people to sign on with Kelly. She is well organized, safety conscious and she makes sure she knows that the animals are going to a good place or a good home, an important part of a coordinator’s job that not all coordinators take seriously.
Transporting is a critical part of rescue work and whether you drive a Ford Focus, a semi truck, motor home or an SUV, you can help save lives. Temporary foster homes__ support people who help get shelter animals out of the shelter, cleaned up and get their vet work done so they are ready to travel are another key factor in a successful rescue.
Wherever you are, there are animals that need your help. Its a very rewarding job, even though you’re paid off in puppy kisses and tail wags.
Kelly Gibson
June 21st, 2009 at 21:30
Thank you Laurel!
Honestly, you were the one who taught me that it was my responsibility to be pay attention to where dogs were going. I would in no way be the TC I am without your advice very early on!
Lorraine M
June 21st, 2009 at 17:36
Way to go, Kelly! This is fabulous and getting the word out so very much needed. Bravo, Madame!
Kelly Gibson
June 21st, 2009 at 21:30
Thanks Lo!!
Cheryl Maibusch
June 21st, 2009 at 20:09
So glad a news outlet picked up on this story! Perhaps others will see and cover these efforts as well. I consider myself to be an informed “animal person” and I was largely unaware of these efforts till within the past year. Now I transport nearly every weekend and am trying to bring new drivers into the fold. I’m certain that without this type of coverage the “average Joe” out there has no clue this type of work goes on or at what level of capacity. It’s an eye-opener once you get tuned in! Thanks to the Albuquerque Journal for stepping up to inform it’s readers.
Kelly Gibson
June 21st, 2009 at 21:33
Cheryl, I’m always thrilled to get new drivers. A lot of coordinators don’t use Craig’s List to find drivers but I absolutely do…if for no other reason than because that’s exactly where newbies are found! New drivers aren’t on the Yahoo boards or any other normal outlet. And for every post I put on CL, I get about 10 emails just asking what it’s all about! Plant the seeds…
Joan McKenna
July 30th, 2009 at 13:14
Hi guys! This is great coverage! And having had the pleasure of working for both Laurel and now Kelly, I can’t imagine *not* doing transport. Laurel–you taught me everything I needed to know, from correct crate sterilization to what to do to avoid chaos. You got me on board years back with my very first transport–SEVEN dogs from you-know-where–and I haven’t looked back since. Transport is awesome. YOU guys are awesome!
janet
August 8th, 2009 at 14:49
hi kelley – i’m a journalist in LA and would love to talk to you about about Nico – the sweet deaf pittie that got rescued recently from South Central. i re- posted on my FB page where i saw this. can you email me when you get this? thanks much! GREAT work – janet
Kelly Gibson
August 10th, 2009 at 01:27
Hi Janet,
Thanks for contacting me about Nico! I just sent you an email…
Kelly