Animalines has often exhorted our movement to
meet demanding performance standards, as passion alone is limited unless accompanied by
excellence of pursuit. We refer to this integration of commitment with the highest quality
standards as "passionate professionalism." Commercial enterprises must respond
expertly to the realities of a fiercely competitive marketplace or perish, but our
movement has no such accountability. Moreover, our primary constituency-other beings and
the Earth-cannot express objections, and thus our only survival imperative is to elicit
adequate financial support from the general public, a populace that is largely uninformed
and responds more to style than substance. If our movement spent as much time soberly
evaluating our policies and programs as we do polishing our public image, then no doubt
the struggle for justice would be on higher ground.
It's very interesting that the word "development" has
an entirely different connotation among non-profits than in the profit sector. Non-profits
generally refer to development as a fundraising endeavor, whereas for-profits view it as a
process for achieving excellence. animalines defines development as the progression of an
organization towards realizing defined objectives through planned phases. Successful
corporations, albeit driven by greed, have more of a handle on realty than our movement,
for they realize that although clever marketing can sell a product or service, only
quality and efficiency can assure long-term success. Our movement's purpose is affirming
the sanctity of life and Earth, and in many years of assisting non-profit organizations,
animalines has yet to encounter a group that has a comprehensive performance assessment
program to ensure that stringent quality standards are met.
Nothing illustrates this more vividly than the historical record
of the oldest and largest segment of our movement -the animal shelter community. We single
them out for many reasons, not the least being that in most smaller cities and counties
throughout the country, they represent the only voice for other beings, a voice that is
often inaudible. It's important to note, however, that animalines could have selected
virtually any segment of our movement-grassroots or national, hands-on or advocacy,
mainstream or radical -and the findings would vary only in degree, not substance. The
conclusions drawn from animalines' exhaustive review of shelters are distressing, but the
lessons to be derived apply equally to all of us.
animalines characterizes the shelter community as a slumbering
giant, not in a derisive sense, but to accurately portray the present state of this
"industry." Much of what occurs in shelters is so bizarre that it almost defies
comprehension, much less vivid description. Let's begin with the statistical nightmare one
finds when examining shelters. Although shelters have existed in this country for well
over a century, there is simply no reliable statistical base from which even the most
basic information can be derived. One does not have to be an applied statistician to
understand the gravity of not having accurate information, for without the existence of
reliable historical and contemporary data, it's literally impossible to draw any
conclusions that stand the test of empirical scrutiny. Surrounded by the deaths of
millions of precious beings, this industry has demonstrated neither the concern nor
competency to even validate the information upon which it bases life and death decisions.
How is it possible that this multi-billion dollar industry never
formed an effective national association, funded and administered by shelter members, to
properly gather and validate critical information? Nor has the shelter community
established a coordinated national effort to protect the interests of the companion
animals they profess to serve. Without any organized pressure from shelters, it's no
wonder the U.S. Census Bureau refuses to include household animals, and the lack of this
vital demographic data is devastating in terms of effective program formulation and
assessment. As a result, a hodgepodge of crude formulas are used to estimate companion
animal population, all of which possess a statistical margin of error so staggering as to
render population estimates virtually useless. However, this doesn't deter shelters one
iota from predicating and assessing programs on these flawed figures and, adding insult to
injury, they freely (and proudly!) publish "success" stories based on data that
would give ulcers to even the most tolerant statistician.
Compounding this statistical farce, the shelter community, has
to undertake a reasonably accurate count of how many shelters exist or even explicitly
define what constitutes a shelter. Sadly, due to this limitation, the best a recent
national survey could do was estimate a range of between 3,000-5,000 shelters. Using the
mean figure, this indicates that much of widely utilized national shelter statistics carry
an astounding 25 percent margin of error-and that assumes accurate sampling and reporting!
Given the unreliability of national population and shelter statistics, some shelters have
taken local surveys to compile their own data. animalines greatly applauds their
initiative, but we have spent wakeful nights reviewing surveys that illustrate good
intentions but sorrowful execution. Instead of seeking the pro bono assistance of
qualified market research analysts, shelters often develop surveys that are so flawed in
construction and sampling methods as to be all but worthless.
Those unfamiliar with program formulation and assessment might
think we make too much of these statistical shortcomings, but accurate measurement is an
indispensable element in developing, evaluating, and refining effective policies. How can
we properly analyze where we have been, where we are at, where we are going, and how we're
going to get there without reliable measurement? After hundreds of interviews with shelter
personnel and reviewing numerous surveys and program evaluations on sterilization,
education, licensing, etc., animalines found that poor methodology, incredible error
margins, and highly contradictory findings prevented us from drawing any statistically
valid conclusions regarding the efficacy of key shelter programs. It's evident that the
shelter community either doesn't know enough or care enough to meet even the most marginal
professional standards. We intend no disrespect, but from the perspective of the
vulnerable shelter animals, one is sadly reminded of the old adage: I can take care of my
adversaries, but God save me from my friends.
Earlier we lamented the absence of an effective national association comprised
of shelter members to establish credible statistical procedures, initiate vital research
projects, coordinate media campaigns and generally bring shelters into the sunlight. By
combining resources shelters could utilize their collective strength to forge formidable
alliance. Keeping in mind that reliable data is not available. We estimate on the basis of
the latest national survey that there are some 4,000 animal control and humane society
with a combined budget of 2.7 billion dollars and a paid staff of almost 50,000 employees.
This means that if shelters contributed a mere one-tenth of one percent of their annual
budget, 2.7 million dollars would be available to establish and fund a national shelter
association. A myriad of crucial projects could be undertaken and the shelter industry
could finally begin to evolve into a force for life.
Perhaps the most troubling dimension of the shelter community is
the prevailing mentality regarding the unconscionable death toll, what animalines refers
to as an assembly line of slaughter. Even some of the more progressive shelter directors
and boards define their preeminent responsibility as preventing suffering rather than
preserving life. This position is perplexing on many levels, for although euthanasia
cannot be completely avoided at the present time, it borders on the obscene to describe
the killing of many innocent and healthy beings as a merciful act. Whether picked up on
the street or surrendered at the shelter, the vast majority of these animals experience
the kind of psychological trauma and terror that we find so abhorrent for caged laboratory
animals but tolerate in our own facilities. Some are exposed to various forms of physical
mishandling and abuse, and all suffer from the anguishing ordeal of being processed and
warehoused in a foreign and frightening environment. Euthanasia might be a relatively
painless end to this journey of terror, but each death represents an abject failure
not an act of mercy.
Shelter personnel incessantly proclaim they have no other choice
than to kill, but this assertion cannot withstand careful scrutiny. Indeed, the argument
that shelters are merely innocent caretakers and the sole blame lies with
"irresponsible pet owners" is not only self-serving but preposterous on the face
of it. We've already elaborated on the absence of a reliable statistical base upon which
to formulate and assess programs, but this only skims the surface of operational
deficiencies among shelters. Management practices regarding strategic planning, program
development, resource utilization, and community outreach are woefully deficient, even in
most of' our largest and wealthiest shelters. Employee screening and selection is an
embarrassment by any standard, and some shelters screen potential adopters with more
diligence than their own employees and then express great surprise when internal abuses
occur. Sound management programs alone could significantly reduce the incidence of
euthanasia. Unfortunately, there's no incentive for creative evolution and solution when
killing is perceived as an acceptable and merciful act.
Perhaps the most remarkable management feature of shelters is
their almost total preoccupation with internal operational components at the expense of
community and youth education. How can they have the audacity to primarily blame the
public for the killing when only some 4 percent of the total shelter budget is spent on
proactive programs! We hasten to add that this disgraceful figure includes both community
outreach and school programs, and this combined total represents the lowest percentage of
any budget category. Since only about 13 percent of companion animals are adopted from
shelters, this indicates that some 96 percent of shelter resources are expended on 13
percent of the overpopulation tragedy! So we pose this question to shelter personnel and
boards: If more than 8 million homeless companion animals are being killed every year, and
shelters assign the lowest budgetary, and operational priority toward overpopulation
education, then who is the major contributor to the vicious cycle of suffering and death?
Certainly the public is not an innocent bystander, but shelters
cannot hold others morally culpable until they have fully met their own responsibility to
modify public behavior. Due largely to sparse and painfully ineffectual shelter outreach
efforts most of the public has little or no understanding of the horrendous magnitude of
the overpopulation tragedy. Compounding the problem, when the public is reached, the
message they receive is "sanitized" with enough euphemisms to fill Grand Canyon.
Why isn't the unadulterated truth, stripped of any veneer, imaginatively and assertively
brought to the public? Perhaps the unvarnished truth would make some uncomfortable, but
that is precisely what we should be doing removing the killing from behind closed
doors and informing the public about their role in the massive slaughter of our so-called
closest companions.
The most potent and cost-effective outreach vehicle is the
development of a creative volunteer program. Were shelters to place a high priority in
this area through attracting, training, and skillfully utilizing a volunteer outreach
corps, they could begin the transition from a killing site to a community resource center.
A true shelter should be a place where life is affirmed, both in teaching and practice,
not a building permeated with the odor of death. Talented and well-trained volunteers are
the key to the four principal components of effective outreach: efficiently reaching
target population segments; establishing credibility among that targeted audience,
articulating a clear and compelling educational message; and, finally, follow-up programs
toward achieving an enduring attitudinal shift. Volunteers are particularly useful in
gaining public credibility, as they can establish critical connections in areas where they
already have easy access and respect family, friends. professional peers, civic
groups, etc. Organizations such as United Way learned long ago that neighbor to neighbor
and professional to professional opens doors and elicits cooperation unattainable to even
the most skilled "outsider." How many more millions must die before shelters -
and all of us - begin to establish professional outreach programs?
Another crucial outreach instrument is youth education. This
area receives abundant platitudes about youth representing the future, but it invariably
receives the lowest budgetary priority. Even accounting for the unreliability of shelter
statistics, animalines was stunned to see recent survey results indicating that shelter
personnel reach more people through Pet Facilitated Therapy programs than youth and adult
education presentations combined! Whether or not one shares our profound reservations
about PFT, this misallocation of resources is unfathomable and reflects the prevailing
myopia within the shelter community. Our movement has to begin anew with each generation
because we fail to effectively reach the preceding one, and the animals and the Earth pay
dearly for this refusal to invest in the promise of a brighter day. Why? Primarily because
shelter personnel and others in the movement become mired in daily operational and
fundraising activities, blinding them to the vision of planting life-affirming seeds in
fertile soil.
Our central point is that even if one shelter animal is
euthanized, then there is a clear moral imperative to exercise every conceivable outreach
vehicle. Overpopulation is essentially a product of ignorance and indifference and only
proactive and aggressive community and youth education programs offer the promise of
breaking the vicious cycle. As mentioned earlier, shelters will never stop the slaughter
if they continue allocating 96 percent of their resources on treating symptoms and a mere
4 percent on fundamental causal factors. Shelters cannot wait for the public to knock on
their door. They must think outside the shelter. They must take the initiative by
approaching every school, media outlet, club, civic organization, professional
association, shopping center, and wherever people will listen. Shelters represent the last
line of defense for millions of vulnerable beings, and if they fail to wage a full-scale
educational war on behalf of these beings, then they cannot rightfully call themselves a
shelter which, by any definition except our movement's, is a safe haven.
Closer to home but equally critical, shelters have failed to
effectively enlist veterinarians as responsible humane educators. Veterinarians have
consistently dictated the terms of their relationship with the shelter community, and
those terms have been self-serving in the extreme. Just as veterinarians have seldom taken
the lead in exposing egregious abuses in laboratories, slaughterhouses, and factory farms,
their record is equally lamentable in addressing companion animal overpopulation.
Veterinarians must do more than simply participate in low-cost spay/neuter programs as
they interact with far more companion animal owners than any other institutional source
and that interaction often occurs at a crucial educational juncture. Instead of the
deferential posture shelter's generally assume, they should meet with local veterinarians
and actively promote those who agree to educate their clients both verbally and
through shelter literature-about the staggering dimensions of companion animal
overpopulation. Veterinarians represent the foremost authority in the public's mind, and
they must be pressured to use that authority to responsibly sound the alarm. It's
essential that shelters and other concerned groups freely publicize the names of
cooperating veterinarians, making it profitable to be an animal rights veterinarian-as
profit seems to be the language veterinarians understand best.
We recognize that shelter personnel work in the trenches and are
often overwhelmed by the daily operational pressures of coping with overpopulation. All we
are asking, however, is merely that they shed their shortsightedness long enough to
embrace the full range of creative possibilities, for when it comes to precious lives,
today's reality cannot serve as tomorrows excuse. Institutional inertia does not give way
easily, but it must give way. We reach out to our friends in the shelter community with
respect, and ask only that they demonstrate the same respect for companion animals by
categorically rejecting the prevailing shelter value system a convoluted system
that places a higher operational priority on "painless" execution than
preventive education. Shelters will continue to be nothing more than processing plants
until they begin the transition from sanitation dumps for the public's unwanted
"baggage" to vital community education centers. Shelters cannot continue to be
slaughterhouses and friends of animals cannot continue killing healthy beings in the name
of mercy. A new and larger vision is needed, a vision in which shelters hold themselves
accountable for meeting demanding performance standards that preserve life not
destroy it. |