Operation Crucian Companion--FREE Tag & Chip Day--June 4

Join AWC beach side at Rhythms at Rainbow Beach on June 4 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. for Operation Crucian Companion–a free tag and chip event. Due to the gracious sponsorship of EPaymentAmerica, AWC is able to provide Free microchipping to the public during this special event.

This special event is part of AWC’s participation in the ASPCA Challenge. During the Challenge, the ASPCA will monitor AWC’s performance in returning lost pets to their owners. The Challenge monitoring period is Aug. 1 to Oct 31—which is also hurricane season. In order to prevent more strays now, AWC is reaching out to STX pet owners now.

Please join us on June 4 and ensure the safety of your pet via licensing and microchipping. Last year more than 2000 strays entered our shelter. Don’t let your pet become a sad statistic. Be Responsible! To voluneer, learn more about microchips, or how you can help email communications@stcroixawc.org.

Keep Your Pet from Becoming a Statistic--Buy a Pet Tag

In 2010 more than 2500 strays were taken in by the St Croix Animal Welfare Center. With hurricane season approaching, AWC is getting proactive. We plan a number of tag and chip events in the coming months starting with this Friday’s Jump Up from 6 p.m. until in Christiansted, April 29, 2011.

As part of our competition in the ASPCA Challenge, AWC will be reviewed on the number of strays returned to owner over that same number last year. We need your help St. Croix. Pet tags are only $5 can be purchased at our shelter location and online via this website. Microchips are $25 and sold daily–7 days per week–at AWC.

According to a recent ASPCA study 87% of pet owners think that id tags are important, but only 33% bother to tag their pets.  Take care of your pet. Make sure it gets home safe and sound. They depend on YOU for safety. AWC depends on you to do the right thing. . . take care of your pet. Call us for details 778-1650.

AWC in ASPCA Top 10---Thanks and Next Steps

The St. Croix Animal Welfare Center (AWC) not only placed in the Top 50 of the ASPCA Challenge, but placed and outstanding #9 among more than 90 competing shelters (puppy Neneita has since been adopted). Our board of directors, staff and pets are grateful to numerous people on St. Croix and beyond who helped us garner more than 9,000 votes.

We appreciate those in St Thomas and St John who emailed and Facebooked that they were voting. We’re thrilled for the inter-island support because the lessons learned by St. Croix in this competition can be shared with our Territory humane agencies–STT Humane and STJ Animal Care Center–to the benefit of all of us working to solve the social problem of animal neglect.

Thanks need to be extended, too, to the VI non profit community. Several non profits emailed us that they were voting because they understood that education and funds to combat one community social issue benefits the community as a whole. Thank you non profits and VI Dept. of Human Services for organizing the VI Non Profit Management group so that we can communicate our efforts to each other because we’re all a team whose goal is to help.

The Virgin Islands Media was incredible and we are so appreciative of them spotlighting our issues and our efforts to affect change. Radio, tv, print, online—all sources featured our ASPCA outreach. Thank you so much.

Finally, we thank the volunteers and community supporters who voted daily, forwarded emails, followed us on Facebook and who via word of mouth grew our votes and helped us reach the top 10. All of the efforts above combined helped us succeed.

So what’s next? AWC will provide shelter data for ASPCA review. Our 2010 adoptions, returns and Pets from Paradise transfers will be compared to 2011 numbers for the period of August thru October. 

We will participate in ASPCA webinars coaching us on success and also create and implement numerous outreach events to educate our community on adoption, licensing, microchipping and responsible ownership. In short–We Have ALOT of Work Ahead.

AWC will keep you posted on our goals and efforts and we hope to hear from you with suggestions and encouragement. We appreciate and depend on your continued support. We can’t do it alone–We can’t do it without YOU!

Local Contestant Hosts Fundraiser for Animal Welfare Center

Ms. America VI Outstanding Teen (MAVIO) Contestant Kaylah Galloway will host a fundraiser for the St. Croix Animal Welfare Center (AWC) on Wednesday, April 20 at Tropical Ten Pins Bowling Inc.

 The night will kick off with Jr. Bowling from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. followed by adults bowling from 7 p.m. to midnight. Men’s and women’s tournaments will be held and prizes will be awarded to the top 3 finalists. The cost to bowl will be $15 per person.

 Community service is a component of the MAVIO competition. According to their website the pageant organization encourages positive achievement by helping to nurture and build the scholastic achievement, creative accomplishment, healthy living, and community involvement of youth.

 “We are honored that Kaylah chose AWC as her charity of choice for the community outreach component of her competition,” said Shelter Coordinator Gretchen Sherrill. She has put forth a lot of hard work and effort into the project and we hope that since many employees are off work on Thursday that they will come out Wednesday and bowl to benefit AWC and Kaylah.

Animal Welfare Center In Hunt for $100K ASPCA Prize

The following article can be found in the St. Croix Source here: http://stcroixsource.com/content/news/local-news/2011/04/12/animal-welfare-center-hunt-100k-aspca-prize

 

Animal Welfare Center In Hunt for $100K ASPCA Prize
By Carol Buchanan — April 12, 2011

The St. Croix Animal Welfare Center didn’t finish first, but the ASPCA $100K Challenge is  proving that people really care about Crucian critters.

On Tuesday morning in online voting, the center was ninth out of 95 competitors and is now in the hunt win ASPCA grant money.

Each shelter canvasses for as many votes as possible and then the top 50 vote getters compete in the final cash challenge. Challenge finalists will be eligible to compete for $300,000 worth of grant funds, including the grand prize of $100,000 to a single shelter.

Shelter coordinator Gretchen Sherrill said there is $25,000 for outreach and promotions. She said the St. Croix shelter managed to prove what it can do with social media outreach with the response it got from voters.

AWC reached out via Facebook and nearly 1,000 email blasts asking everyone to vote for Crucian pets. The top 50 shelters are determined by a community outreach and voting project at www.VotetoSaveLives.org.

To register to vote all one has to do is have an email address and the desire to see AWC get a chance to win grant money.

“We need all our friends and supporters to continue to vote and not give in to voter fatigue,” said Sherrill. “The response has been outstanding, and we need everyone to keep up momentum to help us in our quest to save more lives and continue to vote until midnight Friday.”

Sherrill said they will find out in October who the winners will be.

“There is still a lot of work between now and then,” Sherrill said. “There is reporting and record keeping and continued adoptions to do.”

To learn more about the Challenge visit www.aspcapro.org/challenge.

“We fight everyday for a better life for our pets. Winning this challenge could make an incredible difference in the lives of pets on St. Croix,” Sherrill said. “We need to be innovative on funding and not be thought of as being dependent on the government. We always have to be diligent and take a look at alternative funding sources as in the challenge.”

Founded in 1973, the St. Croix Animal Welfare Center promotes the humane treatment of animals in the St. Croix community through humane education, animal protection, and community service.

To learn more about programs and services visit www.StCroixAWC.org

The ASPCA was the first humane organization in the Western Hemisphere. The mission, as stated by the founder, Henry Bergh, in 1866, is “to provide effective means for the prevention of cruelty to animals throughout the United States.”

Shorty Gets a Leg Up thanks to AWC

Short Greets Spring in Central Park

Shorty, a full grown Crucian mix, spent several months at AWC seeking a home. He attended off site adoptions. He participated in school programs as a reading partner for elementary students. He liked cats, kids, people of all stripes. And yet, no one who visited AWC saw Shorty’s great heart. Staff knew we had to place this special boy. And after a long wait he traveled to New York City to his current forever home. Shorty has been accepted into therapy dog training and will get to share his big heart with people who need extra love.

Flight transfers to stateside homes and shelters are no easy task for the AWC staff. St. Croix is not authorized for unaccompanied cargo, so pets must have a human travel partner. None of the major commercial airlines give AWC a price break, so we incur costs of $100 and up just to give pets a second chance at adoption. But we feel Shorty and his fellow shelter pals are worth it.

The ASPCA Challenge is allowing us to learn more about innovations in adoptions and new means to communicate to our community. Help us Save More Lives, Lives like Shorty, in 2011. www.VotetoSaveLives.org

Vote every day now until April 15. Show your support for all the other Shorties at StCroix AWC.

Help the AWC win $100K - Vote every day

Help AWC win $100K

Welfare Center Coping with More Unwanted Animals

The article below is from the St. Croix Source and can be found here.

By Jackie Leedy — February 26, 2011

The year 2010 saw an unwelcome jump for the St. Croix Animal Welfare Center, as some 3,500 animals came through the center, about 500 above their average.

Director Gretchen Sherrill pointed out that the shelter is the only place on St. Croix where they have an open admission policy. They will accept any animal in any condition and will never turn away any animal regardless of how dangerous or ill nourished it may be.

To break down the numbers a little further, 2,000 of the animals accepted last year were strays that had been abandoned and/or were victims of abuse, criminal activity, or neglect. The remaining 1,500 were owner surrenders – either because they have too many, are moving off the island, or simply can no longer afford them. Sherrill thinks that the major factor in the increase is due to the struggling economy. Owners simply can no longer afford their pets.

She is worried the economy might also take a toll on AWC’s operations. About one-fifth of their funding comes from government contracts, but with the economic decline, these funds could also be affected.

“We as an organization need to be innovative to get ahead of the game,” she said about trying to make up the difference in case of funding cutbacks.

The shelter offers many low-cost options for animals. For example, a pet can be sprayed or neutered for $25, and adopted for a mere $100, which includes de-worming, microchip, tags, vaccines, and spay/neuter services. Furthermore, if a pet is terminally ill, severely injured, or a threat to society, they offer low-cost euthanasia.

Another positive service that AWC offers is its decade-long transfer program called Pets from Paradise, where animals can be adopted from people off-island. Over 200 were placed last year with people living abroad. One major area where adoptions take place is in New York, particularly in the Hamptons.

AWC has worked for more than 20 years with local veterinarians on St. Croix to operate their low-cost spay/neuter program. But in 2010, they began an exciting venture collaborating with the Fix It Foundation, a PetSmart Charity company, to review the AWC database that tracks trends and problem areas for stray animals to help reduce population overgrowth by providing spay/neuter services to these animals at a low cost.

Bethany Bradford, D.V.M., the director of Veterinarian Services for the Department of Agriculture, was also at the conference with other board members Liz Goggins, Karen Poates and Jennie Parrish.

“This year we have really stepped up collaboration and cooperation [with AWC],” Bradford said.

Generally, the department works with livestock and horses, but occasionally, their paths cross and the two services work together to deal with animals who are abused and neglected.

Stephany DeJesus, an adoption technician, then allowed the media for the first time ever to look at their “quarantine surgery center,” which is divided into three sections: treatment, surgical center, and an area for euthanasia. She then took out a few animals that were being housed there and had either been treated for fleas and ticks, or were awaiting adoption.

There were also youth volunteers on-hand who seemed to be loving their weekend duties. One volunteer, Kareem Murrell from Free Will Baptist Church, typically comes every Saturday from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. because he thinks it’s fun bathing and walking the animals.

“I do this because I have a passion for animals,” he said smiling.

If you would like to volunteer, or have a desire to adopt a pet, please visit www.stcroixAWC.org, or contact (340) 778-1650.