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Karen Dawn on disaster relief "no pet" policies

by karen dawn
DawnWatch: Washington Post op-ed by Karen Dawn on disaster relief "no pet" policies -- 9/10/05
I have an opinion piece in the Saturday, September 10, Washington Post, on the 'no pet' polices of disaster relief agencies. It is on line at http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/09/09/AR2005090901824.html and I will paste it below.

I have received some wonderful notes from people who would never leave their animals. I hope people will direct those notes to the media. The Washington Post takes letters at letters [at] washpost.com and advises, "Letters must be exclusive to The Washington Post, and must include the writer's home address and home and business telephone numbers." However, since Katrina is covered in every paper, I urge people to consider sending letters about the animal issue to their local papers. Also, I believe the piece below will be distributed on the Los Angeles Times/Washington Post news wire service, which is accessed by many papers, so you may be able to encourage your paper to publish it. It would be great to see this issue discussed in every paper, with op-eds, or letters, or both.

Washington Post
Saturday, September 10, 2005
Page A23

Best Friends Need Shelter, Too
By Karen Dawn

The week after Hurricane Katrina hit, the media covered the thousands of low-income people trapped for lack of means to get out. Almost two weeks later, thousands still hadn't left, in many cases because official policy would not accept the bond between people and their nonhuman family members. Members of a frustrated rescue team simplified it for a "Dateline" news crew: They said people were refusing to be evacuated simply because "they won't leave their pets."

There is a class issue involved here. While Marriott hotels welcomed the pets of Katrina evacuees as "part of the family," people who had to rely on the Red Cross for shelter were forced to abandon that part of the family or attempt to ride out the storm. It cannot be denied that many poor people are dead as a result of "no pets" policies.

The Los Angeles Times reported on Patricia Penny, who wondered whether her son Billy had survived. She had begged him to leave, but he was afraid to abandon his animals. CNN showed the rescue of a family, including a dog, sitting on a rooftop as a boat pulled up. The boat left without the dog. Staying with a dog and risking their own lives is not an option for people who have children to provide for. The parents were given no choice but to abandon the dog, and to break their children's hearts. As they pulled away they all watched their trusting, confused and terrified canine family member alone on the roof.

At Red Cross shelters there are families that have lost their homes and all of their possessions but are thanking God that they are all safe. Others are frantic, unable to think of anything besides the slow deaths of beloved companion animals they were forced to leave on rooftops or at bus boarding points. One woman, with no other possessions left, offered her rescuer the wedding ring off her finger to save her dog, to no avail.

A young boy carried a dog in his arms as he tried to board a bus to the Houston Astrodome. Dogs were not allowed. The Associated Press story reported that "a police officer took one from a little boy, who cried until he vomited. 'Snowball, Snowball,' " he cried." In a similar story, an old woman, traveling alone except for the poodle in her arms, was forced to leave him behind to wander the streets. We have read other stories of elderly people forced to choose between their lifesaving medications or their life-affirming pets. CNN's Anderson Cooper even reported on a woman, legally blind, who for 10 days had been told that she could not take her service dog with her if she was evacuated. She had stayed put until the CNN cameras arrived and the police relented.

Many large hotel chains, aware of the human-animal bond, now allow guests of varied species. Sadly, those organizations on which we rely, not when on vacation but in life-or-death circumstances, are not up with the times.

The pets pulled from people's arms would not have taken seats meant for humans. There is no reasonable explanation for abandoning them. They were the last vestiges of sweetness, in some cases the only living family, of those who had nothing left. But the police officers were just following orders -- orders that reflect an official policy inconsistent with how people feel about their animals.

Red Cross shelters that do not have animal-friendly areas, or do not coordinate with humane groups to make sure that there are animal shelters nearby, are out of touch with the needs of a society in which 60 percent of families have pets and many view them as intrinsic members of the family.

Karen Dawn runs the animal advocacy Web site DawnWatch.com and is a contributor to "In Defense of Animals: The Second Wave," edited by Peter Singer.

© 2005 The Washington Post Company

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(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.)

§Pet-rescue policy needed, Humane Society head says
by more
Pet-rescue policy needed, Humane Society head says
Current rules forced owners to leave animals behind

- Marsha Ginsburg, Chronicle Staff Writer
Friday, September 16, 2005


Thousands of pets, and perhaps some of their owners, would be alive today if the federal government had a plan in place for rescuing animals after disasters such as Hurricane Katrina, the head of the nation's largest animal welfare organization said Thursday.

In the wake of criticism about the government's lack of coordination during one of the nation's worst disasters, officials from the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the Humane Society of the United States are scheduled to appear at a joint press conference in New Orleans today to discuss the issue of animal rescue. Humane Society President Wayne Pacelle said he planned to call on the federal government to come up with the nation's first animal rescue plan.

"Government policies forced people to make an awful choice -- to be rescued and leave behind their pets or to stay in a stricken city and risk their lives," said Pacelle, who was in San Francisco for a fundraiser before returning to New Orleans. "We want to see a rescue policy that recognizes the incredible bond between people and their pets."

He said the government's approach after Hurricane Katrina was to place a priority on rescuing people over pets. FEMA and the U.S. Coast Guard confirmed the policy.

Forcing people to agree to be rescued without their animals "fundamentally misreads the psychology at work of 60 percent of households in America (who have pets)," Pacelle said. In New Orleans, he said, many owners decided to stay rather than leave their animals behind.

The national Humane Society has led the rescue of some 5,000 abandoned animals. There may be as many as 50,000 stranded pets in Louisiana alone, Pacelle said.

Dozens of animal advocacy groups from California, Colorado, Texas and Florida have volunteered to take animals ranging from dogs and cats to exotic birds, Pacelle said. But they need to be rescued first.

Authorities prevented Humane Society volunteers from saving animals in the immediate aftermath of Katrina and the New Orleans flood, Pacelle said.

Then, officials in New Orleans tried to enforce a 30-day quarantine before the animals could be taken out of state. When they dropped that requirement, Humane Society volunteers were still dependent on federal agencies and their rescue equipment.

TV crews filmed scenes of rescue boats passing up animals. There were heart-wrenching stories of families having to leave pets behind, including one boy at the Superdome who begged in vain to keep his dog, Snowball. He cried until he vomited.

There have been acts of kindness, too, Pacelle said. This week, with the help of a National Guard tank, the Humane Society rescued a St. Bernard from a rooftop. The dog had lost half its weight. A Coast Guard cutter rescued a dachshund that gave birth to pups on board the ship.

About 2,000 animals have been taken to a makeshift rescue center in Gonzales, about halfway between Baton Rouge and New Orleans. Dogs, cats, snakes and even a pot-bellied pig are there.

Both FEMA and the Coast Guard said Thursday their mandate was to preserve human life under trying circumstances. Coast Guard Cmdr. Brendan McPherson said rescuing animals was unfamiliar turf.

"In most cases the animal we come across under normal conditions ... the owner would be there," he said. "We're not trained in rescuing animals."

Both agencies said commanders of the crews on scene had the discretion to rescue animals or pass them by.

"This should not be a matter of individual acts of compassion," Pacelle said. "It should be a matter of policy."


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