Showing posts with label Officer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Officer. Show all posts

Thursday, January 26, 2012

The Shelter’s New Hire is a Cat Lady and Much More


Before Jesse, cats waiting to go from quarantine into “C.A.T.S.,” the shelter’s adoptable cat colony, would get sick and be euthanized.  Jesse Marie Falcon was chosen to fill the only new position authorized in Aiken County last year, Custodian/Adoption Counselor at the Aiken County Shelter, bringing the full-time shelter staff to four, plus two inmates.  She started on September 20th.

“I’ve always loved animals,” she says, “When I was younger (she’s 22), I wanted to be a veterinarian, until I learned how long you gotta go to school.” She has an easy laugh.  Now she hopes to return to Aiken Tech for its vet tech certificate.

“I love cats.  Well, I love dogs and cats, but I’m mainly a cat person.”  Jesse lives with 5 neutered male cats, a “talkative” female cat, a 4-month-old Rotty-mix pup from the shelter who thinks she’s a cat, her 6-year-old son, and her boyfriend.

When asked the difference between a cat person and dog person, she says, “Cats like me better…we connect more.”   She thinks again and laughs, “Cats are more mature than dogs.”

Jesse’s path to her current position was almost as miraculous as the fact that it was created.  She had done community service for a DUI at the shelter and impressed the Chief and Senior Vet Tech with her performance.  When the position came available she had been looking for work for over 8 months.
“It was bad,” Jesse says, “not even McDonald’s would call me back.”

Not so many of the shelter cats are getting sick anymore, now that they are under Jesse’s care.  The “Cat Closet,” or quarantine room where the cats are held for a minimum of 5 days, was given a deep cleaning and she maintains it and its residents.  She also cleans the office and C.A.T.S., and shows any animal to people looking to adopt.

Jesse sees all the court cases: cats near death, so thin and weak they have to be fed a liquid diet, then canned food.  One was finally adopted, she recalls, as if it were another miracle.

Twenty-six were recently confiscated from a hoarder.

“When they came in they were too weak to clean themselves, like they’d given up.  You couldn’t get near most of them,” Jesse says, “You can touch them now.  They’re not coughing, and their eyes aren’t all gooey.”  Sadly, unless adopted, they still will die.

According to Jesse, the black cats in C.A.T.S. are the most loving, even more than the calicoes and tabbies, but some people…

“They see them and say, ‘Ooh, I gotta leave!’ and walk right out again,” she says.

Nick and Chief, jet black with big green eyes, unrelated “twins” that only Jesse can distinguish, take turns in her lap.

“I love this job; I really do,” she says stroking one of them, “its way better than any job I ever had.”

 Jesse is a blessing to our shelter.  You can thank her by adopting a cat; better yet, make it two.  



FOTAS Volunteers work with the AIKEN COUNTY ANIMAL SHELTER, 411 Wire Road.  For more information, contact “info@fotasaiken.org” or visit FOTAS on line at www.fotasaiken.org

Aiken County Animal Shelter:  “By the Numbers”

 
“Cat Stats” for 2011
 
Total Cats Received:  2,169 (approx.)
Average in C.A.T.S. colony: 20
Adoptions:  142 cats
Euthanized: 2,019 cats (93%)

Aiken County Shelter “Pets of the Week” 


JUNE BUG 
This Lab/Terrier  is a doll. 2 yrs and 39lbs of pure love. $70 includes shots, neuter, microchip.

CHLOE 
Gorgeous peach Persian mix.   
10 yrs young and already spayed, she’ll settle in with a grateful purr.

 

 

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Regarding Persons of the Year 2011 and a Community for 2012



In selecting “The Officer” as the 2011 Person of the Year, the Aiken Standard’s New Year’s wish was “that 2012 can be a year of healing and a year of growing.” 
The wish specifically acknowledges a community and a family stunned by tragedy and deep in mourning; and, as such, FOTAS will take this opportunity to lend our collective voice to that hope, and support to the Richardson family.
“Public Safety,” is often a blessing and a benefit that we take for granted, like the sun that lights and warms or the air that cools and sustains us, until it is not there.
In our work with Aiken County Animal Services, FOTAS volunteers have the opportunity to learn how our Animal Control Officers work to protect the two-legged and four-legged citizens of our community.  These agents are on call 24/7 assuring public safety and animal welfare to the best of their ability.  None of us would want to witness, nor intervene in, some of the tragic circumstances they encounter.  To each Officer we would like to extend our heartfelt appreciation for the challenging job they undertake on our behalf. 
The three women honored as a Team by the nomination for Person of the Year were collectively astounded, and individually deeply honored to be singled out for such recognition.
As founders and board members of Friends of the Animal Shelter, Inc., they have worked hard to forge their team and to establish a public charity as deeply dedicated to its professed mission as FOTAS has become.  “FOTAS, Making a Difference,” is what the logo says, making a difference in the lives of thousands of animals and in hundreds of humans who are directly and indirectly their guardians here in Aiken County.
There is nothing quite as powerful as an opportunity recognized, seized and exploited, especially when it can improve the lives of an entire community.
FOTAS was an idea whose time had come.  The founders were the right people present at the right time, but without the nascent desire throughout our community to make a badly needed change, nothing could have happened. Leadership is an initiative that inspires followership. 
Our Chief Animal Control Officer Bobby Arthurs continues to look for ways to improve Aiken County Animal Services, through the ethic and efficacy of his officers and his shelter staff.  Their ideas and initiatives routinely surface for expanding spay/neuter, maintaining useful records, enabling public safety and cooperation, and for saving as many animals as they possibly can, in an environment never intended for such a lofty purpose.
Results are what accrue to an unprecedented Public-Private Partnership.  The founders of FOTAS set the stage for a community that professed to be animal-loving to live up to its self-image; hence, FOTAS volunteers and donors to the cause continue to grow, and our Aiken County government could not be more supportive.
Aiken County will see its new shelter in the year to come; and thus the year of “healing and growing’ will, in part, manifest.  
FOTAS Volunteers work with the AIKEN COUNTY ANIMAL SHELTER, 411 Wire Road.  For more information, contact “info@fotasaiken.org” or visit FOTAS on line at www.fotasaiken.org
 

Aiken County Animal Shelter:  “By the Numbers”

 
For Dec. 26th thru Jan. 1st 2012
 
Dogs taken in: 44
Cats taken in:  15

Dogs adopted: 3
Cats adopted: 7

Dogs euthanized:  13
Cats euthanized:  7

Aiken County Shelter “Pets of the Week” 

 


DASHER – 3-yr-old handsome shepherd mix
a big boy who wants to be a loyal companion. 
$70 includes shots, neuter, microchip.


SAMANTHA – 3 yrs old, part-Siamese beauty.  
 Big blue eyes say, “Love me.”  $35 includes shots, spay, microchip.