Two speakers, one from County Council and one representing
FOTAS, invoked Gandhi’s quote about a people’s moral progress to mark the
significance of the groundbreaking ceremony for the new county shelter last
Sunday.
It was Gandhi’s belief that how a nation treats its animals reflects
its moral progress; it was the speakers’ contention that, with our new county
shelter, our Aiken County community’s moral progress has taken a great leap
forward.
So last Sunday’s groundbreaking was a huge celebration of a
major milestone.
In 2005, over six-thousand animals came into our county
shelter and almost all of them died there.
The facility was the county government’s response to a 1990 problem: one
hundred animals per month, not thinking that eventually they would have to
contend with over one-hundred animals per week.
In fulfilling competing responsibilities to public welfare,
no time or attention allowed animal welfare to be considered. No provisions were made for adequate
ventilation, waste management, or disease containment. No future was considered for the animals or
the facility that housed them.
Until 2009, the unclaimed animals that could not be crowded
into our current shelter still lived their five days in roofless open pens in
the dirt. While the building’s air and
trenches spread disease inside, the ground held the diseases outside.
It wasn’t that members of County Council weren’t aware that
something needed to be done. Kathy Rawls
knew. But the moral outrage can’t come
from our elected officials; it must come from their citizens. It was that moral outrage that gave birth to
Friends of the Animal Shelter, known as FOTAS.
FOTAS began in spring of 2009 with a benefit breakfast that
raised $2,700. That summer a concrete
pad was roofed over for the dogs in the overflow pens. A year later, C.A.T.S. (Cats at the Shelter)
opened as our county’s new indoor/outdoor adoptable cat colony.
As the FOTAS family grew in numbers, we championed the renewal
of the county’s 1-cent sales tax, helping secure a million dollars towards an adequate
county shelter.
FOTAS paid for the county to hear from a nationally
recognized shelter expert to determine the scope and best direction for the
project. In 2011, FOTAS committed $100k of
private funds for the architectural and engineering plans for a new county animal
shelter, then ultimately paid $125,000.
March 3rd, ceremonious shovels went into the ground at
May Royal and Wire Road, as members of County Council lined up with FOTAS
officers, our architect, Cary Perkins and our Chief, Bobby Arthurs, to
celebrate the achievement.
Thanks to Assistant County Administrator, Andy Merriman, and
an amazing public-private partnership, this project will be fiscally
responsible and no-frills; adequate to meet both public and animal needs; and, highly
attractive to community involvement. Happy, healthy animals are more adoptable.
FOTAS now needs help raising $400k to furnish the new
shelter. We will insure its future with
SNAP, our targeted spay/neuter program, working with the SPCA. Please contribute anything you can.
Be
proud, Aiken County. Progress, even moral progress, is evident. 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”
February 25th
thru March 3rd
Received: 44 dogs and 35 cats
Adopted: 19 dogs and 1 cats
Euthanized: 30 dogs and 17 cats
EVA – 2 yrs. Soft, silky, smart and yours for $70
|
Aiken County Shelter “Pets of the Week!”
ALBERT – 18 mos. Lab mix. Bust into spring with this running buddy! Only $70 |
*All adoption fees include: Spay/Neuter, heartworm
test, all shots, worming, and microchip.
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Your comments and input are always welcome. We appreciate any suggestions or thoughts that will help FOTAS with their goal to help the Aiken County Animal Shelter become a happy, healthy place that never has to euthanize an adoptable pet.