The following is the complete text
of the press release issued by City Council Member Kathreen
E. Freed on September 17, 1997
Kathryn E. Freed
City Council Member, 1st District
51 Chambers Street, Rm. 429, New York, NY 10007
Phone: (212) 788-7722, Fax (212) 788-7727
PRESS
RELEASE
September 17, 1997
Contact: Kim Dixon (212) 788-7722
Freed
Supports Referendum on Shelter Reform
As Chair of the New York City Council Contracts Committee and long time
animal activist, City Council Member Kathryn E. Freed announced her support
today of a referendum to give voters the chance to establish a new City
Department of Animal Affairs.
The required signatures have been colleced to add
a referendum to the ballot this November, to create a new city agency responsible for an animal
shelter system for lost, abandoned and stray animals. Currently, these
functions are the responsibility of the Center for Animal Care and Control (CACC) a not-for-profit corporation established and
controlled by the City. The CACC board members are
appointed by the Mayor and its sole source of income is derived from the City
and its contracts with the City Department of Health. The report cited [below]
revealed gross inadequacies in the ability of the CACC
to carry out these duties, specifically citing an alarming euthusania
rate and mismanagement at all levels.
The current contract requires CACC to fulfill the
following services: provide for the spay and neutering of animals before their
adoption; enlist the aid of volunteers; conduct community outreach and
education about animals; humanely care for shelter animals; and promote the
adoption of animals. The report was based on a report by the City Council
entitled "Dying for Homes: Animal Care and Control in New York City." The title summarizes the
main point -- the center's euthusania rate is 71% --
or 120 animals per day -- and no systems are in place to decrease this rate.
Moreover, the 17% adoption rate is well below the 24% national average and does
not reflect the fact that the majority of these adoptions are done by the ASPCA, the North Shore Animal League and animal rescue
groups. The CACC fails to adequately educate the
public about the services it provides, which in part explains the low adoption
rate. Additionally the CACC has failed to adequately
utilize volunteers. Finally, the CACC has ignored
offers from other organizations who have offered help to the agency. For copies
of this report, call the Council's Contracts Committee at [212] 788-7016.
Council Member Freed stated today, "The need for the passage of this
referendum is clear, the City lacks an over all effective and humane policy for
animal care. As the Center for Animal Care and Control has been given the
opportunity and failed to carry out its responsibilities to care for the City's
animals in-need, I support the ballot referendum to
give New York City
citizens a chance to correct this situation." Freed continued, "The
current rash of bite cases and even the rabies epidemic that we are
experiencing is directly related to the City's failure to have an adequate
agency to control our animal population." She urges the public to support
this referendum. To show your support or for more
information, call the Shelter Reform Action Committee at [212] 886-3700.