Only an hour from Corinth where they are struggling to raise money for the shelter by sitting outside the supermarket collecting donations is a beautiful, brand-new 2 million dollar shelter teeming with staff and resources.
Tupelo-Lee Humane Society is blessed with a local community that generously values and invests in its shelter. The new shelter was built literally in the nick of time, the roof caving in one of their kennel areas days after they had moved into their new building in October of 2018.
The building is bright and airy, filled with beautiful paintings and rooms for every possible use. Their director, Rachel, is smart and resourceful and obviously a strong, natural leader. Last year she focused on increasing adoptions and reclaims and the results were strong. A board in the lobby showed how many adoptions they’d had in February.
While we talked with Rachel, her recent foster-fail, Peach listened intently. Peach is a beautiful dog with bulldog heritage.
In Tupelo, every pit bull and rottweiler must be registered as a dangerous dog and its owner must pay a $75 registration fee. I asked Rachel how they know a dog is a pit bull since there is no such “breed.” She grimaced and said, “Square heads.” TLHS assigns the breed and this is something Rachel has her sights set on—changing the perceptions and the required registrations.
“We don’t have any more behavior problems with pit bulls than we have with any other breed, so it’s unfair.”
TLHS handles about two thousand animals a year. They have 22 full-time staff members, including a veterinarian, plus a few part-time people to help, especially on the weekend. They have their own in-house veterinary clinic; we encountered their vet as she was taking a lunch break from an extensive hours-long surgery on one of their dogs. At TLHS, all of their animals, and any stray or lost dog that turns up, is immediately microchipped and vaccinated on intake, and then subsequently spayed or neutered after its stray-hold is up.
TLHS wasn’t always saving all the dogs. As recently as 2011 they were killing 55% of the animals that came in, and in 2014 that number dropped to 35%. Now they work hard to find a home, rescue or reclaim for every dog that comes in. Almost all of their adult dogs who come in are heartworm positive, but the shelter has the funds and the veterinarian to treat heartworm and works to educate the public about the dangers of heartworm and how to prevent it. They are blessed with a dog-loving public and adopt out most of their dogs, only sending about 10% out through rescue.
The shelter is considered a limited intake shelter, but Rachel tries to be more of a managed intake, placing owner surrenders on a waitlist when necessary, and making space by asking people who find strays to consider fostering the dog while the shelter looks for a home for it, providing that dog with veterinary care and support while it is in foster care.
She also partners with local students, allowing them to foster a dog or puppy for a school project or community service hours; this gives her the opportunity to educate, not just a student, but a family. Many of these same kids return to volunteer or foster after their project or service hours are completed, simply because they want to help.
These are smart moves because keeping a dog out of a shelter environment, even one as nice as this with an enrichment coordinator whose job it is to keep the dogs emotionally and mentally healthy is always a good thing.
Developing a transport program that can help TLHS and the surrounding rescues and shelters move dogs out of the area, is another of Rachel’s goals. Rachel has been with TLHS for six years, two and a half of those as the director. She is young, articulate, and motivated, taking advantage of training through Austin Pets Alive, and implementing lots of programs to increase adoptions and advocate for her dogs. TLHS and Rachel are inspiring. This is what a committed, passionate shelter director can do when she has the resources she needs.
We walked through a storage area where 15 palates of donated cat litter were stacked—enough cat litter for the entire year. We visited with the dogs and handed out treats. On each kennel card, instead of simply listing each dogs stats, the dogs ‘stories’ were posted. Sometimes it’s those stories that can get a dog adopted – pulling at the heartstrings.
Rachel didn’t have a hand in designing the building and admitted they have more rooms than they know what to do with, so they are experimenting with usage and trying to figure out what to do with their space.
I only spent an hour or two with Rachel, but I’m pretty certain she’ll figure out the smartest way to set up that shelter. I also believe that if she has set her sights on righting the backward breed-specific laws in Tupelo that make life even harder for a misunderstood and mislabeled breed, she will make that happen too. TLHS is a bright and hopeful star in an area of the country that sorely needs it.
For the sake of all the animals in northern Mississippi, here’s hoping their light reaches the places like Ripley Market and Jackson, where we next visited a shelter that could sorely use these resources and hope.
Cara
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Who Will Let the Dogs Out (we call it Waldo for short) is an initiative of Operation Paws for Homes. If you’d like to contribute to our work, we encourage you to click on the how to help link above and give directly to a shelter. You can also donate to our work via OPH’s donation page by designating Who Will Let the Dogs Out in your comments.
My upcoming book, One Hundred Dogs & Counting: One Woman, Ten Thousand Miles, and a Journey Into the Heart of Shelters and Rescues (Pegasus Books, July 7, 2020) tells the story of not only our foster experience but how Who Will Let the Dogs Out began. It is available for preorder now and a portion of proceeds of every book sold will go to help unwanted animals in the south.
Martha Kennedy
I was at the Animal Control shelter in San Diego about a hundred years ago (well, the 90s) adopting Ariel. Two little kids in San Diego had been savaged by someone’s pit bull and the city was attempting a ban on the breed.
A thuggish looking young man was attempting to adopt a pit bull. The Animal Control officer wouldn’t let him. It was a fascinating thing to watch. She KNEW he was going to use the dog to fight. Finally, the guy got mad and left. The AC officer was furious. “Here, look at this,” she said to us and handed us a notebook that was filled with photos of humans who’d been savaged by their own dog. One was of a woman whose eye was sewn shut and half her nose was gone. “Cocker spaniel,” she said. “Cocker spaniels do more damage to people than pits. I don’t see cocker spaniels being outlawed any time soon.”
Cara Sue Achterberg
exactly. And Chihuahuas and dachshunds rank higher on national dog bite list than ‘pit bulls’.
Martha Kennedy
Fierce little beasts with Napoleon syndrome 😉
rescuedogdexter
Thank you for bringing to a wider audience, what happens when a dog is placed into a shelter, usually through no fault of its own. I am wondering about one point you raise. Microchipping is “supposedly” mandatory here in the UK but there is a gap in the system whereby if the dog is lost, abandoned or given up, there seems to be little onus upon a vet to actually check the microchip against any standard records. Do you think that microchipping, which I understand isnt mandatory in the US, will help to reunite dogs with their owners or, at least, allow the authorities to trace where the dog has been? Will there be state wide or country wide databases for the dogs once they are chipped?
Cara Sue Achterberg
Microchipping isn’t mandatory here and I don’t necessarily know how each microchipping company works. I do know that the microchip company our rescue uses allows the adopter to register their microchip number, but the rescue is still on record, so if they don’t and the dog becomes lost, we can usually help reunite it with its adopter. Microchipping could truly help reduce the number of dogs in shelters because lost dogs with chips could be reunited with their owners, so most rescues and many shelters do use microchips. I believe when a lost dog’s chip is read at a vet or shelter, the reader gives the number and the company who created it and then the company who issued it is contacted for the owner’s information. (I could be totally wrong -this is my assumption based on the few lost dogs I’ve been involved with and my own experience with my lost cat)
rescuedogdexter
Thank you. It’s interesting in that whatever system is in place in any country, there are always loopholes. If you had a mandatory chipping requirement, with the owner having to provide their address details even if they move house, this would help. Surrender of a dog (or cat) would then require the shelter to amend the records and once the dog (or cat) is rehomed, the new adopters details are placed into the register. However this takes a single entity to administer the register, an organisation such as the American Kennel Club for instance and they will plead that they have enough to do and wouldn’t have time to undertake such a task. If the dog is lost or stolen and subsequently recovered, the chip could be checked against the national database and then duly returned to the registered owner.
The microchipping could take place when the dog is still a puppy and this would close the loophole of many of these pernicious “back yard” breeders who have no time for the welfare of the dog generally and look only to profit from the misery of their animals. The difficulty here is the ability to track these individuals who will be hiding their activities from as many of the enforcement agencies as possible.
In the UK, there are some schemes run by some of the better known rescue organisations to get the dogs microchipped for free and this seems likely to help. There are way too many puppy farms which operate without control or regulation. There are also far too many puppies smuggled into the UK, usually on the back of the latest Crufts winner being announced and people deciding that this is the dog for them (until they get bored with walking, feeding and cleaning up or when the cute little puppy grows into a full sized dog and takes over.
Cara Sue Achterberg
I guess I’d hoped it was better on the other side of the pond for dogs – more enlightened. Sorry to hear this. In the end, no matter the people, I suppose it’s always the animals who suffer because they don’t have a voice or a vote.
rescuedogdexter
I dont know if we are more enlightened here compared to any where else in the world. There are good people everywhere who try to look after dogs, to expose cruelty, try to bring bad conditions to the greater public knowledge and to try and ensure that we have something of a voice. It seems to be those in power who try to save face with proposing ideas, statutes and bills for parliament or congress, and then who lose their way when something else arises.
Cathy Beshore
Beautiful shelter! Thanks for another interesting, informative story!❤
Cara Sue Achterberg
It is a beautiful place and a really nice mid-week visit to raise our spirits!