Homeless Animals Rescue Team

Schedule of Adoption Days

Homeless Animals Rescue Team (HART)
P.O. Box 7261
Fairfax Station, VA 22039-7261
703-691-HART   Fax: 703-691-1730

www.hart90.org
United Way #8363
CFC-Federal #75875
CVC-Virginia #8183


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HOW TO BECOME ACTIVELY INVOLVED FOR ANIMALS IN YOUR COMMUNITY

 

1.      Inform yourself about animal welfare problems.  API will help keep you abreast of important national and international issues through our quarterly magazine Mainstream and other special mailings.  You may, in turn, help API by notifying us of local issues which may warrant action by our alert forces.

2.      Become acquainted with your state's wildlife code and animal regulations and report any violations promptly.  Your local librarian or the humane officer at your local animal shelter can help you obtain information about or copies of state and federal animal protection laws.

3.      Join a local humane society or animal shelter and/or volunteer your services for routine work or special fundraising events.

4.      If you have children, encourage them to research animal topics for reports or classroom discussions.  API will be happy to help by supplying reference materials on pet care, endangered species, or other topics.

5.      Scan newspapers and magazines for articles pertaining to animals and/or animal abuses. When appropriate, write letters to organizations or companies involved with a story to either complain or praise them. or direct complaints to the group involved are not effective, write to local government officials.  Also, send a copy of the clipping to API for our information and possible action.

6.      Write letters to local and state officials, elected members of Congress and heads of state and federal agencies concerning animal welfare legislation.  Each letter you write is taken to mean that anywhere from 50 to 500 other people in your area hold the same opinion; do not discount the value of a single letter.  Remember, too, letters of praise can be just as effective as letters of complaint. (Note: Ask for API's article "Writing Effective Letters" that gives helpful hints on how to get the most impact from your letters.)

7.      Inform others about the plight of animals.  Letters written to the editor of a local newspaper, calls to a radio talk show, or material passed out at a dog show, club meeting, or other event, are all excellent ways to spread the word.  In addition, if you like to write, submit informational pieces to the paper for publication-book reviews or even a Mainstream article submitted for reprinting, if appropriate, are two ideas. (API can supply you with materials to distribute.)

8.      Encourage clubs to undertake animal or ecology related projects.  Possibilities include: showing animal videos and films (API has several available); sponsoring trips to wildlife preserves; arranging for talks by veterinarians, wildlife agency officials, or humane society officers; setting up displays on wildlife or pets; obtaining permission to plant special food and cover plants for wildlife in a local park.  When planting cover, be sure to use native species, not imported plants.  Research what types of food sources are needed by indigenous wildlife.  You might want to check with the Department of Agriculture Extension Service for such information.

9.      Individuals or groups might wish to donate books on animal protection, wildlife, pet care, or conservation to a local library or school and ask that it hold an animal week, featuring a display or promotion of these books.  API will be happy to supply you with a list of suitable books for this purpose.

10.    Give schools or libraries gift memberships in API, which include a subscription to Mainstream, as well as special project mailings.  Subscription only to Mainstream magazine is $12/year.  Full membership in the Animal Protection Institute is $18/year.

11.    Encourage responsible pet ownership by setting a good example.  Make sure your pet is spayed or neutered, wears a collar with proper identification attached to it, is routinely vaccinated, regularly exercised, fed a balanced diet, and adequately sheltered.  Never let your pet run loose unsupervised.  If, for some reason, you are unable to keep an animal, either find him/her a good home or take him/her to a no-kill animal rescue association or league through which he/she can be made available to a loving home. If you are unable to find a new home or an organization able to help, take him/her to your veterinarian to be humanely put to sleep.  NEVER abandon an animal, for it will probably not survive and will only add to the already monumental problem of pet overpopulation. (API has a pamphlet on "Finding Pets A Good Home," which may be helpful.)

12.    If your community does not have a spay/neuter program, try to establish one.  You might first contact your own veterinarian to see if he/she will perform a certain number of operations at a reduced rate.  If you would like to go one step further, send for API's package on establishing a low-cost spay/neuter clinic.  This project, however, is a tedious and painstaking process, requiring extensive time and effort.

13.    Attempt to set up a lost and found pet referral program.  By placing ads in the newspaper inquiring if anyone has lost or found a particular pet, people will soon learn that you are the one to call when they have lost or found an animal.  Radio stations will often announce that a pet has been lost and request that people call a particular number if they find an animal matching the description read.  One caution-you may find yourself plagued with people wanting you to place their unwanted pets, and, if your address is known, you may end up with animals on your doorstep.

14.    Circulate petitions on important issues such as API's "CLEAR SEAS" petition to rid the oceans of plastic fishing nets and other plastic debris so deadly to marine animals.  API often has petition campaigns in progress.

15.    Set up a humane education program in the local school system.  Discuss the possibilities with your local school or district administrator.  Perhaps you could initiate a simple, one-hour program on pet care and animal problems for one or two grade levels.  Teachers generally welcome volunteers from the community.  You would eventually reach great numbers of children, and the experience can be rewarding and of immeasurable help to animals.  API can supply you with humane education materials to distribute and use (such as API's Educators Newsletter, A. P. E Vine) as teaching aids.

16.    When requesting materials from API, please enclose a self-addressed, stamped envelope to expedite a reply.

Animal Protection Institute of America
P.O. Box 22505
Sacramento, CA 95822
(916) 731-5521

 
 

 

Contact Information

 
Telephone
703.691.HART (703.691.4278)
Postal address
P. O. Box 7261
Fairfax Station, VA 22039-7261
FAX
703.691.1730
Electronic mail
General Information: HART Office
Website:  Webmaster                          Unanswered Email