improving animal welfare @ocanimalcare orange county animal care, california

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No Kill Shelter Alliance Facebook | Twitter: @NoKillShelterCA email: [email protected] 1 No Kill Shelter Alliance (NKSA) Meeting w/ Staff* of Orange County Supervisor Bartlett, Nov 30, 2015 Topic: Improving Animal Welfare @ OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California * Paul Walters, Chief of Staff, 5 th District | Tanya Flink, Office Manager/Scheduler

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Page 1: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

No Kill Shelter Alliance – Facebook | Twitter: @NoKillShelterCA email: [email protected]

No Kill Shelter Alliance (NKSA)Meeting w/ Staff* of Orange County Supervisor Bartlett, Nov 30, 2015

Topic: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCareOrange County Animal Care, California

* Paul Walters, Chief of Staff, 5th District | Tanya Flink, Office Manager/Scheduler

Page 2: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

No Kill Shelter Alliance – Facebook | Twitter: @NoKillShelterCA email: [email protected]

Agenda – Improving Animal Welfare @OCAC

Introductions

Where are we now and what are the possibilities?

Many areas for improvement – we will highlight a few

Recommendations; immediate/long term

Wrap-up – review of action items, schedule next mtg

Appendix | Additional Info | Links to Information | Topics that came up in meeting

@OCAC = Orange County Animal Care

Page 3: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

No Kill Shelter Alliance – Facebook | Twitter: @NoKillShelterCA email: [email protected]

The Problem (where are we now?)

OCAC Largely viewed as one of the worst high kill shelters in California, not only due to high euthanasia rates (see later), but also very little time before being placed on euthanasia list, as compared to other shelters, an old and decrepit facility, unhygienic, not progressive

Evidence: 5 grand jury reports, 2 lawsuits, recent county audit report, and countless negative press reports; a handful of cities considering dropping their contracts with OCAC

Outdated policies and procedures, largely focused on how to kill the animals and dispose of their remains; no mention of what should be done to facilitate increased live-release rates

Outdated practices, such as hosing down kennels with dogs still inside

Empty cage killing

Page 4: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

No Kill Shelter Alliance – Facebook | Twitter: @NoKillShelterCA email: [email protected]

Euthanasia Data – Oct 2015 | 556 KILLEDIn October 2015, 556 animals were killed at OCAC

102 were dogs, 374 were cats, 35 were birds, the rest small pets, wildlife, livestock

57 dogs

Killed

SAME

DAY of

ADMIT-

TANCE

links to

spread-

sheet

version1(long list)

version2(by species)

Page 5: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

No Kill Shelter Alliance – Facebook | Twitter: @NoKillShelterCA email: [email protected]

Euthanasia Data – NEW INFORMATIONCORRECTION!

In October 2015, 556 725 animals were killed at OCAC

Please note that on Thursday Dec 3, 2015, three days after this presentation was

made, we received additional information from OCAC that 169 unweaned puppies

and kittens were also killed and their deaths not reflected in the numbers given in

the Logan lawsuit euthanasia spreadsheet. We are researching this further.

“Of the 2,050 animals entering the county government’s sole shelter in October, 725

were euthanized, according to data from shelter officials.”

Orange County Animal Shelter’s Kill Rate Has Advocates Sounding Alarms

From: Ingram, Katie <[email protected]>

Date: Thu, Dec 3, 2015 at 4:22 PM

Subject: RE: Difference in numbers

To: Nick Gerda <[email protected]>

Hi Nick, Thanks for checking. If you look at the Sharon Logan report, you will see under gender that some animals are listed as M

(male), F (female), S (spayed), N (neutered), U (unknown) or L (litter). The L (litter) is used for multiple underage puppies and kittens

requiring maternal care. It is our practice to use one record for each litter of underage puppies and kittens. The number of animals in

each litter is also stored in a separate field in our database and accounted for in our shelter statistics.

Katie Ingram Administrative Manager I 714-796-6413 561

The City Drive South Orange, CA 92868

Page 6: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

No Kill Shelter Alliance – Facebook | Twitter: @NoKillShelterCA email: [email protected]

Live Release Rate: OCAC uses flawed algorithm

OCAC EUTHANASIA

STATISTICS ANALYSIS (link goes to complete presentation)

(Orange County Animal

Care [Shelter], California)

by Dr. James Gardner

Page 7: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

7

Euthanasia – the KILLED dogs behind the stats

1. Dogs placed on euthanasia list for reasons such as alopecia, flystrike, dermatitis, and fleas.

2. None of the dogs placed on the euthanasia list for behavior who were then rescued have shown any subsequent evidence of aggression.

3. At least one recent dog who was clearly irremediably suffering was not immediately euthanized, where it would have been appropriate, and instead was found dead in her kennel.

Page 8: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

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Empty Cages does NOT alleviate the daily killings

Page 9: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

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Soaking the dogs…

Soaking the dog kennels while the animals are still within them is not recommended as a best sheltering practice, yet OCAC continues to do this. Two separate visits by the independent group JVR Shelter Strategies (as part of the audit), once in 2007 and once in 2015, both recommended against this practice. Additionally, this practice was criticized in the most recent Grand Jury report.

Page 10: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

10

Policies and Procedures Documents (Docs)

High level overview (approx. 193 docs)

Looked at titles, put in categories (raw data)

Looked at creation and revision dates (raw data)

Caveats:

Docs only put in one category

These categories defined by us

Docs were not read, categorization based on title

We believe we can still draw overall conclusions…

Page 11: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

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Policies and Procedures Documents (Docs) General Focus of Document #

financial/fees/business/office/ops mgmt 44

medical/disease control/facility maintenance 28

employee management/job duties 23

licensing/field inspections 20

reporting/legal/cruelty/vicious dog 20

chameleon process 9

owned/impounded animal processing 8

euthanasia/killing/use of force justification 8

safety/weather 5

shelter cats/feral free program 5

livestock/wildlife/rodeos 4

animal tracking stats 3

rescue/adoption partners 3

communications 2

dead animal disposition/cremation/rendering 2

animal adoptability/form 2

newborn puppies/kittens 2

volunteers 2

age calculation 1

foster care 1

miscellaneous 1193

Not a single document w/ title that

reflects canine welfare* e.g.

training, kennel enrichment, play

groups, outside kennel activities,

adopter meetings

Not a single document w/ title about

marketing adoptable pets, adoption

events, or social media outreach

10 docs about killing animals

and disposal of their bodies

Volunteers/fosters = 2 docs

Focus is on animal control,

licensing & revenue, & employees,

NOT animal welfare

*except one for unweaned puppies

Page 12: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

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Policies and Procedures Documents (Docs) 2of 2

Not only the content, but the quality of these docs is

suspect – Why?

Much has changed in the last 3-5 years in animal

welfare, but these docs are generally not recent

193 docs

only 11% originally written in the last 3 years

only 30% updated in the last 3 years

animal welfare and esp. canine – no docs

marketing, social media, enabling adoptions – no docs

YEAR --> 78 79 82 83 86 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 TOTALS

total original 1 2 3 1 5 11 3 16 4 4 2 8 6 11 0 9 11 6 7 8 2 18 4 12 5 0 3 5 5 3 15 3 193

total revised 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 20 27 2 3 5 7 32 15 30 12 161

newly written in last 3 years? 21 11%

revised in last 3 years? 57 30%

Page 13: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

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Example number 1: Austin

Page 14: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

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City of Austin No Kill Resolution

Page 15: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

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Austin City Live Release Rates

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Major points of Austin’s No Kill implementation plan

Revise mission of Animal Services, with moratorium on empty cage killing

Report public information with implementation of a sound performance-measurement system that clearly connects shelter

operations to the life-saving mission.

Decrease shelter intake via the following:

High-volume, free and low-cost spay and neuter surgeries

Projected cost of $110,000

Decrease owner surrenders

Intervention program run by APA with volunteers to freely converse with owners regarding alternatives and what

will happen to their pets if surrendered

Supply microchips to track success of program

Owner-surrender disclaimer to ensure the owner surrendering fully understands what may happen to their pet

Full-time behaviorist to decrease shelter intake, prevent return to shelter, and assist in giving information on shelter

animals and rescue groups.

Increase live outcomes via the following:

Comprehensive adoption program via partnership with APA and off-site adoptions

Maximizing the use of current shelter building facilities

Large scale foster program

Increase feral cat live outcomes

Public awareness and advocacy

Volunteer public-relations task force to promote shelter needs

Partner with Love-A-Bull to promote positive outcomes for pitbulls, including reestablishing the pitbull task force

Revamp website to provide much more information about each animal in its care (including where stray was

picked up, known personality traits etc), candor about number of animals killed at the shelter, and opportunities to

help reduce the killing.

Page 17: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

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Examples of life-

saving programs

in Austin

Page 18: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

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Example number 2: Washington D.C.

Page 19: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

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Washington D.C.: CEO Lisa Lafontaine’s blog

Page 20: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

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Example number 3: Ventura County

Page 21: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

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Adoptable Pet Marketing on Website/Petfinder/Adopt-A-Pet

Compare OCAC to another county shelter in CA, that is also using Chameleon/PetHarbor

as their animal management system/adoptable pet display system

Let's compare two dogs that are labeled as "pit bulls". Along with Chihuahuas, these types of dogs are the most common in CA shelters, and

the most likely to be killed rather than adopted or rescued.

Go to OCAC - Look at adoptable dogs. Scroll up and down the first page. Click on Bubba

Look at Bubba's profile. Take note of the information available.

(by the time you are looking at this, this dog may have been adopted, screen shots follow)

Now let's do a comparison of the possibilities...

Go Sacramento County Animal Care - Look at adoptable dogs. Scroll up and down the first page. Click on Turtle

Look at Turtle’s profile. Click on the link provided in the page. Take note of the information available.

(by the time you are looking at this, this dog may have been adopted, screen shots follow)

Look at some other dogs in each shelter.

Which dogs are more likely to attract adoption interest via shelter website viewers?(includes Petfinder, AdoptAPet, PetHarbor, etc.)

There are many other examples of outstanding marketing of adoptable dogs

• Humane Society Silicon Valley - dog Widget

• Pets In Need, Redwood City - dog Fabi

How do we get from where we are now, to where these other shelters are?

This is one of the areas we want to work on collectively.

County Info

<------------------------- Income -----------------------------------

County Pop Per capita Median house Median family

Sacramento 1,408,480 $27,180 $56,553 $65,720

Orange 2,989,948 $34,416 $75,762 $85,009

Page 22: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

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Adoptable Pet Marketing on Website/Petfinder/Adopt-A-Pet

Go to OCAC - Look at adoptable dogs.

Scroll up and down the first page.

Click on Bubba.

Look at Bubba's profile. Take note of

the information available.

Page 23: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

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Adoptable Pet Marketing on Website/Petfinder/Adopt-A-Pet

Go Sacramento County Animal Care -

Look at adoptable dogs. Scroll up and

down the first page. Click on Turtle

Look at Turtle’s profile. Click on the link

provided in the page. Take note of the

information available.

Page 24: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

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Adoptable Pet Marketing on Website/Petfinder/Adopt-A-Pet

Page 25: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

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Flawed Behavior Assessments OCAC = > killings

1. The so-called “Head Test” used at OCAC is not a recognized behavior assessment tool. SAFER is the industry recognized standard test.

2. OCAC staff do not have any formal animal behavior training

3. This issue requires more comprehensive evaluation, by someone with an in-depth understanding of how behavior should be assessed, if at all formally

We Don’t Know What We Don’t Know Thursday, December 3 2015 ASPCAPro Blog

If a dog displays a behavior in shelter, what might that say about his behavior in the home – and how we can

best help that dog? Dr. Emily Weiss continues this important discussion

Page 26: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

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IMMEDIATE GOALSMoratorium on empty cage killing

Full review of the shelter by an

independent group (e.g. JVR shelter associates,

Kristen Auerbach at Austin, Humane Alliance) so

recommendations can be made to reduce

killing

Establish a committee for best practices

in progressive life-saving sheltering,

whose composition is yet to be

determined

Page 27: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

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Third Party Assessment - Who can do the review?

Page 28: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

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Close

Wrap-up

What could be – the power of love (kennel enrichment video)

Action Items

Send presentation (NKSA)

Schedule next meeting w/ Sup Bartlett (Bartlett Staff)

Page 29: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

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Appendix & Backup Info

OCAC Oct 2015 Euthanasia List as per Logan Lawsuit Settlement:

version1 (long list) version 2 (listed by species)

Sharon Logan Lawsuit against OCAC (amended)

Performance Audit of Orange County Animal Care Final Report (#141505) March 24, 2015

The Orange County Animal Shelter: The Facility, The Function, The Future

(Orange County Grand Jury Report - 2015)

If Animals Could Talk About the Orange County Animal Shelter

(Orange County Grand Jury Report - 2015)

OCAC EUTHANASIA STATISTICS ANALYSIS

(Orange County Animal Care [Shelter], California) by Dr. James Gardner

OCAC Policies and Procedures – 193 documents released in Nov 2015

OCAC Policies and Procedures spreadsheet data

We Don’t Know What We Don’t Know Thursday, December 3 2015 ASPCAPro Blog

If a dog displays a behavior in shelter, what might that say about his behavior in the home –

and how we can best help that dog? Dr. Emily Weiss continues this important discussion

Page 30: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

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Grand Jury Report on Management IssuesSections of the 2015 Grand Jury report “If Animals Could Talk About the Orange County Animal

Shelter 2014-2015” that attest that management is inadequate"So much of what we call management consists in making it difficult for people to work.” Peter Drucker

“EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The 2014-2015 Orange County Grand Jury found that the Orange County Animal Shelter has serious problems

that have needed attention for many years. In addition to the desperate need for a new shelter facility, there have been complaints and

allegations from a number of sources inside and outside the Animal Shelter that have focused on the lack of leadership throughout the

Orange County Community Resources and Animal Care chain of command. This alleged void in leadership has resulted in

either the inability of management to define the problems at hand or, if defined, an unwillingness to correct them. It has been

alleged by many that the lack in leadership has led to a few mid-management personnel assuming control of the Animal Shelter

daily operations with little or no oversight from upper management. Additional information has led the Orange County Grand Jury to

investigate concerns regarding employee morale, human and animal health issues, feral cat policies, and allegations of criminal behavior.

Also, there have been indications of conflict between veterinarians and management staff with regard to medical decisions.”

“Consider a change of leadership within the Orange County

Community Resources Department and arrange for

mandatory leadership training for all managers and

supervisors that includes a curriculum of leadership skills,

people skills, and diversity”

Page 31: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

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ASPCA: How Shelters Can Use Data to Save LivesHow Shelters Can Use Data to Save Lives

Date: December 12, 2013

Panel Presentation

Webinar Recording »

Materials

aspca_webinar_slides_Using_Data.pdf

Webinar Slides

What is your Rate 10_2013.pdf

NFHS What is Your Rate

nfhs-basic-matrix-fillable.pdf

NFHS Basic Matrix (Fillable)

- Steve Putnam, National Federation of Humane Societies

- Jodi Lytle Buckman, CAWA, ASPCA

- Emily Weiss, Ph.D. CAAB, ASPCA

Does your agency track the number of lives you save? Do you use data

to gauge your progress or to plan your future life-saving initiatives?

Whether you’re already collecting data or not, learn how data collection

can help you to measure your impact on your community.

Discover how shelters are already using data to save more animals at

risk.

The National Federation of Humane Societies conducted a survey of

animal welfare professionals regarding data collection.

In this webinar, we will share the fascinating survey results, provide an

overview of commonly used rates and their formulas, and introduce a tool

which defines the most basic data all shelters should be collecting.

Webinar attendees will:

• Learn the difference between four live release rates commonly used in

shelters

• Receive a copy of the National Federation’s Basic Data Matrix and

understand how to use it to collect data for their community

Leaders of public or private animal welfare organizations interested in

collecting and understanding their own data to help inform their work and

planning will all benefit from this free, 60-minute webinar.

Page 32: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

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Appendix & Backup Info

Seagoville Animal Services (TX) – dramatic

shelter reform by police sergeant

Shows power of leadership, commitment,

animal welfare, and love

Sgt. Bailey, the little shelter that could and did

(presentation)

2012 live release rate = 98.5%

Seagoville Animal Services website

How Seagoville Animal Shelter Became No

KillPolice Veteran Makes Open-Admission Animal

Shelter No Kill & Ends Gas Chamber

How Seagoville Animal Shelter Became No

Kill - The Little Shelter That Did!

Published on Sep 13, 2012The inspirational story of how a 22 yr veteran police officer reformed his

city's animal shelter and saves the lives of the animals in their care -- using

compassion, conscience, and proven methods. To learn more about saving

the lives of shelter pets with the successful no kill equation,

Page 33: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

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Appendix & Backup InfoSAWACON 2015 Presentations (Society of Animal Welfare Administrators Conference)

SAWA 2015 Annual Conference Speaker Handouts

Sticky Frames: Why Negatives Lodge in the Mind and What to Do

Align Cultural Diversity to the Community You Serve (handout link will be given on site)

Changing Dynamics between Animal Shelters and the Veterinary Community

Your Role in Developing Your Leadership Team

Fitting your Baggage in the Overhead…So you can Take Off and Fly! (no handouts; networking session)

Transform the Board’s Contribution to the Organization

21st Century Animal Welfare: Using Technology to Save Lives

Prospect Research in Fundraising

Managing Skills and “Refreshing” Your Board

Eureka! Wheels on Suitcases! How Organizations both Promote and Stifle Innovation and what a Leader Should Do

Taking the Fear of the “Ask” (What would John Wayne do?)

SAWA 2015 National Council on Pet Population Research Symposium Speaker Handouts

When do you implement policy based on Research?

Perceptions that Impact Pet Adoption: What Non-Adopters Say About Shelters and Shelter Pets

Closing the door on Policy based adoptions

What's in a Name? Effect of Breed Perceptions & Labeling on Attractiveness, Adoptions & Length of Stay for Pit-Bull-Type Dogs (no

handouts)

Characteristics of Clients and Animals Using High-Volume NonProfit Spay-Neuter Clinics

Comparative costs and demographic impact of alternative strategies to manage free-roaming cat populations, as evaluated using

bioeconomic stochastic simulation modeling

Responsible and cost-effective solutions to address the urban cat overpopulation crisis

Increasing shelter cat welfare through a better understanding of human-cat interactions

Placing Dogs with Behavioral Issues in Foster Homes: Observations and Outcomes

Minimizing Animal Entry into Shelters through Social Tools & Main Stream Technology

Opening the door to a changed perspective of relinquishers / rehomers

Page 34: Improving Animal Welfare @OCAnimalCare Orange County Animal Care, California

No Kill Shelter Alliance – Facebook | Twitter: @NoKillShelterCA email: [email protected]

Areas for immediate improvement

Many areas for improvement – we have just highlighted a few…

adoptable pet marketing

euthanasia

behavior assessment

kennel enrichment

policies and procedures

fostering program

engaging community

spay and neuter

breed definition elimination

data access

best practices

use of technology

increase licensing revenue

More, more, more!