The ASPCA: Angels In Our Midst
Many of us are familiar with the parable of the
footprints in the sand. Able to review the moments
in his life, a man sees the best and the worst and
he notices two sets of footprints except at the
lowest periods. He questions this and ultimately
learns that he was never alone. He was being
carried.
For six months now the footprints that trace the
Louisiana SPCA’s path to recovery bear a special
mark, that of the “A,” the American Society for the
Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA). During
these past months they have literally carried us.
On the afternoon of Monday, August 29, hours after
Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast Laura Maloney,
Executive Director of the Louisiana SPCA, was in
Houston, monitoring television reports and watching
the worst case scenario unfold for New Orleans. A
couple of days earlier she and her staff had
evacuated with 263 animals from their New Orleans
shelter. Even before the reality could sink in,
Maloney’s cell phone rang. On the other end of the
line was Laura Lanza, Southern Regional Manager for
the ASPCA. “How can the ‘A’ help?” she asked.