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In This Issue

  • LA/SPCA
    one year
    later
    KATRINA
    one year later:
  • August 2006
  • WHEN LASSIE CAME HOME

  •  
    Pawsitively New Orleans
    A Timeline of the Louisiana SPCA
    in the Year of Katrina
    August 31, 2006

    Lexy breaks ground for the new shelter! Dear Friends,

    A very belated hello! It’s been too many months since we last communicated with you and we’re so sorry for the long delay since our last e-newsletter. It’s also been a difficult year for us as an organization. We faced the greatest of challenges during the past year – losing our facility, losing most of our staff, and rebuilding our organization as we all attempted to rebuild our individual lives. We say it so much it’s almost a mantra, but we couldn’t have done it without the support of friends like you.

    Although it has been a difficult year, I cherish the time I have enjoyed with the wonderfully diverse group of individuals who make up our Louisiana SPCA family. I feel truly blessed to work with a staff that I admire and love. I’m exceptionally proud of our team and what they were able to accomplish when facing despair and deep personal and professional sadness. If everyone pulled up their bootstraps and handled grief and sorrow like they did, the world would be a better place.

    Today marks a new beginning for the LA/SPCA as we break ground on the future site of the LA/SPCA Campus. The three phase project will ultimately offer a wide array of animal and community services including an adoption and education center, competitive agility trials, summer camp programs and programs for at-risk children and their dogs. Several supporters have pledged funds to begin the building process. However, the LA/SPCA must still raise $12 million in order to achieve our vision for the future. We invite community members near and far to consider this unique opportunity to be part of the building of the new LA/SPCA. This investment will result in a stronger and brighter future for the people and pets of Louisiana. Visit our website or call us at 504-368-5191 ex 202 to learn more about making a contribution.

    Thank you again for your patience as we rebuild and transform the LA/SPCA for both our human community and our four-legged companions.

    Woof!

    Laura Maloney
    Laura Maloney, Executive Director

    New friends LA/SPCA
    one year
    later
    KATRINA
    one year later:

    On August 29, 2005 a community and its animals were irrevocably and tragically altered. Katrina, one of the deadliest and strongest hurricanes ever recorded, exacted a devastating blow to the Gulf Coast leading to the loss of thousands of lives, both people and animals. The destructive storm and its aftermath were horrific and unprecedented. That it ravaged the physical landscape in a catastrophic blow was only one level of its strength. Its blow to the mental landscape was just as extreme. When people experience or witness a trauma on the scale of Katrina it strips away all the extraneous facets of life and brings us back to our core. Our connection to family and friends, our bonds of love and friendship become as essential as food and water. Amidst the chaos emerged one of the most enduring of bonds – the human-animal bond. During the hours, days, weeks and months following the storm that bond has only strengthened. In our relationship with animals, it became painfully clear that we needed them as much as they needed us.

    As the Louisiana SPCA marks the one-year anniversary of Katrina it’s done so with sadness and reflection, but also with a sense of hope and urgency to provide a better future for the animals we protect. Most importantly though, when acknowledging Katrina one year later we do so as a testament to all of the animals who’s lives were lost or dramatically altered following August 29, 2005.

    August 27-August 28, 2005 263 Animals Safely Evacuated

    August 29, 2005 A Horrific Storm

    August 30-August 31, 2005 Creating A Shelter Out of Thin Air

    August 31-October 15, 2005 Thousands of Animals

    October 15, 2005-December 9, 2005 Loss, Reunion and Starting Over

    December 10, 2005-March 25, 2006 Programs Return

    March 26- April 17, 2006 A Community of Animal Lovers Re-connect

    July 22-31, 2006 Lessons Learned: Part I & II

    July 22-31, 2006 Lessons Learned: Part III


    August 2006
    A Long Road Ahead

    Looking back at the past year, it’s almost unimaginable that we were able to not only survive our unprecedented hardships, but also overcome them. Most staff lost their homes, clothing and all their possessions. Those who worked the front lines during the rescue operation worked non-stop from the moment we left New Orleans on August 27. There was no break in anyone’s lives – they had no chance to assess or even comprehend their personal losses. They gave their all to the LA/SPCA and the animals that needed rescue. The staff performed like machines. And when we returned to New Orleans, the months that followed were fraught with change and uncertainty and a constant need to get it done and move on to the next hurdle, the next project, the next program.

    In July 2006, the LA/SPCA leadership team took part in...

    WHEN LASSIE CAME HOME

    The story of Lassie and Lassie’s return to New Orleans in late June 2006, more than any other we’ve encountered, touches many of the issues that have evolved from the Katrina animal rescues.

    Animal reunions were simple tales pre-Katrina. A family’s pet was lost. Maybe it scooted out of the yard or dashed out of a kitchen door left ajar. Owners would knock on neighborhood doors, post flyers, run ads in the local paper or go to the local animal shelter looking for their lost pet. With persistence and time, often times the animal would be found, the pet would return to its familiar environment and the world would go one, owner and pet reunited at last.

    Katrina of course was more than just a door left ajar. Debates raged and continue to in the animal welfare community over stories of lost and reunion.

    Read the full story

    Thank you!
    Thank You to our Treasured Colleagues . . .

    There are thousands of individuals, organizations and communities to whom we are eternally grateful. Listed are some of the many organizations that assisted us in rescue and recovery operations, as well as our own survival.

     Howls and meows to you all!
     
     
    Email Address: info@la-spca.org
    Phone Number: 504.368.5191
    Web site: http://www.la-spca.org


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    Louisiana Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals
    1700 Mardi Gras Blvd. | New Orleans | LA | 70114



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