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ASPCA Grants

ASPCA Volunteers Choose National Volunteer Week Grants

Wednesday, April 24, 2013 - 3:00pm
Man wearing ASPCA orange shirt holding small dog

Earlier this year, we invited animal welfare organizations to apply for one of three $10,000 Volunteer Appreciation Program grants to be awarded during National Volunteer Week—which is happening right now! We couldn’t believe the response we got from more than 140 groups eager to brag about their amazing volunteers. Our experts winnowed the impressive list down to a few finalists, and we asked our own volunteers to vote on the three winners.

In the end, the rockstar grantees were:

• Ark-Valley Humane Society (Buena Vista, CO)
• Mayport Cats (Jacksonville, FL)
• Foothills Humane Society (Tryon, NC)

Each group will receive a $10,000 grant in recognition of their volunteers’ amazing work for animals. Congratulations, guys!

If you’d like to volunteer, check out our Top 10 Ways to Help Your Local Shelter. If you already volunteer for animals, tell us about it in the comments, or tweet us @ASPCA using the National Volunteer Week hashtag, #NVW!

Montana Community Comes Together to Save Starving Horses

Thursday, April 18, 2013 - 11:30am
Filly at the time of rescue

Tana, a two-year-old filly, at the time of rescue (top) and after rehabilitation (bottom).

When several horse lovers in rural Carbon County, Montana, noticed more than a dozen starving, neglected horses on two local ranches, they did what we hope everyone who witnesses animal suffering will do: They spoke up.

Local law enforcement was eager to take on the case. But, like most law enforcement agencies, they didn’t have the facilities or resources necessary to build a successful case against the owners and nurse dozens of horses back to health. So, officers reached out to the county’s only animal welfare group, Beartooth Humane Alliance, for help.

Diane Zook, Beartooth’s tenacious executive director, jumped at the chance. The only problem: Beartooth works mainly with cats and dogs. In fact, it had never assisted with an equine cruelty situation before.

Zook was unfazed. She called on experts including ASPCA Equine Initiatives Manager Stacy Segal for help. “Stacy is my hero!” Zook tells us. “Without her guidance, I really did not know how to go about this process.”

Segal drew on her wealth of experience investigating equine cruelty to help Zook and local police create a strong case against the owners of the starving horses. The hard work paid off: In July, both cases were settled in court, and Beartooth was awarded custody of many of the horses. For Zook, her greatest challenge was just beginning: Beartooth would need to find permanent placement for these deserving horses.

Segal immediately facilitated an ASPCA grant for the removal and care of the horses at a short-term foster home. Zook and her volunteers began the work of medically and behaviorally rehabilitating the horses, many of whom were undersocialized.

Meanwhile, Segal and Zook called on other equine rescues to see if they could take in and rehome these resilient equines, and the horse welfare community responded with an outpouring of generosity: Seven rescues from all over the country took in Beartooth’s horses, until there were just eight left. Zook prepared to care for the horses through the winter. And then, on Thanksgiving, Zook got an amazing surprise: Blaze’s Tribute Equine Rescue in Jones, Oklahoma, had an opening for the last eight horses. By December, every horse had been placed.

Today, many of these horses are in loving homes, while others are in sanctuaries. One is now a trail horse, two were adopted out together to be well-loved companion animals, and still another is a working cow horse. This spring Hazel, a mare who went to Zuma’s Rescue Ranch in Littleton, Colorado, gave birth to a foal. Hazel and baby will remain on the ranch as a part of its humane education program.

Should equine cruelty occur in Carbon County again, Segal notes, the police and Beartooth are now ready to confidently take on the case. We’re thrilled to have helped.

“The best part is that these horses have found a better tomorrow,” Zook tells us.

The ASPCA has been dedicated to helping horses since our founding in 1866. If you are able, please consider supporting our efforts to end equine cruelty and protect other companion animals from lives of suffering and abuse.

March 1 Is National Horse Protection Day

Thursday, February 28, 2013 - 2:00pm
Group of horses

Horses are frequently the victims of cruelty and neglect, but their suffering sometimes fails to grab headlines. In honor of National Horse Protection Day, we’d like to share just one horse rescue we’ve had the opportunity to support.

Last month, 13 emaciated horses were found living on a rural farm in Vermilion County, Illinois. The horses were all skin and bones. Two were blind, and a third was found deceased on the property.

Luckily, the Society for Hooved Animal Rescues and Emergencies (S.H.A.R.E) stepped in and began the long process of rehabilitating the horses. As soon the ASPCA heard about S.H.A.R.E’s incredible work, we gave the organization a $6,500 grant to help pay for veterinary care and food for the rescued equines.

We’re so glad to assist S.H.A.R.E in its efforts to help horses! Find out how you can get involved and be a hero for horses by reading our top 10 ways to help equines.

Have you stood up for horses? Tell us about it in the comments!

Thumbs Up—Illinois Students Help Their Local Shelter!

Thursday, December 27, 2012 - 11:00am
Illinois Students Help Their Local Shelter

We love connecting people with their local animal shelters—which is exactly why we love the HEART (Humane Education Advocates Reaching Teachers) program!

We awarded $50,000 in grants to HEART programs across the country to help students of all ages learn about human rights, animal protection and environmental ethics. One such program, at Stockton Elementary in Chicago, gave students a chance to participate in a service learning program focusing on animal issues.

The students organized two fundraisers to benefit the Chicago Canine Rescue and paid a visit to meet the animals they helped. A big shout out to the HEART students of Stockton Elementary for all their hard work! Great job, all!

For more information on the ASPCA Grants program and how you can get involved, visit the Grants page.

ASPCA Mega Match-a-thon: Thousands of Lives Saved

Monday, April 16, 2012 - 3:00pm
Ed Sayres, ASPCA President & CEO

On any given Friday afternoon across America, most of us are likely to utter a variation of the same phrase: “Have a great weekend!” A good weekend may be one in which we are able to relax, but I believe that a truly great weekend is one in which something meaningful is accomplished. By that standard, thousands of Americans started April with an amazing weekend during which they saved thousands of animals during the ASPCA’s first-ever Mega Match-a-thon.

Animal shelters and rescue organizations recognize that weekends are of prime importance for the adoptable animals in their care, as potential adopters are more likely to look for companion animals to adopt on days when they do not have to work. Some creative people who work on the ASPCA’s Community Outreach team spend a lot of time brainstorming ways to create excitement around animal adoption events. This year, they proposed and implemented a dramatic idea: concurrent Mega Match-a-thon events to be held throughout the country, which would be subsidized by the ASPCA to support high-volume community adoption events.

The ASPCA granted nearly $500,000 to be shared among 53 animal welfare organizations. Each grant recipient had made a thoughtful proposal detailing how it would use the funds we provided to create successful weekend adoption events. The Mega Match-a-thon weekend was a huge success—and 6,144 animals found loving homes.

Happy stories poured into us throughout the weekend adoption event:

  • Riverside County Department of Animal Services in Riverside, California, adopted out 400 animals over the weekend;
  • Staff and volunteers at Bangor Humane Society in Bangor, Maine, closed up early and went home after running out of animals;
  • The Humane Society for Southwest Washington in Vancouver, Washington, broke its own record for the most adoptions (44) in a single day within the first two hours of its event;
  • Rubbles, a 12-year-old blind Shih Tzu, was adopted from the Humane Society of Greater Miami in Miami, Florida, by a local soldier, and as soon as Rubbles got to his new home, his proud dad shared photos of Rubbles finding his way to the kitchen; and
  • Wisconsin Humane Society spent a lot of time preparing for its 24-hour adoption event, including posting a Paw-jama Puppy Parade on its website; their hard work paid off with 156 animals adopted during the event.

While the immediate and wonderful result of the Mega Match-a-thon events held throughout the country was the thousands of lives saved, the excitement these events elicited in their communities will hopefully lead to an enduring legacy of more people saving lives by adopting homeless animals in their local shelters.

More than 6,000 Animals Adopted During ASPCA Mega Match-a-thon

Monday, April 9, 2012 - 3:45pm

Talk about teamwork! More than 200 animal welfare groups from 53 communities found homes for 6,144 animals during the first-ever ASPCA Mega Match-a-thon, held March 30 to April 1.

“It really was inspiring to watch the collaboration among the different rescue organizations,” says ASPCA President & CEO Ed Sayres. “They reached out to their local media, spread the word to their supporters through social media, and showcased the amazing animals they have up for adoption. And over the three-day event, they got together and saved a record number of lives.”

In total, the ASPCA granted $492,250 to support the nationwide adoption event. A portion of the funds came as a result of the ASPCA’s participation in the fourth annual Subaru “Share the Love” event. The ASPCA received $1.4 million in funding from Subaru of America—62% has already been earmarked for the ASPCA’s “Share the Love” Grant Program. So far, approximately $884,000 has been distributed to local shelters.

Would your local shelter benefit from an ASPCA grant? Learn how it can apply today!

ASPCA Assists AL with Grants, Supplies and Boots on the Ground

Wednesday, May 18, 2011 - 2:00pm

Rescuing Flood VictimsAs the South and Midwest have struggled to cope with severe weather and the devastation it leaves in its wake, we’ve been keeping you informed about where we’re deployed and how we’re helping animals across the regions.

But, some of you have rightly asked, what are we doing to help Alabama’s animals as the state recovers from the worst tornado outbreak in U.S. history?

Here are a few highlights of our work for Alabama’s animals.

Grants
One ASPCA grant awarded in Alabama went to the state’s largest animal welfare organization. After receiving the $128,000 grant, the Greater Birmingham Humane Society (GBHS) was able to obtain an adoption and transport rig so it can better assist the state.

The rig will help GBHS head to other parts of Alabama—including hard-hit Tuscaloosa—to provide disaster relief. It will include space for animal transport cages, an on-board veterinary work space and room for the storage of pet care supplies.

“This rig will help us reach even more animals in need as we work to help the pets who have been affected by these devastating storms,” says GBHS Strategic Communications Officer Laura Golden.

Sheltering
Collaborating with our partnership network, the ASPCA has helped bring staff to Alabama’s overburdened shelter. In Tuscaloosa, the Saranac Technical Rescue Team has five responders at Tuscaloosa Metro Animal Shelter, and the Washington Animal Rescue League (WARL) has also sent a team.

In addition to assisting with shelter management and daily care, WARL has taken animals back to Washington, D.C., for adoption, lessening the burden on Tuscaloosa.

Supplies
From our innovative distribution center located in Memphis, we supplied Alabama with pet food, crates, carriers, large fans, litter boxes and more. ASPCA volunteers and partners drove trucks to the state and unloaded supplies quickly, helping shelters in Alabama care for their animals in the aftermath of the tornadoes.

Stay tuned to ASPCA.org for more news on how we’re responding to this crisis in Alabama and elsewhere.

ASPCA Helps Treat 160 Horses Battling West Nile Virus

Wednesday, August 25, 2010 - 2:15pm

Earlier this week, the ASPCA granted $12,000 to Lifesavers Wild Horse Rescue of Lancaster, CA after the organization rescued 166 wild mustangs from a Nevada auction block. The horses, who had been living on public land, were seized by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and turned over to the Nevada Department of Agriculture for public sale—many destined for foreign meat markets. After garnering incredible public support, Lifesavers was able to save the equines from potential slaughter.

In a tragic twist of fate, several of the horses fell sick soon after rescue—blood tests revealed they were positive for the West Nile Virus. Transmitted by mosquitoes and at times fatal, West Nile Virus affects countless numbers of horses each year. Symptoms typically include stumbling, wobbly gait, circling, hind limb weakness, inability to stand, fever, seizure, coma and paralysis. Unfortunately, six of the horses died due to virus complications. 

To decrease the spread of infection among the uninfected horses, Lifesavers worked with local veterinarians to vaccinate the entire herd. The funds donated by the ASPCA were used to provide the critical care and life-saving medical treatments needed.

"These horses were lucky enough to escape slaughter, and Lifesavers made an extraordinary effort to provide for them during this unfortunate outbreak," says Jacque Schultz, Senior Director of Community Initiatives for the ASPCA. "Treating such a large group is a challenging task and the ASPCA was honored to assist in providing these animals with a second chance."

Since 1997, Lifesavers Wild Horse Rescue has provided refuge, training and placement for hundreds of horses in need.

Take Action—Join the Pony Express!
Your help is needed to help stop the inhumane roundup of wild equines. The National Wild Horse Foundation is urging animals advocates from across the country to join their Pony Express campaign—a life-saving letter writing initiative.

Supporters are asked to visit Saving America's Mustangs, click on the Pony Express button and compose a polite letter urging the BLM to end their needless slaughter and confinement of wild horses and burros.

Madeline Pickens, the organization's founder, will print and personally deliver the letters to President Obama, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and BLM Director Bob Abbey via “Pony Express”—on one of her many rescued mustangs. The group has set a goal of collecting 20,000 letters by September 1, so be sure to add your voice to the Pony Express today!

For more information on the ASPCA’s effort to protect America’s wild horses, visit our Wild Horses page.