What you should know about pet-overpopulation! Pet overpopulation is a community problem that costs taxpayers hundreds of thousand of dollars each year, puts overwhelming burdens on area shelters and creates health and safety problems for neighborhoods. An estimated 20,000 cats and dogs are euthanized each year in the Greater Kansas City and surrounding shelters. This is done at a significant cost to taxpayers and is a tragedy that can be decreased through targeted mass sterilization programs. Clearly the trends are not good, and action must be taken now to control future animal control costs and provide better care for the animals.
Spay Neuter Kansas City Spay and Neuter Kansas City (SNKC) is a 501c3 organization, formed in 2002 to reduce pet overpopulation through spay and neuter. SNKC provides subsidized low-cost surgery for pet owners who cannot afford the surgery. SNKC's approach is to:
The Solution Animal experts state that spaying and neutering 70% of the animals in a problem area within a few breeding cycles will show significant results.1 The target area must be addressed and surgery performed quickly because of the high reproductive rate of pets. Animal Control has identified the small geographic areas that produce nearly 80% of animal control calls. These areas tend to be the lower-income areas of the county and have a lower rate of compliance with rabies vaccination and licensing requirements and spay/neuter recommendations than do more affluent areas. SNKC targets these troubled areas in its marketing efforts, offering discounted or free rabies vaccinations and spay/neuter surgery to pet owners with financial need. Animal Control uses its enforcement power to create incentives for pet owners to utilize SNKC's services and have their pets vaccinated, neutered and licensed. SNKC ensures that all pets receiving surgery are either current on rabies vaccinations, or SNKC provides that rabies vaccination to the animal. SNKC does not provide subsidized surgery to those who can afford such services, nor does it provide comprehensive veterinary care to pets. It targets a market previously unserved by veterinarians. It is a well-known fact that non-neutered pets are much more likely to roam and to be aggressive than non-neutered pets. Statistics show that an intact male dog is 6.2 times more likely to bite or be aggressive than a spayed or neutered dog. 2 With more neutered pets, there will be fewer litters, less roaming and fewer cases of aggression. Future costs of Animal Control will be contained. Animal Control resources could be used to improve response time, and to focus efforts on bite prevention, humane education and adoption of shelter animals. Spaying, neutering and vaccinating this many pets will be expensive, but experts state that for every community dollar spent on spaying and neutering, the result is a cost savings of three dollars on expenses in the future. 3 Spay and Neuter Kansas City's goal is to continue to provide free and low-cost spay and neuter services to those who cannot otherwise afford it, with an emphasis on breeds that present potential safety issues to neighborhoods. We will also direct residents who can afford the surgery to private veterinarians. The more we can spay and neuter, the more we can curb the increase of animals entering shelters, bite cases and trouble calls. We hope to ultimately see a decrease in such numbers. Our organization is committed to:
It will take our entire community to help improve animal welfare in Kansas City. We must work together to make indiscriminately breeding unacceptable in our society, promote spay and neutering as an effective means in decreasing pet overpopulation and help make adoption more likely for a shelter pet then death. Please be a part of the spay and neuter movement! Get involved by volunteering with our organization or donating to help spay and neuter a pet in need. Donating to help a pet in need
Thank you, Michelle Dormady, President and Executive Director Spay and Neuter Kansas City 1. Dr. Marvin Mackie article http://www.animalmission.org/public/files/docs/70_percent.pdf 2. Gershman KA, Sacks JJ, Wright JC. Which dogs bite? A case-control study of risk factors. Pediatrics 1994; 93:913-917. 3. Solutions to Overpopulation of Pets. Peter Marsh and New Hampshire state wide spay and neuter program data.
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Spay and Neuter Kansas City 3710 Main Street Kansas City, MO 64111 816-353-0940 |
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