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The Pixie Project is a non-profit animal adoption center and rescue. We offer a variety of services to the public including but not limited to: pet adoption services, pet owner education and support and low cost and free spay and neuter and veterinary services for homeless and low-income pet owners.
It is our mission to manage the health, population and quality of life for feral cats in Waushara County.
Fixing The Boro’s mission is to provide low-cost sterilization to residents pets of Bulloch County. We plan on offering the only humane and sustainable solution to the overpopulation of dogs and cats. We strive to maintain the highest level of assistance we can provide and ensure that our services are available to everyone who needs help with their personal pets.The specific objectives and purpose of this organization shall be:-Offer affordable solutions to spaying and neutering personal pets.-Provide free spaying and neutering to people in need.-Small scale rescue/adoptions for both cats and dogs.
To build global awareness about the unnecessary and inhumane procedure of declawing so that we can outlaw this practice.
The Farley Foundation subsidizes necessary veterinary care for the pets belonging to low income seniors and homes, persons with disabilities, Ontario Works recipients & abused women (OVMA SafePet Program). Eligibility criteria includes: Seniors receiving GIS, persons with disabilities receiving the ODSP or CPP Disability, Ontario Works recipients, pets belonging to seniors' care facilities, and women at risk of abuse*. Applications for funding are made by veterinary clinics. The Farley Foundation is the charitable arm of the Ontario Veterinary Medical Association, which covers most of the Foundation's overhead costs (e.g., staffing, office space rental). This charity pays tribute to one of Canada's most famous pets, Farley the Old English sheepdog from Lynn Johnston's For Better or For Worse® comic strip. Lynn generously allows the Foundation to use Farley's image to promote the Foundation's good work. Visit www.farleyfoundation.org for full eligibility criteria.
Rescue The Animals operates a rehabilitation and transport center in Abilene that rescues homeless, abused, or at‑risk animals from municipal and rural shelters across West Texas; it provides medical care, rehabilitation, spay/neuter and adoption services, and coordinates transports and partner adoptions nationwide while supporting investigations of animal cruelty.
To control the local feral (undomesticated) cat population through Trap-Neuter-Return-Maintain (TNRM) programs and to facilitate the adoption of stray and abandoned cats and kittens into responsible permanent homes through our foster care and adoption programs.
The Humane League’s mission is to end the abuse of animals raised for food. Started in 2005, The Humane League, a national nonprofit organization, works to end the worst cruelties of modern factory farming and also encourages reduced meat consumption through public education, outreach, and corporate campaigns.
To alleviate the suffering of animals through veterinary service, spay/neuter and education. Our work is primarily carried out in Northern Uganda.
The Livestock Conservancy was founded in 1977 to conserve rare breeds of cattle, horses, donkeys, sheep, goats, pigs, rabbits, chickens, ducks, geese, and turkeys. Today's rare breeds are quite different from the "factory farm" stocks, which are very productive but require intensive husbandry. The rare breeds retain survival qualities such as disease resistance, foraging efficiency, maternal abilities, and longevity, which make them a perfect fit for organic, grass-based, and humane sustainable agriculture. As well as being useful to farmers today, rare breeds represent the genetic diversity essential for domestic animals to adapt to changing environmental conditions in the future.
The Owl Foundation is a registered Canadian charitable organization focused on helping wild Canadian owls that are injured or orphaned. The foundation operates an owl rehabilitation centre located in the Niagara Peninsula, Ontario, Canada.
The Pongo Fund works to prevent animal hunger and keep pets with their families by providing emergency pet food, veterinary-care referrals, and mobile/emergency services. Its volunteer-driven pet food bank and related programs focus on keeping animals safe, healthy, and out of shelters when families are facing hardship.