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The Houston Humane Society is a 501 (c) (3) IRS designated non-profit organization dedicated to, and working towards, ending cruelty, abuse and the over population of animals while providing the highest quality of life to those in our care. We do not receive any government funding or operational funds from national animal welfare groups. We operate on the generosity of people throughout Southeast Texas, special events, program services and grants to continue our care for almost 50,000 animals each year.
At Forgotten Cats, our mission is to reduce the unwanted cat population without killing and to stop the suffering of the thousands of kittens born to abandoned, homeless cats. We do this by working with colony caretakers to trap, sterilize, vaccinate, and return every cat within a colony. We provide the necessary medical treatment for sick or injured feral cats, stray cats, and kittens. We are working to find homes for adoptable cats and kittens. We also provide education about spay neuter, and we are assisting other cat rescue groups with trap, neuter, and return programs.
Each year hundreds of healthy companion animals are “euthanized” at local Humane Societies, primarily due to a lack of funding and cages. The Animal Assistance Society believes that euthanizing healthy animals is neither a humane nor an effective form of controlling unwanted/abandoned animal populations. Alternatively, we hold that spay/neuter programs and encouragement of pet guardians to employ an indoor lifestyle for their cat, is the answer. The Animal Assistance Society has a “no kill” policy and helps to effectively reduce the burden on local Humane Societies through our Foster, PetSmart Adoption and Spay/Neuter iniatives.
We are the oldest and largest nonprofit animal welfare organization in Saginaw County. We are dedicated to the betterment of the lives of stray, owned and abandoned animals since-We believe no-birth is the first step to no-kill. Our organization works diligently to reduce the population of homeless and unwanted animals in Saginaw County, Michigan through our free spay and neuter services.-We rescue hundreds of homeless and abandoned animals every year. -We are strong advocates of Trap-Neuter-Return of Community Cats.-We provide pet food to households in needs to keep pets in their homes.
The purpose of the Humane Society of the Ohio Valley shall be to promote the welfare of the animals within greater Washington County, Ohio in the following manner:Provide a safe haven for stray, lost and /or abused animals through operating an animal shelter.Educate the Communities served by the Society on the need for humane care of animals, the need for animal population control, the relief of animal suffering, and the services offered by the Humane Society of the Ohio Valley.Investigate and prosecute complaints of animal abuse and neglect as permitted by the Ohio Revised Code.Provide for the adoption of animals by people who can demonstrate that they will provide care consistent with the purposes of the Society.
Metairie Humane’s mission is “connecting humans with pet companions destined to be a lifetime love affair” and to care for companion dogs regardless of breed**, age, gender, or medical status. Our goal is to place homeless or abandoned dogs in permanent loving homes. We provide a safe and caring environment for pets awaiting placement due to high kill rates at local pounds and shelters.
TO CONNECT HORSES AND PEOPLE THROUGH CHARITABLE GIVING IN ORDER TO DEVELOP AND SUPPORT PROGRAMS OR INITIATIVES THAT PRESERVE OUR HORSE'S LEGACY AND FURTHER THE OVERALL WELL-BEING OF THE AMERICAN QUARTER HORSE AND THE PEOPLE WHO COMPRISE THE QUARTER HORSE FAMILY THROUGH SCHOLARSHIPS, RESEARCH, EQUINE ASSISTED ACTIVITIES AND THERAPIES, THE HALL OF FAME & MUSEUM, AND OTHER PROGRAMS OF INTEREST TO THE QUARTER HORSE FAMILY.
Our goal is to educate people about animal rescue and welfare while working together with various groups, shelters, and rescues to decrease and eventually eliminate our sick, stray, and abused animal population. Love and Rescue has two main missions. One is to ensure that 100% of the donations made through the website go towards an animals well-being. The second is to bring two types of fosters together: one that can fund the animal and the other that can house the animal. This will grow our foster base and in turn increase the amount of innocent lives we can help save.
Our mission is to take swift and decisive action to protect and restore marine species and their habitats and to inspire people in communities all over the world to join us as active and vocal marine species advocates. The Sea Turtle Restoration Project (STRP), founded in 1989, TIRN's oldest and largest project, works to protect and restore endangered sea turtle populations worldwide in ways that meet the needs of the turtles and the needs of neighboring local communities using grassroots action, multimedia campaigns, hands-on conservation, environmental education, and litigation. STRP's sponsoring nonprofit is Turtle Island Restoration Network or TIRN.
The mission of the Niagara County SPCA, Inc. is to prevent cruelty to all animals, to help educate the public on the humane treatment of animals and to provide love and care for those companion animals with whom we come in contact.We promote adoption and re-homing for abandoned and unwanted companion animals. We promote humane treatment of all living things and work within the law to respond to and investigate all complaints of cruelty and neglect.The Niagara County SPCA endeavors to eliminate cruelty and over-population. We support the principle that no person has the right to cause pain and suffering to any living creature.
We are dedicated to saving the lives of stray cats and kittens and finding them their forever homes. Our organization's focus is on female cats who are having litters of kittens outside, adding to the stray cat population. We take in the nursing mother cat with her kittens or motherless litters of kittens. We socialize them in our shelter or foster homes until they are old enough to be spayed or neutered, vaccinated, and deemed healthy and ready to find a permanent home. We strive to do this better than a large organization by limiting our intake to numbers we can properly accommodate.
Wild Fish Conservancy seeks to improve conditions for all of the Northwest’s wild fish by conducting important research (http://wildfishconservancy.org/about/what-we-do/science/research-and-monitoring/research-and-monitoring) on wild-fish populations and habitats; advocating (http://wildfishconservancy.org/about/what-we-do/advocacy/advocacy) for better land-use, harvest, and hatchery management; and developing model restoration(http://wildfishconservancy.org/about/what-we-do/science/habitat-restoration/test) projects. We are dedicated solely to the needs of wild fish, and don’t represent the interests of any specific user groups.