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It is our mission to preserve the lives and enhance the well-being of animals. At the Greenville Humane Society, we love and care for each pet as if they were our own. We work hard every day to provide homeless pets with more than just the basics of food and shelter—our pets receive daily enrichment, loving attention, and medical care. Beyond adoption, we offer a wide variety of preventative services like vaccinations and spay/neuter to make proper pet care affordable for our community so that all pets can be pets for life.
Our organization is committed to keeping pets safe, happy and healthy while they wait to be placed in a forever home. Since 1983 the McCook Humane Society has provided a temporary home for puppies and kittens, as well as adult dogs, cats and any temporarily homeless pet. We are dedicated to finding permanent, loving homes for abused, neglected, and abandoned animals in Southwest Nebraska and Northwest Kansas, while also continuing in our mission of education in Responsible Pet Ownership. We are classified as a No Kill Shelter and strive to be as low kill as possible and give them every opportunity to find forever homes.
The Wyandot County Humane Society was founded in 1985 because the local dog pound was selling animals to research and the remaining animals were being killed by unacceptable methods. The shelter continues to accept all animals 24 hours a day in order to prevent the suffering of being stray or worse and has expanded services to reach into three nearby counties to prevent animals from suffering a terrible death. No animal of ANY TYPE is ever turned away. Our scope of operation has truly become at least state wide, and in some instances we are covering several Midwest states at this point
The Moose Jaw Humane Society is a non-profit organization that cares for the abandoned, abused and neglected animals in the City of Moose Jaw and surrounding communities. A significant portion of our funding is derived from donations, which are used to provide the best possible care for each of our animals while we find them a 'forever' home. We pride ourselves on being a warm, personal-touch, progressive Shelter. Our staff are genuine animal-lovers who are committed to exploring the best ways to care for and help the furry clients we serve. Your support is our success!
For over 100 years, the Humane Society of New York has been a presence in New York City, caring for animals in need when illness, injury or homelessness strikes. In 1904 we were founded to protect the city's horses against abuse. Members fought for laws to punish negligent owners and place watering troughs in streets and parks. As funds allowed the Society expanded to include a free medical clinic and a small adoption center for cats and dogs. Today our hospital and our Vladimir Horowitz and Wanda Toscanini Horowitz Adoption Center help more than 38,000 dogs and cats annually, and their numbers continue to grow.
Their philosophy is to rescue, shelter, and adopt homeless companion animals in Westmoreland County. They also practice a no-kill policy They also wish to provide a full service shelter which includes rescue and shelter, Humane Society Police Officer Services, low cost veterinary services for the community, and volunteer opportunities. Their low cost veterinary services include a Walk in Clinic twice weekly, surgery 7 days a week and scheduled appointments. Equipment includes an X-Ray, Laser Machine, Blood work Machine, and a full pharmacy. This is all available to the general public who cannot afford private veterinarians. It also enables them to provide all of the care needed for the animals.
Founded in 1900 by M. Jennie Kendall, the NH Humane Society has gradually evolved into the organization it is today - assuring each animal exceptional care and comfort, gentle behavioral support, excellent medical treatment and specific adoption guidelines. Today we are a private, nonprofit animal welfare organization that is proud to serve the people and animals in the communities we serve and rely 100% on donations from the public. Come rain or shine, blizzard, or heat wave, our dedicated staff and volunteers strive to make a difference in the lives of the animals 365 days of the year. We strive to make the animals stay as short as possible, but no matter how long the wait, we are pledged to find a forever home for all.
The Kansas Humane Society is the largest privately-funded, non-profit animal shelter organization in the state of Kansas. We believe pets are safest in a community that values and protects them, best cared for by a responsible and loving family, healthiest when seen regularly by a veterinarian, and that saving animal lives involves much more than increasing adoptions and decreasing euthanasia. Did you know we have many programs and services such as counseling to help people find solutions to keep their pets? We offer spay/neuter services to families in need to help prevent unwanted litters. Since 1888, we have helped hundreds of thousands of Wichita’s pets by providing them care, comfort, hope, and most importantly, a second chance at a new life.
MISSIONHighland County Humane Society (HCHS) is a private, non-profit organization that promotes the health, safety, welfare, compassionate care, and protection of animals in Highland County, Virginia and beyond. As volunteers, we’ve been working since 2012 to help neighbors with their pets, and to take in dogs and cats with no other hope. We have no shelter or staff. HCHS receives no county or state funding. Thanks to our dedicated volunteers and foster homes, HCHS has rescued nearly 4,000 animals and has made life better for thousands more. HCHS is a 501(c)(3) organization. We’re funded through donations, grants, adoption fees, and fundraising events. Your tax-deductible donation provides day-to-day care, veterinary services, food, and shelter for dogs and cats in Highland County.
Our mission is to promote the welfare of companion animals through protection, advocacy, education, and by example. Our programs and services are uniquely designed to address the needs of dogs, cats, and rabbits of all ages and to provide support, education, and assistance for all the people who care for and about them. We operate our low-cost, high-quality spay/neuter clinic, weekly low-cost vaccination and microchip clinics, wellness clinics for pets in-need, and bring humane education to the elementary and middle school classrooms in our valley to ensure the next generation of pet owners will treat animals with respect and compassion. Our programs and services are open and available to any pet owner and Napa Valley elementary and middle schools, without regard to ethnicity or income
Georgian Bay Animal Rescue (GBAR) is a registered charity run solely by unpaid volunteers, who have been dedicated to helping animals in need, since 1999. GBAR is a "No Kill' animal rescue, serving Georgian Triangle, dedicated to helping lost, injured, abandoned, neglected animals; providing compassionate care, spay/neuter, adoption, 'second chances' at life." GEOGRAPHIC COVERAGE GBAR has no formal boundaries; it serves the area commonly known as the ‘Georgian Triangle’, which includes the communities of Wasaga Beach, Stayner, Creemore, Collingwood, Town of Blue Mountains, Thornbury, Clarksburg, Meaford, and the surrounding areas. At times, we have provided assistance to animals beyond this region. OUR VISION ‘No more homeless animals’ We dream and work towards a world in which there are no stray, unwanted, abandoned, neglected or abused companion animals, by building awareness of animal welfare rights, and promoting responsible pet ownership.
Our totally volunteer operated Humane Society has served Gananoque and the former Front of Leeds Township (now Ward 1 of Leeds & the Thousand Islands) since 1989. Since 1992 we have been a full service affiliate of the Ontario SPCA, managed by an elected Board consisting of local members of the communities we serve. In our history we have never euthanized a healthy adoptable pet just to make space in our Shelter for another. We rescue, rehabilitate and re home about 300 dogs, cats and other small domestic pets annually. Our volunteers raise the money to cover our operating costs through adoption fees, donations, continuous fund raising efforts and occasional help from the municipalities we serve. We are just one small charity trying to address the community problem of homeless animals. We can’t succeed without broad support from everyone in our community. Will you help us solve the problem by donating not only money but also your personal support as a volunteer and adopter?