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Our goal is to stop pet overpopulation. If you (or someone you know) in Long Beach or Signal Hill needs assistance to help spay or neuter your own pets, please call 562-988-SNIP.
Did you know that 2 unaltered cats can
produce 420,000 descendents in just 7 years? Or, that 2 unaltered
dogs can produce
up to 67,000
descendents in just 6 years? This is called the “multiplier” effect
and is the leading cause of chronic pet overpopulation in our city.
Unfortunately most city residents are virtually unaware of the
magnitude and seriousness of this issue. The responsibility for
pet overpopulation lies not with the Long Beach Bureau of Animal
Control who vainly attempt to manage the problem but rather with
all city residents and pet owners who care about their communities.
The simple step of ensuring that a companion animal is spayed or
neutered is an effective solution to pet overpopulation.
In 1998, Friends of Long Beach Animals recognized the need for a low cost spay/neuter and public awareness program and introduced our city's only Spay Neuter Incentive Program (SNIP). Our program encourages participation by all city residents and offers low cost and/or free vouchers to local residents requiring financial assistance. We are extremely proud of our accomplishments to date, resulting in a total of 13,057 animals spayed/neutered at a program cost of $527,746.
Friends of Long Beach Animals has partnered
with Long Beach Animal Control to distribute SNIP vouchers to city
residents.
Each animal
control officer carries a supply of vouchers in the vehicle for
easy distribution in situations when a city resident appears to
be in need. In 2004, Long Beach Animal Control was recognized as
the leading distributor of SNIP vouchers in the cities of Long
Beach and Signal Hill and received a recognition award for its
tireless efforts.
“SNIP, what a great program!
Friends of Long Beach Animals (FOLBA) has helped the community
with this
spay and neuter program for
many years. It has given Animal Control Officers an additional
tool to assist owners of animals to help reduce unwanted litters.
Over the years I have seen many litters turned in where the owner
is keeping the mother dog or cat and many times we would see this
person again even though we educated them about the benefits of
spaying and neutering the pet. With SNIP we see the number of unwanted
litters turned in to Animal Control being reduced. I'm sure that
this program will continue to be part of the solution reducing
the countless number of unwanted litters.”
Wesley Moore,
Acting Manager,
Long Beach Bureau of Animal Control Vouchers
are also distributed through several community outreach organizations
including the Neighborhood Resource Center (NRC)
on Atlantic Avenue as well as the Neighborhood Watch program hosted
by the community relations division of the Long Beach Police Department.
In addition, Friends of Long Beach Animals members support the
program through voluntary distribution of vouchers during community
events such as the Martin Luther King Day parade.
In the words
of Dr. Salah Saleh of Mercy Animal Hospital, a long time SNIP supporter
and participating veterinarian, “If everyone
did his share, we would not have a problem. The SNIP program is
wonderful – it helps animals, it helps people and it makes
a difference by saving lives”. According to Dr. Saleh, an
animal that has been spayed or neutered has a much better chance
at a longer and healthier life. The occurrence of pyometra in older,
unaltered female dogs as well as testicular cancer in older, unaltered
male dogs is common and can result in a painful death for the animals.
In addition, low income pet owners who
may never have the opportunity to take their pets to a veterinarian
will receive the added benefit
of understanding the importance of veterinary care as well as the
ability to ask questions about their pets while using the SNIP
vouchers. According to a study by the American Veterinary Medical
Association, dogs with minimal or no veterinary care are at greater
risk of relinquishment than dogs with regular veterinary care.
The benefits of spay/neuter are significant
and ensure that companion animals will live a longer and healthier
life without contributing
additional litters to the current number of homeless animals awaiting
adoption or roaming the streets.
Unwanted animals are becoming
a very real concern in many places. Stray animals can easily become
a public nuisance, soiling parks
and streets, ruining shrubbery, frightening children and elderly
people, creating noise and other disturbances, causing automobile
accidents, and sometimes even killing livestock or other pets.
-
The American Veterinary Medical Association
The capture, impoundment
and eventual destruction of unwanted animals cost taxpayers and
private humanitarian agencies over a billion
dollars each year. As a potential source of rabies and other less
serious diseases, they can be a public health hazard.
- The American Veterinary Medical Association
All Long Beach and
Signal Hill city residents are encouraged to participate by taking
responsibility for the spaying/neutering
of “just one pet.” Residents requiring financial assistance
can obtain a SNIP voucher by calling 562-988-SNIP. All other residents
can participate by taking the initiative to have their pets spayed/neutered
or by sending a donation in support of the SNIP program.
Please
show your support by joining responsible pet owners as well as
our participating veterinary hospitals in breaking the cycle
of pet overpopulation. Together we can make a difference!
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