County supervisors today defended strides made at the Orange County Animal Shelter since a stinging grand jury report.
Orange County supervisors today
took issue with a stinging grand jury report on conditions at the Orange County
Animal Shelter in Orange and assured activists that they were making progress
on establishing a new facility for strays.
“I know things at the animal
shelter are not perfect, but we’ve made great strides,” Supervisor Lisa
Bartlett said.
Bartlett said the grand jury’s
two reports, which were issued in June, contained “glaring inaccuracies.”
Bartlett noted the board has
authorized hiring of more employees and increased the salaries of
veterinarians.
“We’re doing everything we
can,” Bartlett said.
Bartlett noted the county had a
pet adoption event recently with the goal of finding homes for 100 animals, but
ended up finding homes for 147 animals.
Activists stood outside the
County Hall of Administration with signs bearing photos of dogs and cats they
say were killed at the shelter. Several addressed the board, pushing them to
make it a no-kill shelter.
Orange County Animal Care
Director Jennifer Hawkins said less than 6 percent of animals are euthanized at
the shelter.
The county, in its response to
the grand jury, blamed the U.S. Navy for hold ups in negotiations to acquire
property for the new shelter at the former U.S. Marine Corps Air Station in
Tustin.
County officials have met with
Navy leaders multiple times to try to accelerate the process, the county
reported.
More from Newport Beach-Corona
Del Mar Patch
Orange County Board Chairman
Todd Spitzer asked county officials to research alternative sites so they can
have a backup plan should negotiations with the Navy continue languishing.
The grand jury claimed the
shelter was poorly managed and plagued with slumping morale.
The grand jury declared the
shelter “has serious problems that have needed attention for many years.”
The panel went on to say in the
report, “there have been complaints and allegations from a number of sources
inside and outside the animal shelter that have focused on the lack of
leadership throughout the Orange County Community Resources and Animal Care
chain of command. This alleged void in leadership has resulted in either the
inability of management to define the problems at hand or, if defined, an
unwillingness to correct them.”
The grand jury said some
observers have speculated the vacuum of leadership has prompted some
mid-management employees to take charge with “little or no oversight from upper
management.”
The grand jury also claimed
“there are potential problems with preventing zoonotic diseases that can be
passed between animals and humans.”
Zoonotic diseases include
rabies and endemic typhus. The grand jury said a sheriff’s employee who worked
near the animal shelter was diagnosed in June 2012 with endemic typhus and
required hospitalization.
The grand jury also raised
concerns about the shelter’s Feral Free Program, claiming county officials have
ignored warnings from Orange County Vector Control about housing the wild cats.
September 2, 2015
Newport
Beach-Corona Del Mar Patch
By
Paige Austin
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