Saturday, August 1, 2009

Poignant News –

Seeing the news photo of the Millwood Road animal shelter (humane society) building destroyed by today’s flames, brings back a flood of memories to me (and I’m sure to many others, too). For 13 years I was associated with the humane society ... for the first three years as a hands-on volunteer (walking dogs and cleaning their cages) and then as education director, traveling with my program to schools and organizations throughout Knox and contiguous counties. I kept doing it because I wanted to save animals’ lives by promoting responsible pet ownership and spay/neuter. I did bring the message to hundreds of classrooms, youth organizations, and civic groups until my job was eliminated in early 2004.

Thousands of animals came through the doors of that old building each year. The lucky minority were adopted ... the rest were dispatched when their time was up – or sooner if they were "owner surrendered". Of all the situations there that broke my heart, it was the suffering of the house-trained adult dogs, who were in the top tier of the old cement cages, that was the saddest; they had no access to the outdoors. I still see images of them and their distress, in my mind’s eye.

The news photo shows the large holly tree as it still stands next to the building, a silent witness to so much. The news article says that an arson investigator has been called in.

Employees had sometimes talked among themselves about "seeing" animals who were no longer there, moving about in the euthanasia room; the employees concluded that it must be an "energy field". I never went inside that room.

So, goodbye to the corridors and rooms where lives were extinguished, and the spirits of many, many animals roamed. The news article says that the fire left only the outer walls of the building remaining.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Wow. That brings memories back to me too.

Anonymous said...

How sad - this is one of the first places I visited on moving here - was a really pretty drive to me with the winding road. Why are the owner-surrendered animals dispatched more quickly? Seems like those dogs would be in some cases well beheaved and used to families?
Angela

Clara the Lady Wolf said...

Angela,
Almost always, there was a shortage of space; strays and/or animals brought in by AC have a few days of legal holding time to allow owners to come in and redeem them. Owner-surrendered animals were relinquished by owners at the time they were brought in, so could either be put on adoption floor or euthanized, depending on circumstances.
....Clara