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Do you find yourself this summer with time on your hands, but no place to go?
Are most of your friends leaving the city for the Hamptons or other fun spots?
Are you bored with reruns on TV, endless "junk" emails/telemarketing calls, and solitary (now sweaty) runs in the park?
Do you sometimes wish there was some warm and welcoming body to greet you when you come home from a long day on the job or trying to hunt or haggle for the lowest supermarket prices?
Let's be honest. Life in New York City during an economic crisis and the oppressive, heavy heat and humidity of the summer is a drag.
But, there IS a way, you can bring a little summer sunshine and companionship into your life without a lifelong or heavy commitment of time or money!
You can also help save lives in the process!
Have you ever considered the summer foster of a cat or dog?
City animal shelters and rescue groups are besieged in the summer with animals abandoned when owners leave for vacations and spring and summer litters of kittens -- many arriving at shelters with their lactating mothers.
Don't want to take on a family of kittens or cats? How about fostering ONE adult cat or ONE adult dog?
Can you imagine yourself on a lazy summer afternoon casually walking your foster dog in the park (good way to meet members of the opposite sex!). Can you see yourself lounging in the grass or on a park bench with your foster dog by your side reading a book, listening to music or catching a little sun? Can you imagine sharing some evening laughs or canine stories with other dog lovers in the neighborhood dog run?
But, if socializing with other "dog nuts" is not for you, what about the easy, loving companionship of a cat?
You don't need to leave the quiet, cool comfort of your air conditioned apartment to enjoy a cat!
All you need is a lap, a hand that can pet and stroke, some cat food and a litter box.
How to get more information about possible summer foster of a cat or dog? How to get the process started?
Well, it's not hard or "complicated" at all (unlike so many other things in modern life!).
In fact, all you have to do is pick up the phone.
You don't need a Master's Degree, a truckload of money or a genius IQ.
All you need is a heart -- and the time and will to tend to and nurture it.
Call us at (212) 427-8273.
It might be one of the most fun -- and fulfilling decision you ever made! ;)
Still vaccinating Your Pet Every Year? (from MSNBC)
"The Right Dog, Cat (or Whatever) for You."
SAVING LIVES: THE DIRE NEED FOR FOSTER PEOPLE
IMPORTANT: THINKING OF BUYING A PET FROM A BREEDER?
Looking to volunteer in a shelter? Please help!
UPDATE! Article in the NY Observer about the new CACC
Top Reasons Animals Die in New York City (and their solutions)
Companion Cats and Dogs: A Consumer Issue
Welcome to the homepage of New Yorkers for Companion Animals. We are a non-profit, all volunteer animal rescue group in New York City. We are active in animal rescue and placement. We are also active in current animal issues in and around the New York City area.
Please call for additional information and details. Due to space constraints, we cannot show every animal we have for adoption in the store. Some are adopted from foster homes. For further information or if interested in a specific pet, call, (212) 427-8273.
| About NYCA | Pets for adoption | Success Stories | About our adoptions | Frequently asked questions | How you can help | Newsletter |
About New Yorkers for Companion Animals
The CACC receives more than 60,000 pets every year. Of these, more than 40,000 the animal shelter is forced to "euthanize" (destroy).
New Yorkers for Companion Animals does not have a formal shelter, nor does it have a salaried working staff. It receives no governmental funding. It is entirely dependent on the sacrifices and caring of a handful of reliable and responsible volunteers and foster people. It is also entirely dependent on the generous financial donations of caring and compassionate people.
Most cats rescued by NYCA are vetted, neutered and receive in-home care provided by foster volunteers until the animal(s) can be responsibly placed in permanent adoptive homes. Most dogs rescued by NYCA are totally vetted, neutered and boarded in kennel facilities until an adoptive home can be found.
Because the boarding of animals is very expensive, NYCA is not able to rescue as many dogs as cats. It is extremely difficult to find caring and responsible people to willingly foster dogs in-home.
Because NYCA is a "no-kill" organization, each day, NYCA receives many desperate calls and emails from members of the public pleading for help in placing animals. Usually a caretaker has fallen ill, become allergic, died, been evicted or is in the process of "moving" to a no-pet situation. However, due to our severely limited foster space and tendency to be filled to capacity, we are usually forced to offer only advice. In the overwhelming majority of cases, we cannot take the animal(s) in.
We want to be able to help as many animals as we can. However, in order to do that we need greater foster and volunteer help and/or greater funding in order to better afford the boarding of animals until they can be permanently placed.
The availability of both financial and volunteer support has become far more scarce and limited in Post 9-11 New York City due to the economic fallout and loss of hundreds of thousands of jobs in New York City. The CACC has also been cut millions of dollars in financial funding from the city due to the economic crisis.
Almost all shelters and organizations (with the exceptions of the well-funded North Shore Animal League and the ASPCA) are thus able to rescue and place fewer animals. The reality is that there are not enough shelters and rescue groups in New York City to save the more than 60,000 animals who each year, for whatever reason, lose their homes or never had a home to begin with. Nor, is there enough funding or other resources to enable the boarding or other temporary housing situation until permanent placement of pets can occur. The result of all this is death for more than 75% of animals coming into our city pound system or otherwise given up -- a very high proportion of these, adoptable pets.
NYCA and all other responsible shelters and rescue organizations desperately need more financial help and greater involvement and support from the public in order to save and responsibly place more pets. If you can help in any way, please call (212) 427-8273 or mail financial contributions to:
NYCA
PO Box 286124
New York, NY 10128-0002
Thank you
New Yorkers for Companion Animals
Pets for adoption
Frequently asked questions
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NYCA or you can now donate to NYCA through PayPal. |
Tails of the City: Adventures in Animal Rescue and Placement
Read Patty’s story of her adventures of animal rescue in New York City here.
Newsletter
Fate of a dog in an Atlanta animal shelter
Please read My Animal Needs a Loving Home
Click here: Animals destined for death
By Kathleen Laufenberg
Click here: Puppymills - facts and information about mills and how to shut them down.
Thinking about getting a pug just like you saw in MIB II?
Read this first.
Activists Demand City Do More For Stray Animals Following Comptroller Scathing Report
Can you help save the
Little Shelter? Please check this out.
This is a groundbreaking article from the Washington Post on meat. They die piece by piece
Check out dogs that are available at Pets Alive No-Kill Animal
Shelter - New York
Brooklyn Animal Resource Coalition
About NYCA
Pets for adoption
Success Stories
About our adoptions
Frequently asked questions
How you can help
Newsletter

