Log in

goodpods headphones icon

To access all our features

Open the Goodpods app
Close icon
Shelter Success Simplified - How to propose or best support a cat declaw ban - Ep37

How to propose or best support a cat declaw ban - Ep37

03/30/21 • 27 min

Shelter Success Simplified

GUEST: Dr. Jennifer Conrad is the founder of The Paw Project, which educates the public about the painful and crippling effects of feline declawing and actively advocates to legally ban declawing at the community and state level. She is currently working in Southern California with nonprofit wildlife sanctuaries for unwanted and abused animals and administering her own company, Vet to the (Real) Stars, which provides humane veterinary care to animals appearing in television and movies. Dr. Conrad has spent more than two decades working on six continents to protect and improve the lives of wild animals. She is a graduate of the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine and is a member of the American Veterinary Medicine Association, the American Association of Zoo Veterinarians, and the European Association of Zoo and Wildlife Veterinarians.

MAIN QUESTION: What can animal welfare organizations do to make sure efforts to ban declawing of cats are successful?

TAKEAWAYS:

If you would like to see legislation banning declawing in your state or community, be sure to reach out to the team at Paw Project – Pawproject.org – which can help you with airtight language for your proposal. This is important because it’s easy to have proposed legislation get amended with exceptions that make it worse than no new legislation at all. It’s better to kill such bills than let them be passed, where they could enshrine into law the practices you are trying to end.

State veterinary medical associations tend to be the only ones to oppose declawing bans. They are trade organizations concerned primarily with the financial wellbeing of businesses, not with what’s best for the animals.

Veterinary medical associations have pushed a number of myths and outright lies. These include:

~ Myth: Declawing is necessary to protect babies and seniors with thin skin from being scratched. The truth is that declawing makes cats far more likely to bite. A cat scratch is a relatively minor issue but a bite can be much more serious because they more easily lead to infection. For this reason, the CDC does not recommend the declawing of cats to protect human health.

~ Myth: If declawing it not available, cats will be dumped at shelters by people in even greater numbers. This can be demonstrated as untrue in two ways. First, nearly all animal shelters oppose the declawing of cats because they know it results in behavioral issues such as urinating outside the litter box and biting – that really are common causes for cat surrenders to shelters. Second, the documented results of declaw bans show that shelter admissions decline after the practice of declawing is eliminated in a community.

The best thing animal shelters and rescues can do to support a proposed ban in your state is to write a letter in support of banning declawing on your own organization's letterhead and send it to the legislators – including the bill sponsors. Such letters are used in the “bill analysis” when legislators first see the proposal. It demonstrates support to legislators that makes it more likely they will back the legislation.

LINKS:

The Paw Project or email [email protected]

For Nevada residents to comment on proposed declaw legislation:

~ Select bill AB209 https://www.leg.state.nv.us/App/Opinions/81st2021

~ Email the bill's sponsor Assemblywoman Susan Martinez with "AB209 SUPPORT" in the subject line at [email protected]

Leadership recommendation: Future Fundraising Now blog and newsletter

plus icon
bookmark

GUEST: Dr. Jennifer Conrad is the founder of The Paw Project, which educates the public about the painful and crippling effects of feline declawing and actively advocates to legally ban declawing at the community and state level. She is currently working in Southern California with nonprofit wildlife sanctuaries for unwanted and abused animals and administering her own company, Vet to the (Real) Stars, which provides humane veterinary care to animals appearing in television and movies. Dr. Conrad has spent more than two decades working on six continents to protect and improve the lives of wild animals. She is a graduate of the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine and is a member of the American Veterinary Medicine Association, the American Association of Zoo Veterinarians, and the European Association of Zoo and Wildlife Veterinarians.

MAIN QUESTION: What can animal welfare organizations do to make sure efforts to ban declawing of cats are successful?

TAKEAWAYS:

If you would like to see legislation banning declawing in your state or community, be sure to reach out to the team at Paw Project – Pawproject.org – which can help you with airtight language for your proposal. This is important because it’s easy to have proposed legislation get amended with exceptions that make it worse than no new legislation at all. It’s better to kill such bills than let them be passed, where they could enshrine into law the practices you are trying to end.

State veterinary medical associations tend to be the only ones to oppose declawing bans. They are trade organizations concerned primarily with the financial wellbeing of businesses, not with what’s best for the animals.

Veterinary medical associations have pushed a number of myths and outright lies. These include:

~ Myth: Declawing is necessary to protect babies and seniors with thin skin from being scratched. The truth is that declawing makes cats far more likely to bite. A cat scratch is a relatively minor issue but a bite can be much more serious because they more easily lead to infection. For this reason, the CDC does not recommend the declawing of cats to protect human health.

~ Myth: If declawing it not available, cats will be dumped at shelters by people in even greater numbers. This can be demonstrated as untrue in two ways. First, nearly all animal shelters oppose the declawing of cats because they know it results in behavioral issues such as urinating outside the litter box and biting – that really are common causes for cat surrenders to shelters. Second, the documented results of declaw bans show that shelter admissions decline after the practice of declawing is eliminated in a community.

The best thing animal shelters and rescues can do to support a proposed ban in your state is to write a letter in support of banning declawing on your own organization's letterhead and send it to the legislators – including the bill sponsors. Such letters are used in the “bill analysis” when legislators first see the proposal. It demonstrates support to legislators that makes it more likely they will back the legislation.

LINKS:

The Paw Project or email [email protected]

For Nevada residents to comment on proposed declaw legislation:

~ Select bill AB209 https://www.leg.state.nv.us/App/Opinions/81st2021

~ Email the bill's sponsor Assemblywoman Susan Martinez with "AB209 SUPPORT" in the subject line at [email protected]

Leadership recommendation: Future Fundraising Now blog and newsletter

Previous Episode

undefined - Resource tips to keep animals out of shelters - Ep36

Resource tips to keep animals out of shelters - Ep36

GUEST: Dr. Cindi Delany is a supervising shelter veterinarian in the UC Davis Koret Shelter Medicine Program, was the supervising shelter veterinarian at Yolo County (California) Animal Services for nine years, and is executive director of the nonprofit California Animal Shelter Friends. She has extensive experience in emergency care in animal shelters, high-volume spay/neuter, foster programs, and the use of technology and statistics in improving outcomes for animals.

MAIN QUESTION: What can organizations do to keep animals from coming into shelters in the first place?

TAKEAWAYS:

Time in a shelter is stressful for animals, anything we can do to reduce time spent there is beneficial to the animals. Providing support services to keep pets in homes and making return-to-owner processes easier and friendlier are two examples.

Having fewer animals in the shelter reduces the risk of disease transmission and allows you to put more time and resources into helping animals who truly need to be there or need special assistance.

The cost of taking in an animal is generally more expensive than helping keep that same animal in their original home, whether it’s providing food, medicine, veterinary treatment, or help with a rental pet deposit.

It doesn’t require more resources, instead you are shifting resources from caring for animals in the shelter to helping keep animals with their original families.

*Start by looking at data to understand what animals are coming in and why.

LINKS:

Next Episode

undefined - How to recruit and retain happy productive staff - Ep38

How to recruit and retain happy productive staff - Ep38

GUEST: Dr. Steve Kochis is chief medical officer at the Oregon Humane Society. His veterinary specialties include infectious diseases, immunology and emergency medicine. He received his Bachelor of Science in Animal Sciences and DVM from Cornell University. Dr. Kochis has served as President of the Portland Veterinary Medical Association and currently serves on its Executive Board.

MAIN QUESTION: How can an organization create a happy, productive team and retain staff?

TAKEAWAYS:

Creating a positive culture of trust and respect where people are valued helps with staff retention, recruitment and leads to happy clients and successful medical outcomes.

Making staff feel valued can include relatively simple and inexpensive things such as celebrating birthdays, bringing in healthy snack foods, or a coffee cart where everyone gets to pick their favorite fancy drink. For bigger organizations, such options could include a food truck or shaved ice truck once a month where the organization pays for staff to pick something they like.

When seeking new team members, hire someone who is a good fit with the team; someone you'd want to go to work with each day can be more important than experience because kindness and respect are harder to teach.

Staff on site might not know about or appreciate the hard work of those working remotely so it’s important to let people know what others on the team are contributing.

Remember that some people don’t like public recognition so find other ways to let them know their work is appreciated.

Veterinary social work – that area where human needs arise in the practice of veterinary medicine – is an important area of work that nonprofit clinics and shelter clinics can benefit from exploring.

LINKS:

Oregon Humane Society

Contact Dr. Steve Kochis at [email protected]

Leadership recommendations:

~ Article: "How nice leaders create team drama"

~ Book: "No-Drama Leadership"

Episode Comments

Generate a badge

Get a badge for your website that links back to this episode

Select type & size
Open dropdown icon
share badge image

<a href="https://goodpods.com/podcasts/shelter-success-simplified-183597/how-to-propose-or-best-support-a-cat-declaw-ban-ep37-16448798"> <img src="https://storage.googleapis.com/goodpods-images-bucket/badges/generic-badge-1.svg" alt="listen to how to propose or best support a cat declaw ban - ep37 on goodpods" style="width: 225px" /> </a>

Copy