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Results tagged “san pedro animal shelter” from South Bay Pets

I need a home

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My friends Amy and Dani found a dog on New Year's Eve near Compton. He was filthy, but Dani gave him a bath and a warm place to sleep.

But they already have a dog and the two of them were too much for the girls to handle. In any case, he's not theirs. He's either lost or needs a new home.

While I can't vouch for the dog, he seems nice enough. And if you go to this link, you'll see how playful he is. The black dog in the pictures is Drama, Rocket's afternoon girlfriend. She's not available!

Oh, he's a pitbull.

Dani and Amy are hoping to find the dog's original owner or find a new home for him. He's at the San Pedro animal shelter.

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If you love animals, the Harbor Animal Care Center is sponsoring one of several volunteer training classes at 2 p.m. today in San Pedro. 

The training is on dog handling and will be held at the new shelter in San Pedro at 957 N. Gaffey St. If you can't make it, there will be other training opportunities. Go to www.laanimalservices.com/volunteer.htm to download an application and learn more about it -- or you can call the shelter at 888-452-7381, Ext. 143.
 

Beating the heat

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Work began this week to install the mister system at the new Harbor Animal Care Center at 957 N. Gaffey St. in San Pedro.

The system is expected to be complete and working by the end of this week.

In the photo at right taken by Daily Breeze photographer Brad Graverson, a dog named Max watches Ray Vanegas work on Tuesday.

A Daily Breeze story today focuses on the new efforts to recruit volunteers at the shelter.

San Pedro now has a spanking new animal shelter.

It's bigger and way nicer than the former facility, which was half a century old and cramped beyond reason.

But with the city of Los Angeles undergoing budget cuts, the shelter at 957 N. Gaffey St. is in need of your help.

Shelter volunteer Theresa Sardisco tells us there will be a meeting for prospective volunteers at 1 p.m. Saturday at the shelter. The new Harbor Volunteer Coordinator, Mercedes Grey, will be on hand to talk about the needs and how local volunteers can help.

panting dog.jpgMeanwhile, a Daily Breeze story has been published regarding the installation of a cooling misting system at the shelter. The misters, costing the city about $50,000, are expected to be in place by the first week of August.

"The misters are provided at other shelters," Kiran Vohra of the city's Bureau of Engineering explained to me in an email. "Because a climate study completed earlier indicated comparative milder weather in San Pedro for most days of the year, the misters were omitted for this shelter. However, maybe because of the micro-climatic conditions in different parts of San Pedro, it is currently determined that the misters will add to the comfort of the animals and the visitors." .

Adoptathon this weekend

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Our friends at Valley of the Dogs report that the city of Los Angeles will hold a citywide adoptathon this weekend to help with what's being called a "perfect storm" of animals currently caught in the city's six animal shelters.

Several factors have contributed to the influx of animals, including the housing crisis and animals that came in after they were found loose after the Fourth of July. Summer also is a high-volume season for animal shelters. Many people move during these months and are unable to take their animals with them.

San Pedro's new shelter, which has been in the news lately, has seen a surge in animals being turned in by owners, Capt. Daniel Pantoja told me a couple weeks ago. And ironically, because the city now has an official "no kill" policy, animals are often being brought to L.A. shelters from other shelter areas outside the city.

The event this weekend will feature a more than 60 percent reduction in adoption fees -- $43 for dogs and $28 for cats. That includes vaccinations, microchips, spay-neuter and licensing.

Hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday July 19 and 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday July 20. In our area, the Harbor Area Animal Shelter is located at 957 N. Gaffey St., San Pedro.

If you see a dog or cat that's not available for adoption yet, you can get a "rain check" and adopt the animal should it become available later -- at the same discount price. 

And speaking of raising awareness for the plight of shelter dogs, check out Traer Scott's book by the same name: shelter dog book.jpg 

 

Cool!

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mist.jpg Let there be mist.

You may recall our earlier post about San Pedro's new, nearly $14 million animal shelter and its  pet-mister.jpgmissing misters. The oversight was the focus also of a Daily Breeze story.

The new kennels and grounds at the new shelter (at 957 N. Gaffey St.) are beautiful. But no cooling system was included to provide a light, fog-like mist to lessen the often high temperatures in north San Pedro where the shelter is located. Other shelters have them. But city officials believed that because San Pedro was a "coastal" community, the equipment could be eliminated to save costs. .

The glaring omission was driven home on the shelter's grand opening day when temperatures soared over 100 degrees.

Thanks to some dedicated volunteers like Theresa Sardisco who refused to let animals settle for a mist-less shelter,  it looks like the misters will be installed within two weeks.

A vendor from Arizona reportedly was to show city planners his prospective plans today. It will cost about $50,000, but money from a city bond program will pay for it.

Maybe there should be a second grand opening to show off the misters.

Watch for a story in the Daily Breeze this week that will provide more updates.  

Pet project

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Thumper, Ocho, Gigi and Jake.

They're all rescued pets who found a place in artist Nancy Webber's collage now on permanent display at San Pedro's new animal shelter.

Webber, a longtime San Pedro resident and Harbor College faculty member who was awarded the $55,000 arts grant from the city, took animal-themed paintings and incorporated images of real pets from snapshots mailed in to her.

Reporter Jim Farber writes about the project in today's Daily Breeze. "I wanted to do something for the animal shelter that would combine the history of animals in art," Webber told Farber.

************** Also in today's Daily Breeze is an update on efforts  to get a water mister system installed at the shelter at 597 N. Gaffey St. Seems the city process could take months. Volunteer Theresa Sardisco is working to do it all on private money, confident the misters could be in place within weeks. The city is still hoping to find the funds, though, and is consulting with a firm that set up a similar system at one of the shelters in the San Fernando Valley.

Theresa will be at the shelter from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday collecting donations should those still be needed for the project. You can also call her at 310-386-7932 or call the shelter at 888-452-7381, Ext. 143. 

 

panting dog.jpgAfter sitting through last Saturday's sweltering grand opening for San Pedro's new animal shelter, city officials and community activists all agreed: Misters.

Discussions are underway to get a water "mister" system installed to help keep the animals cool on hot days. Linda Marinkovich of the Coastal San Pedro Neighborhood Council was among those who e-mailed L.A. Animal Services GM Ed Boks on Monday. He replied in an e-mail to her that the city is seeing what it can do to "make it happen." 

In today's Daily Breeze story  (accompanied by these photos by Breeze photographers Sean Hiller - above - and Brad Graverson - below), shelter volunteer Theresa Sardisco is pledging to get the job done, city money or no city money. 

 

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There have been conflicting stories about why there were no misters put in at the shelter at 957 N. Gaffey St. The most recent explanation was that the misters were in the original shelter plans, but got scrapped as construction costs began to rise and the city had to meet its budget for the facility. Because San Pedro is considered to be in a "coastal" zone, downtown architects figured the misters wouldn't be missed 

We hope to have an update on this later in the week. But if you want to find out how you can help, give Theresa a call at 310-386-7932. Or stop by the business she owns,Dominic's Pizza House at 28360 S. Western Ave. in San Pedro (that's in the Smart n' Final shopping center, near Westmont Drive).  

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Shelter opens

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San Pedro's new animal shelter had its grand opening Saturday (Capt. Daniel Pantoja, left, joins other staffers in applauding remarks by L.A. Animal Services General Manager Ed Boks and Los Angeles City Councilwoman Janice Hahn).

Four Girl Scout troops (Go, Girl Scouts!) were on hand to help greet and escort visitors through the new facility at 957 N. Gaffey St.

Many animal welfare groups were on hand as well to mark the opening, including Kaye Zigrang of Torrance from the Roar Foundation/Shambala Preserve.

There also were representatives from San Pedro's Neighborhood Council. One of them, LInda Marinkovich from Coastal, already is spearheading a drive to collect old newspapers for the shelter.

But what about that heat?? For those of you who were there, you know how HOT it was -- that part of Pedro can get pretty toasty during the summer. So what happened to the water "misters" that were supposed to be installed to help cool down the animals? We'll be following up on that issue this week in the Daily Breeze.

If you want to see some more pictures from the opening (after looking at the shots I took, it became very clear why I never would have been hired as a photorgrapher), check out Daily Breeze photographer Sean Hiller's slide show. 

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Finally.

San Pedro's new animal shelter will be formally unveiled from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, June 21. The shelter is at 957 N. Gaffey St., (near Miraflores where the old Big C hardware store was located). See the story in today's Daily Breeze..

This is a HUGE improvement over the the dark and industrial decor of the cramped, 57-year-old former facility on Battery Street. Whenever I'd go there looking for a dog, it was literally impossible to concentrate as the dogs on either side (several in each kennel) jumped and barked. 

The new shelter (which, counting the purchase of the property, cost $18.7 million) not only has triple the number of kennels (79) compared to the old one, but the 2-acre site offers its own medical clinic and grooming facility.

That's a welcome addition. I haven't adopted an animal from LA in a while, but maybe 10 years ago I took an Australian shepherd out of the South Central shelter for a rescue group. I had to personally take him in my car to the off-site clinic for neutering and the poor animal was absolutely filthy. I remember thinking, "Can't they at least wash the animals when they're adopted??"

What a difference from just a couple years before that when I adopted my shaggy dog Ellie from the Long Beach shelter. Before I picked her up, they'd bathed and groomed her, sending her home smelling great and with a bright red bandana around her neck. 

But the L.A.'s Animal Services Department has been catching up and changing over the last decade. These new, state-of-the-art shelters, which are much more people- and pet-friendly, are a big part of the new mindset.  

So stop by on Saturday to join in the celebration. There will be music and tours. And they always need volunteers and donations. See if you can help contribute your time -- or bring along some donations tomorrow to help with the shelter's wish list

Better yet, check out the shelter's available animals and take one home!  .

 

About the Bloggers

Daily Breeze reporter Donna Littlejohn has shared her homes with a succession of wonderful, funny, and occasionally difficult canines -- Muffin, Fritz, Ellie, Mercy, Pilgrim and now Cowboy, an Australian shepherd-border collie, and Tess, a border collie. From strong-willed terriers to weirdly obsessed Australian shepherds, they've invaded her world with boundless energy, wet noses, muddy paws and soggy tennis balls. But they've really brought so much more than that -- like laughter and joy, some unexpected life lessons, and more than a few tears along the way.

E-mail Donna at donna.littlejohn@dailybreeze.com.

Josh Grossberg grew up with the usual array of animals: goldfish, dogs, hamsters, parakeets and turtles. He now owns the loudest dog in the South Bay(Video: Rocket the Dog) and is the least popular person on his block. He spends his free time in dog parks, pet shops and always has an extra plastic bag in his pocket just in case. He also has a cat.

E-mail Josh at josh.grossberg@dailybreeze.com.

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