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Lewis Clark Animal Shelter
Mission & Vision Statements
Mission:
The Lewis Clark
Animal Shelter's mission is to promote the humane treatment of animals, prevent cruelty to animals and provide education to enhance the human-animal bond
and to end pet over-population through an aggressive spay/neuter campaign.
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Vision:
1)
Lewis Clark Animal Shelter envisions a time when our community
celebrates the human-animal bond, embraces the mutual benefits therein
and treats all fellow beings with care, compassion and respect; a
time when LCAS is primarily a resource for health services, education and
recreation for animals and their people.
2) We present LCAS as a happy, cheerful place
where people come for pet adoption, pet information and community events;
3) Our valley will become a unified community
where pets are not stray and unwanted.
4) LCAS together with the community becomes a
model for achieving a “humane society".
The Adoption & Learning Center
will be the stage for implementing and achieving three cornerstones
of the Strategic Plan: Intervention through sheltering and
investigations, Prevention through education and outreach,
and Advocacy through leadership and public policy.
As an interactive educational facility, the
new
Adoption & Learning Center will provide an experience that allows people
to see how animals enrich our lives. Learning experiences at The Center
will engender respect, compassion, and empathy for animals, and a sense
of increased responsibility for animals. The Center will host pet
adoptions and a wide range of positive reinforcement training classes,
behavior consultations, pet day care, seminars, pet sitting
certification, specialized pet boarding, a behavior help line, retail
pet supplies and gifts, owner/pet recreation, and dozens of unique
opportunities for volunteer service ranging from foster care to
political action. As prevention services supplant intervention
services, The Center will function as a conduit for citizens who care
about animals and humane values to actualize their vision of programs
that can contribute to a more humane society.
The Lewis Clark Animal Shelter,
Clinic,
Adoption & Learning Center will be the resource our community needs to
solve pet problems and concerns, rehoming pets if necessary.
Ultimately, the Lewis Clark Animal Shelter Adoption & Learning Center and
Clinic along with the Lewis Clark
Valley will serve as a successful model for shelters, humane
organizations, and communities nationwide as programming and community
involvement minimize the need (and reliance on LCAS) for traditional
shelter services.
Lewis Clark Animal Shelter's ultimate goal is
to change the relationships between people and animals. LCAS spends 85%
of its resources providing for abandoned stray and abused animals and
finding homes for them. Our focus goes beyond simply educating;
instead, it is our mission to empower people to have successful
relationships with pets. Our intent is to inspire the community, to
create the resources, educational opportunities and location to allow
community members to get involved socially, in classes, during events
and many other ‘pet related’ agendas.
Background: The Purpose of an Animal
Shelter
There will always be a need to
find new homes for animals. People and circumstances change. An
animal shelter can provide a place for animals to stay in between homes,
but it does not have to be the only place. Foster care, rescue
organizations and adoptive services help rehome these homeless pets;
however, availability of these resources is being outpaced by the
increasing need for more temporary homes. Resolution must be focused on
maintaining current permanent homes. Offering education to pets and
owners will increase pet retention. Last and most importantly we are
morally obligated to decrease stray and unwanted pet populations by
making spay/neuter surgeries available to all pets.
The vast majority of people who
adopt from or surrender a pet to a humane society never maintain a
continued relationship with that humane society. They view their
surrender or adoption more as a business transaction that's completed,
their contribution finalized. Further, when the transition to a new
home doesn't go smoothly, adopters frequently blame the shelter rather
than focusing on the tools necessary to solve the problem.
The new LCAS Adoption & Learning
Center will practice a new approach that 1) addresses the core problems
leading to animal suffering, and 2) builds interest, commitment, and
participation from the community in partnering to solve the problems.
A new look at "The Problem"
Lewis Clark Animal Shelter staff
and volunteers have worked hard to shape a humane society that is
friendly and caring in order to provide the most successful shelter
services to animals and the community.
The best animal shelter is a ‘humane
community’.
We now understand our role
differently - LCAS is an agent of change. While managing the problems,
we will build awareness in community. LCAS will begin providing
incentive and forums for solution building. LCAS is not, cannot be, and
should not be the only solution for animal suffering. Instead, LCAS
will help people find solutions to their pet problems, through services
we offer, education and training opportunities and referral services.
The Lewis Clark Animal Shelter
Adoption & Learning Center will further the mission of the humane
society by enhancing and supporting pet/owner relationships through
problem intervention and prevention services. Programs such as dog
training and puppy kindergarten classes, doggie day care, understanding
pet behavior seminars, and private behavior consultations will help
adopters get their new shelter pets off on the right foot (paw) and will
help both adopters and community pet owners address and solve problems
that would otherwise lead to a break in the pet/owner relationship.
The Adoption & Learning Center
will elevate and change the image of the humane society - reaching the
greater pet owning community (in addition to pet owners who acquire
their pets from LCAS).
The new LCAS Adoption & Learning
Center
As A Strategic Tool
Creating an "experience" that…
…engenders respect, compassion, and empathy for animals,
…conveys that animals enrich our lives,
…motivates people to return to LCAS again & again,
…inspires increased responsibility for animals,
…motivates people to become involved.
Education
Objectives
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Provide information and experiences which inspire visitors
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Be
accessible and inviting to visitors of all ages and abilities
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Suggest a homelike environment appropriate for pets and people
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Create
environments for observing as well as direct interaction with shelter
animals
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Offer
changing pet exhibits for repeat visitors (animal population changing
regularly will change experience for repeat visitors)
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Provide appropriate educational activities for people of all ages
Visitor Experience
Goals {while here, we want visitors to: …}
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feel
comfortable and at home; feel comfortable enough to ask questions
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see
animals living with people and other animals
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observe and compare animal behavior and personalities
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interact realistically and positively with prospective pets
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observe proper, high quality animal care (systems for cleaning, feeding,
grooming, waste exercise & socialization will be visible and accessible)
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participate in care for shelter
animals (tasks available for untrained people)
Communication Goals
{What we want to hear people say as they
leave the facility…}
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Animals enrich our lives because they are fun, interesting,
entertaining, comforting.
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There
will be fewer unwanted pets if more pets are spayed or neutered.
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Pets
need attention, stimulation, socialization and steady relationships.
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Pet
guardianship is a lifelong commitment.
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Most
pets are trainable. Positive reinforcement and praise is the best way
to train pets.
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Animals and people are similar in many ways.
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Domestic animals rely on people to provide everything they need.
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Lost
pets with ID tags are more likely to return home quickly and safely.
Conclusion
The Adoption & Learning Center is
designed to afford visitors a series of experiences - sensory, physical,
and emotional - which, combined with information, will inspire and
encourage the human animal bond. Animals will be housed with other
animals and stimulated with music, human interaction, color, toys and
training. This is better for both animals and people because it is more
natural, more humane, and facilitates better understanding of animals
and therefore better choices in adoptions. Visitors will find
museum-quality exhibits which change daily as the animal population
changes - always affording new, interactive learning experiences.
Training at The Center will both strengthen the human/animal bond and
provide rewarding volunteer opportunities.
The primary vehicle of the LCAS
Adoption & Learning Center is in our name…Learning! From pet
training classes to cat watching outside the "Cat Tails’ living center,
from volunteer training for animal behavior rehabilitation to summer day
camp for students; from adoption counseling to foster care for orphaned
kittens - every interaction at LCAS is a learning opportunity which will
have positive impact on individual animals and people, as well as the
community as a whole.
The Lewis Clark Animal Shelter
Strategic Plan calls for a dramatic shift in emphasis from crisis
intervention to prevention and advocacy. Programming at the Adoption &
Learning Center will provide the tools people need to achieve success.
In the future, LCAS will be able to reach record numbers of animals and
owners in the region with programs that make living with animals easier,
more successful, and more enjoyable. Non-animal owners will be inspired
by a community effort where friendship, team work, and ingenuity turn a
dream into reality.
Lewis Clark Animal Shelter will
become the heart of the Lewis Clark Valley. Through the Adoption
& Learning Center, LCAS will redefine companion animal welfare, paving
the way for our communities to become "humane societies".
Lewis Clark Animal Shelter has served the Lewis Clark Valley since 1950.
The agency provides vital services to animals and people alike
through sheltering and adopting animals, providing positive reinforcement behavior training for adoptable animals and for owned animals through public training classes, income-based reduced cost spay/neuter
surgeries, investigating animal cruelty and
neglect, providing adult and youth education programs, sharing animals through pet-assisted therapy, and rescuing animals in emergency situations.
A private nonprofit organization
that relies on community support, contributions, grants, bequests,
investments, proceeds from the society’s Thrift and Gift store and some fees
for service
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