Los Angeles Times

Mobilizing for animal welfare

Nonprofit raises funds for a second surgical bus to serve lowincome pet owners.

- By Andrea Lopez-Villafaña Lopez-Villafaña writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

Spay-Neuter Action Project is fundraisin­g for another bus to reach pets in need.

SAN DIEGO — Victor Gutierrez already has two pit bulls, and he doesn’t want any more puppies running around his Mira Mesa home. So he brought his 8month-old, 65-pound pit bull Cali to the “Neuter Scooter,” a low-cost spaying and neutering mobile clinic that caters to low-income pet owners.

For $40, Gutierrez was able to get Cali spayed at a price he could afford. The black-and-white pooch also got a free nail trim, f lea medication, e-collar and rabies vaccine, and was sent home with pain medication.

The animal welfare nonprofit Spay-Neuter Action Project, or SNAP, organizes the spay and neuter clinics all over San Diego County. SNAP lost its primary source of funding when the county gave up animal control services last year, but it’s possible some of that funding will be restored under the new animal control service provider.

The recent clinic held in Chula Vista served 25 large dogs, a majority of which were pit bull and mixed shepherd breeds.

The organizati­on focuses on providing services to lowincome pet owners as well as those who don’t have access to transporta­tion.

SNAP is raising funds to design and purchase a second, customized surgical bus, estimated to cost $300,000. Having a second bus will enable the nonprofit to offer more spay and neuter services to pets in southeaste­rn San Diego, South Bay, Escondido and Fallbrook. Staff members say they receive a lot of calls from those areas.

The nonprofit was awarded a $145,000 matching grant from PetSmart Charities to help pay for the bus. SNAP has already raised nearly half the amount through private donations and is in the process of raising about $16,450 before the end of the year.

Executive Director Dorell Sackett said SNAP receives an average of 60 to 90 calls a day for services, but can only accept 10% of those procedures.

One reason is because the group has only one bus, which accommodat­es 19 small to medium pets and four large dogs.

Another reason is those clinics are a money-loser for the organizati­on.

The cost of a procedure through SNAP for pet owners can range from no cost to $100 for an 80-pound female dog.

“Every surgery, every clinic is a loss,” said Sackett, adding that the same procedure with a private vet can cost up to $800.

SNAP was founded in 1990 by a group of women who believed that in order to reduce the number of euthanized animals in shelters, pet overpopula­tion in San Diego County needed to be addressed, Sackett said.

In 2003, SNAP launched its surgical bus and traveled to communitie­s that needed affordable spay and neutering services the most.

Four years later, the nonprofit began accepting county vouchers given to low-income pet owners who could use them as cash to pay for spay and neutering procedures. Those vouchers helped the nonprofit recover its costs.

The value of the vouchers ranged from $25 to $100 depending on the animal and its sex. According to the county, from July 2013 to June 2018, when the program ended, the value of the vouchers was roughly $965,000.

Not having the program has been hard on the nonprofit, Sackett said.

She said SNAP lost as much as $40,000 annually in voucher income. SNAP ran up to 22 clinics a month, which had to be cut almost in half when the program ended.

The county scaled back its animal control services, so cities sought contracts with other organizati­ons.

The new animal services provider for 12 cities in the county is the San Diego Humane Society.

The Humane Society does not currently offer the voucher program, but it recently agreed to revive the program following a contract extension with the city of San Diego. That gives Sackett some hope.

SNAP recently organized clinics and an improvised voucher program in collaborat­ion with Councilwom­an Vivian Moreno. The organizati­on performed 130 surgeries and collected about $9,000 from September to December.

SNAP is funded through private grants and donations. This year, SNAP has spayed and neutered 3,500 pets.

“If we didn’t do it, what is the outcome?” Sackett said, pointing to the owner of a white and gray pit bull. “Just by fixing her pit bull right there we just prevented lives from being born unwanted and being euthanized.”

The organizati­on hosts special big dog clinics, such as the one on Dec. 15, with the help of dog day-care center Camp Run-a-Mutt in Chula Vista that lets it use space in the building as a recovery area.

Twenty-two kennels covered in different colored blankets covered the floor of the day care. One by one, sedated dogs were placed inside the kennels and volunteers sat nearby.

Jill Lozier, who sits on the SNAP board of directors, said it was touching to see how much families love their pets. They shared quirky stories about the animals as she checked them in for their surgeries.

“It’s important to help people become responsibl­e dog owners,” she said.

 ?? Photograph­s by Nancee E. Lewis Nancee Lewis Photograph­y ?? DR. MARVIN HELPHREY prepares to spay a dog at a Spay-Neuter Action Project clinic at Camp Run-aMutt in Chula Vista. SNAP, which is funded through private grants and donations, fixed 3,500 pets this year.
Photograph­s by Nancee E. Lewis Nancee Lewis Photograph­y DR. MARVIN HELPHREY prepares to spay a dog at a Spay-Neuter Action Project clinic at Camp Run-aMutt in Chula Vista. SNAP, which is funded through private grants and donations, fixed 3,500 pets this year.
 ??  ?? ZERO, a boxer-pit bull mix, gets some love from vet tech Emily Derosier, left, and volunteer Katie Franzi.
ZERO, a boxer-pit bull mix, gets some love from vet tech Emily Derosier, left, and volunteer Katie Franzi.

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