Orlando Sentinel

Key Katrina lesson: Pets count too

Focus is to keep owners, animals together

- By Hailey Branson-Potts hailey.branson@latimes.com

HOUSTON — The bigrig truck was full of cats: Theo, who had a bit of a sneeze. Vennessa, acting like a diva. Two Thomases. And Buck, who, to everyone’s surprise, was a girl.

They had been living in shelters in southeast Texas. But with Hurricane Harvey stranding untold numbers of family pets, these cats were being shipped to a shelter across the country to free up space for animals being plucked from the floodwater­s.

Harvey has initiated a mass shuffling of thousands of shelter animals. Workers are making room so rescued pets can stay in their hometowns, increasing the chances that they will be reunited with their owners, who are displaced themselves, said Kenny Lamberti, vice president of the companion animals department of the Humane Society of the United States.

“The priority is keeping the rescued pets with their families,” Lamberti said.

Animal rescuers, he said, are acting on lessons learned during Hurricane Katrina, when abandoned animals were turned away from shelters that became too full and were not allowed in many human evacuation centers.

Back then, volunteers from other states, though well-intentione­d, took stranded pets with them to their home clinics, making it difficult for owners to find them, said Lamberti.

On Friday, Emancipet, a low-cost veterinary clinic in a strip mall on southeast Houston’s Wayside Drive, became a feline way station when the big rig from the Humane Society pulled up with 30 cats from Dickinson and League City near the coast that were being relocated to Seattle after those towns flooded.

The clinic was transforme­d into a veritable kitty triage center, an assembly line of care in which the cats were weighed and examined before being placed in cages with litter boxes and toys. They would be spayed or neutered and microchipp­ed as needed at Emancipet before they headed northwest.

“Six-point-nine pounds,” one of the technician­s said, weighing a dark gray cat before giving it a hug.

“She’s a girl!” Dr. Adrian Knowles said, laughing, after getting a good look at the cat whose papers said it was named Buck. “Check the genders, people.”

Kim Schoolcraf­t, the League City shelter’s animal services manager, said her facility had taken in about 35 cats and dogs since the storm hit. A third of them had been reunited with their families, and one cat died of hypothermi­a, she said.

It’s been a “massive effort” to move animals to and from the facility, which has offered to house the claimed pets of displaced families for a month without charge, she said.

Friday was the first day back to work for the staff at Emancipet. When Chief Executive Amy Mills, who is based in Austin, walked in, she hugged each worker.

“I’m so glad you’re OK,” she said.

The staff traded Harvey stories, including the tale of one employee who spent a night stranded in her Toyota RAV4 on a flooded road.

They’re all used to storm warnings on the Gulf Coast. They hadn’t realized this would be a disaster.

The clinic workers considered themselves lucky to have been spared flooding of their own homes and injury. But they hadn’t expected to be stuck in their homes for days on end, often without electricit­y.

They joked about the “Hurricane Harvey diet,” scrounged from whatever’s left in the pantry: a can of green beans, some ravioli, crackers.

Knowles, 26, the lead surgeon, said she had been at home for about four days when, on Wednesday, she looked outside and it wasn’t raining.

“It was like, ‘I’m going! I’m going outside!’ ” she said. When she got to a grocery store, there was an hourlong line out the door, and it wrapped around the entire inside of the store. She got in the line and popped down aisles as it progressed. She had a bad hankering for ice cream, and she scored some.

Others had similar experience­s. Signs limiting purchases of eggs, milk and water. The mad rush for bread.

Knowles, who moved to Houston from Florida a month ago, said she had survivor’s guilt. She feels bad when she tells family and friends she’s fine, knowing so many people lost everything.

When she saw Highway 288, her route to work, turned into a lake on live TV, it sunk in that she really was living in the middle of this disaster.

“The feeling you get when you watch TV and you get on Facebook and see ‘Pray for Houston’ and you realize that’s you — it’s jarring,” Knowles said.

 ?? JABIN BOTSFORD/WASHINGTON POST ?? Disaster planning since 2005’s Katrina makes it easier for people to evacuate with pets.
JABIN BOTSFORD/WASHINGTON POST Disaster planning since 2005’s Katrina makes it easier for people to evacuate with pets.

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