The Star Malaysia - Star2

A dog’s best friend

Meet the American whose outreach programme helps people in underserve­d communitie­s care for their pets.

- By CHrIStINA AMArACHI MBAKWE

AS a child, Baltimore native James Evans would bring home stray dogs, something he said drove drive his mother crazy.

At the time, neither of them knew animal advocacy would form the core of his life’s work, and that he would go on to help shift how underserve­d communitie­s and, in particular, people of colour approach their pets’ health.

Evans, 47, is black and grew up in a working- class neighborho­od, which means he stands out in a movement dominated by white, middle- class women. That lack of diversity, according to research by sociologis­t and animal- rights activist Corey Lee Wren, is a key reason advocates often struggle to connect with disadvanta­ged groups and people of colour.

But Evans is working to change that.

“Growing up in an impoverish­ed community and being able to leverage that to help others in the community has been rewarding,” said the graduate of the Maryland Institute College of Art, now the CEO and creative director of illume, a communicat­ions agency.

At the start of his career, Evans worked in environmen­tal graphic design, and in 1999 he started illume. He quickly secured the National Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Colored People as a client.

After building a reputation for doing advertisin­g for nonprofits, the Mount Vernon resident and father of one was approached by the Humane Society of the United States to lead a pilot program in Mississipp­i and Louisiana. PostHurric­ane Katrina, the euthanasia rate for animals in Louisiana, was disturbing­ly high, Evans said, and the Humane Society wanted help combating it.

For Evans, this was the perfect assignment. When he was a little boy, he loved watching the wildlife TV show Mutual Of Omaha’s Wild Kingdom, and with a cat and dog of his own that he adopted from the Maryland SPCA, animals were a huge part of his personal life. Finally, his love of animals and passion for design were intersecti­ng.

“It was literally like a childhood dream come true,” he said. “It couldn’t have been a better pairing of two things I was interested in.”

The collaborat­ion resulted in Pets for Life, an outreach program that aims to help people in underserve­d communitie­s take care of their pets. This can range from spaying and neutering pets for free to free care for animals that may have mange or another illness.

Most notably, Evans helped design the Pets for Life tool kit and an advertisin­g campaign, focusing on educating communitie­s of colour and encouragin­g them to spay and neuter their pets. Today there are 34 cities in America running the Pets for Life program and using the tool kit, a manual that can be downloaded online.

“Through his work with the Pets For Life program, I think it really started a fundamenta­l shift in the whole way we do animal welfare,” said Kenny Lamberti, 46, director of strategic engagement for the Humane Society. “A lot of his expertise and communicat­ions and messaging helped us tell our story better and changed the narrative.”

Lamberti said Evans changed how the nonprofit communicat­es visually – it now used more inclusive posters, featuring black and Latino people interactin­g with animals in a positive way.

He said Evans influenced verbal communicat­ion as well, teaching staff at the Humane Society not to use language that could be viewed as condescend­ing by some. The Pets for Life tool kit, discourage­s the use of what might seems to be benign terms like “responsibl­e” and “educate,” which can imply that pet owners they’re reaching out to are irresponsi­ble and uneducated. It also advises advocates not to underestim­ate their audience’s intelligen­ce.

Evans has found the work rewarding and is still moved by how much compassion people in underserve­d communitie­s show their animals, despite the economic hardships they have to contend with.

“You meet amazing people who literally feed their animals before they feed themselves,” he said. – The Baltimore Sun/ Tribune News Service

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 ??  ?? Evans is pictured with Juanita stern in her home with her Jack Russell terrier, Pup- Pup. Juanita had her dog and cats spaded and neutered by Charm City Companions, who also operated on PupPup without charge when he was sick. — tns
Evans is pictured with Juanita stern in her home with her Jack Russell terrier, Pup- Pup. Juanita had her dog and cats spaded and neutered by Charm City Companions, who also operated on PupPup without charge when he was sick. — tns

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