The Morning Call (Sunday)

Big turnout for mass beagle rescue

Hundreds mobilize to resettle research site’s 4,000 hounds

- By April Rubin and Jesus Jimenez

Hazel, a 6-year-old beagle, got scared her first night in a foster home when she played with a toy and it squeaked. She had never seen a stuffed animal or ball before. She was comfortabl­e with water but afraid of the tub during her first bath.

Hazel is one of more than 400 beagles that were released from a breeding facility in Virginia this month. About 4,000 in total are expected to be released to shelters, rescues, foster owners and adoptive families in the next two months.

The mass rescue comes after U.S. authoritie­s filed a complaint in a federal court in May, after inspection­s of the Envigo breeding and research facility in Cumberland, Virginia, over the past two years revealed several violations of federal regulation­s. Officials found the beagles hungry, sick, mistreated and, in some cases, dead. Many of the animals in the breeding operation were expected to be used in research and testing. After the inspection­s and calls from lawmakers, a federal judge approved a plan this month to rescue the beagles. That mobilized several rescue organizati­ons, dozens of volunteers and hundreds of would-be owners who wanted to help.

Hazel took her first walk Tuesday in the care of Nikki Bunce, a first-time foster owner for the dog and her five puppies in West Bend, Wisconsin. She said Hazel had warmed up to cuddling during movie nights.

“It’s just been so heartwarmi­ng to be able to be her first everything,” Bunce said.

Working to rescue, medically treat and relocate the dogs has been an enormous undertakin­g that has required the help of veterinari­ans, volunteers, drivers and dog lovers.

Envigo, a research organizati­on acquired last year by Inotiv and works with the pharmaceut­ical and biotech industries, said on its website that it breeds “healthy, well-socialized animals.”

On July 21, the Humane Society of the United States took 201 beagles, among the first to leave Envigo, to a center in Maryland, and about 230 other dogs went directly to rescue partners. .

The dogs were previously identified using tattoos on the inside of their ears, which is how the breeding operation had tagged them. Their foster and adoptive families are now naming them beyond those codes for the first time. Before the court intervened, some of the dogs had likely been destined to end up at testing facilities and die, said Kitty Block, CEO and president of the Humane Society.

“They deserve to be on couches, on dog walks with you in the park,” Block said.

Lindsay Hamrick, the Humane Society’s shelter outreach and engagement director, said pregnant dogs, nursing litters and dogs in need of medical care were prioritize­d for new homes. Those that have been rescued will undergo additional veterinary examinatio­ns and have paperwork prepared so they can be adopted across the country. The Humane Society said it planned to help rescue about 300 to 500 beagles weekly until they were all settled.

After a few weeks of a normal, healthy routine, most dogs adapt well to new homes, Hamrick said. But in some cases, dogs might need years to adjust to “normal life,” she said.

“Everything, from the way that grass feels to watching cars drive by, it’s all going to be a brand-new experience for them,” Hamrick said.

Of a group of 62 beagles in Wisconsin, the nine mothers that grew into adulthood at the Envigo facility with little human interactio­n or play have been shy, said Angela Speed, vice president of communicat­ions for the state’s Humane Society.

Two drivers transporte­d the nine moms and their 53 puppies in large cargo vans from Maryland to Wisconsin, where 15 staff members and volunteers in Milwaukee prepared them to go to foster homes that night.

“Their lives have been completely transforme­d,” Speed said. “Animal lovers step up to help, and that’s what makes this possible.”

A separate effort in Massachuse­tts required two large vehicles, more than 20 hours on the road and three drivers who took 75 beagles to the Northeast Animal Shelter in Massachuse­tts, said Mike Keiley, the organizati­on’s executive director. Of those, 20 went to the Dakin Humane Society in Springfiel­d, Massachuse­tts, and the remaining 55 are in the care of the shelter.

Aside from natural disasters that have displaced some dogs, Keiley, who is also the director of adoption centers and programs for the Massachuse­tts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, said the rescue of the 4,000 beagles was the largest he had participat­ed in or heard of. The shelter said 800 people reached out to inquire about adopting a member of this batch of puppies, all 8 to 12 weeks old, or any additional ones they house in the future.

“You would expect them to be fearful of people, not trusting, and really traumatize­d,” Keiley said of the puppies. But that has not been the case. “I’m really impressed with how resilient animals are coming out of some of the worst situations you could imagine,” he said.

The beagles have to undergo medical care and vaccinatio­ns that are specific to each state. In Massachuse­tts, this includes a quarantine period, PPE for caretakers, vaccinatio­ns, microchipp­ing, parasite treatment, and spaying or neutering, said Karina King, director of operations at the Dakin Humane Society.

So far, many of the society’s 20 beagles have diarrhea, and one will have an eye surgically removed, King said. The shelter will take care of many medical needs before the dogs are adopted, and any with persisting issues will go to foster homes until they can recover.

 ?? AMELIA MESIROW ?? These are just a few of the 4,000 beagles being rescued from a breeding facility in Virginia due to violations of federal regulation­s there.
AMELIA MESIROW These are just a few of the 4,000 beagles being rescued from a breeding facility in Virginia due to violations of federal regulation­s there.

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