Pets Alive gets hundreds of rescue requests every month. From owner surrenders, to other shelters, to mass mailings, to just about any method of social media available – we get asked to help save the lives of animals. We do help whenever we can and we do read everything that comes our way and try to do something to help the person or people that are trying to save a life. It has gotten so unwieldily though that we spend hours wading through emails, so much that we have had to ask people to not add us to cross posting, as it bogs us down and we can often get over 60-70 emails on the exact same animal! Many people get majorly offended when we ask them to take us off all of these cross posted emails, but the only way we can be effective is if we can have policies and procedures in place for people to reach out to us and ask for help with a specific animal, which we can then review. Cross postings just are not an effective way to get the word out or for us to review and handle a request.
We also get all of the CACC mailings with the pictures of the dogs and cats that are scheduled to die the next morning and we look at those and help pull those animals whenever we can.
That is how I came across one of the saddest looking dogs I had ever seen. His name was Jojo.
Jojo was supposedly 10 years old. His owner had gotten arrested, and JoJo was brought to the CACC, where JoJo just…..well….gave up.
He wouldn’t even sit for his picture and volunteers said he would not respond in any way to them, or come for a walk.
He lay in his run, not looking at any one.
Not eating.
Not participating in life.
And so he went on the kill list to be euthanized the next day.
All night I watched his thread, hoping I would see that he was “safe” but with an old dog, there are not many people who would take this on, never mind an old dog with possible issues or in need of specialized care or worse – very special adopters that would ignore his age, his special needs and his depression. No rescue wants a dog that will stay for a long period of time. We want to be able to move our dogs out into homes, so we can help save the next one!
But they start killing the animals early in the morning, and at 6 am, I checked again, and he was still there.
Not safe.
Awaiting his death.
He looked so miserable, so sad. So broken.
And so we reached for the phone and pulled him.
Over the next few days we hit a few obstacles in getting him to us from the city, and finally his transport was arranged, and we eagerly awaited the day of his arrival. Volunteers had followed his story and they were all set to shower him with love and to show him a new life.
Then I got an email from the CACC. Someone had come in looking to adopt JoJo. The woman said they had been looking all over the place for him, at every shelter in NY and was he here? They responded that he was, but that he had already been adopted.
WHAT??? I’m sorry – but WHAT? The woman was a family member. Sister to the person who had been arrested. She said she loved JoJo and had been searching everywhere for him. She also added that JoJo was on medication – he was an epileptic and he needed medication for that and also for his joints and she told them how much of a dosage he got and how often. Clearly this woman KNEW the dog, cared about him, and wanted to take him home. But they stuck to their guns. Jojo was “adopted” .
Again…WHAT?
No he wasn’t. He had been pulled by rescue. Us. But a rescue. To go to live a life in a shelter. NOT a home. And here was a HOME – someone that KNEW the dog, wanted him and was standing in front of them crying?
…and they turn their back on her and on Jojo and continue the process to transfer him to us??????
Oh my. Sigh.
Thankfully someone at the CACC went after her and wrote all of this down and passed it on to us, including the woman’s contact information.
But again, here is such a disconnect. Jojo had family. He had someone that was looking for him. WHY WOULD ANY ORGANIZATION NOT IMMEDIATELY CALL US AND TELL US THE GREAT NEWS!??
Why in the world would you send this woman away, from a dog that she loved and from one that loved her, to send that dog to an unknown life in a shelter, when he could go to a home?
The minute I read the email about the need for Jojo to be on the medication, and the woman’s number to contact if we needed more information about it, I was stunned.
Why, why, why, why, why?
We immediately contacted her. We told her we would be thrilled for her to take Jojo. She broke down and wept. She wept loudly, and long, and with great happiness, great despair, and great relief. She must have thanked us 1,000 times.
We arranged for her to go BACK to the CACC as a Pets Alive representative to pick up the dog “for us”.
And of course we didn’t take the dog – we instantly approved her adoption and sent Jojo directly home with her.
Jojo never came here, he never needed to.
His home was with the people that loved him. With the people that went to every single shelter in NYC to try to find him, after calling netted them no results.
This woman called the police, the shelters, she hunted for days for this beloved dog of her sister’s and was bereft when she was told that the dog had been adopted out.
Why would any organization prevent her from taking that dog home with them? This is another disconnect, another problem at the bleagured CACC in NYC. The lack of common sense. The lack of the ability to make a judgement call, to do the right thing, to do everything in their power to reunite a lost dog with an owner, or to give a confiscated dog to a family member that clearly loves and wants that dog.
I know the pictures on this page are not great. The people have only an older cell phone and are not computer savvy so it was hard to get us some good pictures, but the pictures you see here are the day that they picked Jojo up and took him home. Home. Home after taking him for a long walk at the beach, after getting his epilepsy medication into him, after getting him a good meal and settling him down in a warm and cozy bed in their living room.
Why would anyone deprive them of taking this dog home with them, and why would anyone deprive a dog that had given up all hope and just waited to die, a chance to go home with someone he clearly loved?
You’re home Jojo. We are so glad to be the instruments of that for you and so glad that your eyes have light in them once again.
Enjoy the rest of your days in the arms of people that didn’t give up on you. Who hunted the mean streets of NYC to bring you home.
Home.
What a wonderful story….yes, as it had a happy ending. SO grateful you pulled him. I don’t believe in a higher power, but let’s just say it was meant to be.
Yet so sad to see how dysfunctional the CACC in NYC is and really don’t give a dam about animals.
I thank you for all you do!!
Bittersweet…SO thankful for all of you and saving jojo but sad CACC is this bad. I pray jojo lives happily now, thanks to you!!!
This reminds me of when my cat got kidnapped (yes, kidnapped during a mass vandalism at my apartment complex). He’s deaf. Born profoundly deaf. He hears nothing. My best guess is he was picked up – probably marched right up to the vandals who grabbed him – then dumped IN TRAFFIC 3 miles from my house, likely with a “Now what are we doing to do with THIS” from the vandals. He’s never BEEN in traffic.
There was a guy waiting at a bus stop. He saw a white cat struggling on the median, scared, trying to figure out how to get across and not able to. He ran out and grabbed him, thinking he was too clean and too scared to be a stray. At least not for long.
Luckily the morons who took him left his collar on him.
The man was going to take him on the bus and take him home, then call his owner [me]. The driver wouldn’t let him on. Because he wasn’t in a carrier. My cat is NOT a fighter. And he LOVES car rides. He’d have just sat in this guy’s lap all the way home, purring and having a big adventure.
The man explained “He isn’t mine. I found him in the road. He’s a stray and someone is missing him. I’m getting off in 2 miles. Please just let me take him to my place so I can call the number on his tag.”
Bus driver said “no”. The man asked “Then what am I supposed to do with him?” Driver said “Put him back where you found him.”
IN. THE. ROAD????
Luckily he didn’t. He waited and asked the next passerby for a cell phone (the man who found my guy doesn’t own one) and called me using it. I was at work. I had NO IDEA any of this had been going on.
Had it been up to a bus driver, or a less compassionate person, I’d have been driving home, seen a white cat who’d been hit by a car and thought “How sad, that looks just like…” and then gotten home to no cat, to realize I’d just seen my own cat flat on the road.
Who ARE some of these people? Don’t they THINK? Don’t they CARE that in the midst of all the animals who get abused, dumped, or abandoned, there are people who LOVE and MISS them and when those people exist, THEIR job is to do everything in their power to reunite them?
I’m so glad JoJo got HOME. <3
This gave me goosebumps, both at how awful the CACC is and how amazing Pets Alive is. Thank you for all that you do for each and every animal you can. I’m going to give my Gracie and extra treat tonight and tell her to thank you as well!
I remembered seeing Jojo and I didn’t know the rest of his story. I felt awful for him. He and other animals that have been ‘confiscated’ after their person has been arrested or is sick in a hospital, those pets really hit me. Their person had no choice in their pet going to an ACC.
At some point, once I get a house for myself my significant other (and my 2 kitties) I hope to develop some sort of shelter or half-way house for pets in this situation.
I have a soft spot for the older pets too…so I’m not really sure what kinds of ‘conditons’ or rules I would set to try to guide me to help certain animals…but I hope I will be able to do this in the future.
If the NY ACC’s were more concerned about animal welfare, they would have satellite shelters specifically FOR animals whose families are in these predicaments.
Thank you so much for reuniting Jojo with his family. 🙂
Unfortunately, this is a story we’ve heard replayed hundreds of times. ACC refusing to release an animal to any member of the public after a rescue group has a hold on them. And, further, refusing to even provide them with so much as the name of the rescue group the animal is going to so they can at least contact them directly. It’s unfortunate because I can’t think of any rescue off the top of my head that would not be GIDDY at the thought of returning a dog to a home where they were loved and wanted and saving a different dog in their place. Very unfortunate indeed.