Volunteers asked to leave
Deepa Bharath
Political tension between volunteers and management at an animal
shelter in Huntington Beach stifled operations and became the ax that
dropped on the volunteer program, administrators and shelter workers
said on Monday.
More than 80 volunteers were asked to leave the shelter after the
situation got out of hand because of constant arguments over
medication and space arrangements, said Samir Botros, the
veterinarian who runs the shelter.
Botros said he got rid of the volunteer program as of Aug. 30
because volunteers complained so much about the facility and about
what medicines were given to the animals, that day-to-day operations
had become a burden for administrators.
A handful of volunteers who have remained positive and supportive
of the shelter still come in and help out, he said.
“They don’t do as much work inside the shelter,” he said. “They
help us with publicity or getting us outside help from other
agencies.”
Jon Vreeland, a volunteer who still works for the shelter, said
volunteers are losing sight of why animal shelters exist.
“If they were so interested in animals, they wouldn’t be blocking
and picketing the shelter,” he said. “These animals need to be
adopted. They need to go home.”
The disgruntled volunteers got into a power struggle with the
administration and presented irrational demands, Vreeland said.
“Some of them wanted animals to be euthanized because they’ve been
in the shelter too long,” he said. “But that’s the beauty of our
shelter. We’re a no-kill shelter. We give animals a chance to live
and have had some of them for a year or more.”
Former volunteers maintain that their intentions are pure and free
of any agenda. They will continue to protest outside the shelter on
Newland Street until it is shut down and rebuilt, former volunteer
Sune Gillin said.
“Politics was the farthest thing from our minds,” she said.
Gillin, who had been volunteering at the shelter for five years
until having been asked to leave in March, said she built a strong
volunteer base at the shelter over the years.
“We were taking sick animals home and nursing them back to
health,” she said. “One dog I took home was so sick that it had to be
force-fed and carried up and down the stairs.”
Gillin and other volunteers say the shelter is “falling apart” and
animals get hurt because the cages and fences don’t get fixed.
But Angie Dahman, one of the few volunteers who still works
weekends at the shelter, said the complaining volunteers were
exaggerating the circumstances and wanted the shelter to operate on
their terms.
“They were talking about two dogs being squeezed into one cage,”
she said. “But I saw that the dogs were happier that way. They had a
friend.”
Volunteers still take dogs out for walks and make extra food such
as chicken and rice for the weaker animals, Dahman said.
“We know the shelter is in an old building that needs repairs and
rebuilding,” she said. “But Dr. Botros is working with the city on
that, and those things do take time.”
The city of Costa Mesa has launched an investigation into the
Orange County Humane Society after several former volunteers
complained at a City Council meeting last month that the animals at
the shelter were not receiving proper care. The city has a contract
with the shelter to send all rescued animals there.
Costa Mesa City Councilwoman Libby Cowan said she is primarily
concerned about whether animals are treated humanely at the shelter.
“I want to make sure they are getting food, water and healthcare,
which are all in the contract our city has with them,” she said. “We
owe it to our animals to perform an in-depth review and analysis of
the conditions at the shelter.”
Costa Mesa has a three-year contract with the Orange County Humane
Society and pays the shelter $4,000 a month to send its animals
there. The city is one year into its contract, Cowan said.
“But we do have clauses in there that say we can get out of it if
the terms of the contract are not being met,” she said.
People have different values when it comes to the level of care in
a shelter, Cowan said.
“You have to wonder ‘What if it’s true?’ and also ‘What if it’s
exaggerated?’” she said. “But we have an obligation to our animals to
find out where the truth is.”
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