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Animal Network is a 501(c)(3) not for profit corporation with years of experience dedicated to rescuing homeless and abandoned animals from the streets, shelters and owners who can no longer care for their animals. By working with committed volunteers, foster homes, shelters, other rescue organizations, local veterinarians, trainers and boarding facilities we are able not only to find loving homes for these animals but solutions to help owners keep their animals. We have a network of volunteers and supporters who generously volunteer their time, resources, homes and hearts to help us succeed. Unfortunately we do not have a centralized physical shelter instead we house our companion animals in boarding facilities or volunteer’s homes. We also try to help owners keep their pets.
We provide shelter and a healthy environment for our animals; we educate the public about animal welfare, we strive to reduce the animal overpopulation by providing spay/neuter services; we advocate for the humane treatment of animals in the community and we promote the adoption of animals into loving, responsible homes.
The mission of PAWS NY is to help New York City’s most vulnerable residents remain with their pets by delivering critical programs and services through a community of partners and volunteers. Our programs help keep pets in their homes while protecting and promoting the human-animal bond that is so physically and psychologically valuable to our clients. Thus, our motto: helping people by helping pets.
Valley Humane Society (VHS) creates a brighter future for cats and dogs by encouraging and strengthening the bond between people and pets. VHS rescues and rehabilitates companion animals, champions responsible caretaking, shares pets’ soothing affections with people in need of comfort, and supports and preserves existing pet-guardian relationships.
WOODLAND PARK ZOO SAVES WILDLIFE AND INSPIRES EVERYONE TO MAKE CONSERVATION A PRIORITY IN THEIR LIVES.
Clark County Humane Society is dedicated to promoting a more humane world through:- Operating a No-Kill Shelter - Adopting homeless cats and dogs- Low cost spay/neuter services- Humane education- Reducing pet overpopulation- Assisting area residents with pet problems and- Alleviating animal suffering whenever possible.
The Humane Society of North Central Florida is our community’s leading resource for pets and pet owners. Our mission is to eliminate the needless euthanasia of healthy and treatable pets in North Central Florida. Formerly the Alachua County Humane Society, Gainesville Pet Rescue and Helping Hands Pet Rescue, we joined forces in 2018 to streamline services for pets and the people who love them. Founded in Alachua County over 40 years ago, the Humane Society of North Central Florida is committed to ensuring every healthy or treatable companion animal in our region finds a loving, adoptive home.
Founded in 1941, SAVE is an independent non-profit animal shelter dedicated to protecting the health and welfare of homeless companion animals in the greater Princeton area. Through six core programs of rescue, shelter, health and welfare, spay/neuter, adoption, and humane education, save focuses on the rehabilitation and successful placement of treatable and adoptable animals. Save endeavors to build, foster, and strengthen the human-animal bond. On February 21, 2006, save merged with Friends of Homeless Animals (FOHA). Founded in 1998, FOHA concentrated on animal rescue and care in the Princeton area. The new union, renaming the organization as save, a friend to homeless animals, is now the largest shelter for companion animals in the Princeton area. Consolidating 75 years of community involvement and a shared philosophy and mission, the merger of SAVE and FOHA has led to a greater number of successful adoptions. SAVE operates as a limited admission shelter with contracts to serve Princeton, Lawrence, Hopewell, Montgomery and Cranbury animal control officers. Save depends mostly on private contributions to support its six core programs. The shelter facility houses approximately 75 dogs and cats at a time, and helps an average of 400 animals a year.
We exist to serve abused, abandoned and unwanted animals. The HVHS pursues its mission of promoting its core: the cause of animal welfare. In addition to sheltering abandoned and unwanted animals, HVHS actively seeks adoptive homes for these animals.
A non-profit dog and cat rescue creating pathways to permanent, safe, and loving homes through adoption, transport, and spay and neuter services.
To provide rescue, rehabilitation and new loving homes for dogs that have been living on the street, abused, abandoned and removed from high kill shelters