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imbalances in particulate matter, which will add to comfort and limit the spread of diseases. Healthy animals are happier, and happier animals get adopted. The current San Martin Animal Shelter at 12370 Murphy Avenue is a re-purposed house, over 70 years old, with a veterinary clinic housed in a trailer and seven salvaged livestock stalls. “People might look at our current facility and think; Oh they don’t save lives there,” said Jenkins. But this is not “the pound” of old where stray, abandoned, lost, or surrendered animals enter but do not leave. The shelter has been a no-kill facility since 2013. Last year, the shelter received over 4,000 animals and achieved a 94.3% live- release rate. “It’s never okay for us to say we’re going to euthanize animals due to time or space. That’s not ever going to be the case. We will always, no matter what, save every animal that we can,” she said. And this from a shelter that accepts every animal regardless of condition— seniors, hit by a car, abused, malnour- ished, or sick—and every species great or small: cats, dogs, guinea pigs, rabbits, birds, livestock, horses, goats, pigs, and more. Every shelter animal is available for adoption. The foster program “has really increased our capacity,” Jenkins said, adding that last year foster families took in 1,069 kittens. “They’re responsible for a large part of our live-release rate. We’ve recently started a foster dog program.” According to Jenkins, shelter visitors can “check out” a dog for an hour or two, take them for a walk, on a hike, or to the beach. Or keep them for a day or a sleep-over weekend. “Sometimes fosters adopt the dog, but even if they don’t, the dogs get social- ized and might get adopted quicker.” At the current Murphy Avenue site, the dog room is narrow and dark with concrete floors and twenty dog runs—a double row of ten are lined up along the walls. The dogs sleep on raised padded beds, some have toys or stuffed animals. Smaller dogs share, two to a run; most large dogs have a run to themselves. An outside exercise area is bare dirt with no trees and a picnic table sits in the middle for use by volunteers. The yard is large enough to throw a ball and to hold play groups for socializing. In the dog room, one run holds a white Maltese mix and a Chihuahua. Both approach the front of the run when I stoop, but only the Maltese approaches when I enter. Another run houses a black and white Border Collie-mix who lies stolidly in the center of the pad, making furtive glances my way. The cat room is square with stain- less steel cages stacked three high. In Lisa Jenkins, the Program Manager of Animal Care and Control for Santa Clara County the center there are climbing perches and cat toys scattered about. And adult white Domestic Short Hair is curled sound asleep on a chair. A black and white kitten plays alone with toys in his cage. A male orange tabby and a female tortoiseshell huddle behind a folded towel. Despite the make-do facilities, the employees, fosters, and volunteers are upbeat, dedicated, compassionate, and optimistic. Every animal is treated as an individual, provided with comfort, medical treatment, and companionship. And they can use our help: donations of money or supplies, and volunteers are always welcome. The new facility will have the same high standards but in a setting that will make things easier. They’ll have GILROY • MORGAN HILL • SAN MARTIN WINTER 2020 an upgraded veterinary clinic with two surgery rooms for in-house spay/neuter and medical treatment for homeless animals as well as a separate space for owned-animal procedures. A grief room, with a separate exit, will allow people to share the last moments with their pet in a peaceful setting. There will be a space for staff and volunteers to gather, dog agility yards, and a small animal room. The Field Services division of the Animal Services Center, Animal Control, will be housed in the same building. Animal Control provides assistance with a variety of services: picking up confined, stray domestic animals; patrol- ling for stray, roaming domestic animals; investigating animal bites, animal abuse and neglect of domestic animals and livestock; and picking up injured, stray domestic animals, among other func- tions. Both the Animal Shelter and Field Services cover a territory that extends from Palo Alto to Gilroy. The Santa Clara County Animal Services Center is the only shelter that houses livestock. The new facility will feature a 2,500 square foot barn with 10 stalls, a pasture and an exercise yard. The barn and pasture are a separate space set front and center, where they can see and be seen. The new center will also house a spacious multi-purpose room that can hold up to 300 people. The room will be used for meetings, workshops, agriculture-based training, and for non-shelter events hosted by other community organizations. There’s a special bond between people and pets. People receive as much, or more than they give: friend- ship, companionship, and love. So, it’s comforting to know that we will have a county shelter that tends to animals lost, strayed, abused, and ill. And it’s comforting to know that the new shelter will be modern and state-of-the-art; sheltering taken to a whole new level. When misfortune happens, we seek shelter, a place of refuge that welcomes and accepts, feeds, houses, and protects us, but a shelter is supposed to be temporary. It’s important to shelter these animals, but it’s more important to find them a loving home. gmhtoday.com 105