Newmans accept $300,000 donation from the ASPCA® to the
Humane Alliance National Spay/Neuter Response Team

NEW YORK--The ASPCA®
(The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals®) today announced a $300,000 sponsorship for the Humane Alliance of
Western North Carolina's National Spay/Neuter Response Team to provide a
strategic training program and facilitators to mentor organizations to open and
operate 12 new high-volume, high quality spay/neuter clinics across the country
in 2007.
Ed Sayres, president of the ASPCA, presented the $300,000 pledge to Humane
Alliance director Quita Mazzina at the Humane Society of Catawba County, which
will operate one of the model spay/neuter clinics, in Hickory, NC. The clinic
will be part of the Humane Society’s multipurpose animal welfare facility that
is currently under construction.
Humane Society of Catawba County's
Spay/Neuter clinic is being built through a $400,000
donation from the Ryan Newman Foundation. Ryan and Krissie Newman are the
national spokespeople for the
Humane Alliance's National Spay/Neuter Response Team (NSNRT)and honorary
capital campaign co-chairs for the Humane Society of Catawba County.
The NSNRT operates much like a NASCAR pit crew, sending groups of trained vets
and veterinary technicians to help nonprofit organizations learn how to open
spay/neuter clinics using the Humane Alliance model.
A total of 22 organizations around the country--including the Humane Society of
Catawba County--have applied to open spay/neuter clinics, and a minimum of 12 of
the 22 will open this year with help from the ASPCA's funding of the NSNRT.
These organizations will partner with hundreds of local animal shelters and
rescue groups in their regions across the nation.
“Spaying and neutering is the only way to permanently curb the proliferation of
millions of unwanted and abandoned animals each year in the United States,” said
Ed Sayres, president of the ASPCA. “The Humane Alliance’s National Spay Neuter
Response Team model exemplifies the successes that can be achieved through
mentoring best practices, since trainees then become creative collaborators and
new mentors of the program. It’s a win-win for everyone, especially the
animals.”
The Humane Alliance of Western North Carolina is a non-profit high volume, high
quality, affordable spay/neuter clinic located in Asheville. Since its inception
12 years ago, The Humane Alliance clinic has sterilized 180,000 companion
animals and reduced the euthanasia rate in the Asheville community by an
astounding 72 percent.
Through the NSNRT initiative, which began in 2005, the Humane Alliance’s team of
facilitators has mentored 21 organizations across the nation to successfully
implement its high volume, high quality spay/neuter model. More than 200,000
companion animals have been surgically sterilized at these clinics in just two
short years. NSNRT has already trained six organizations so far this year.

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