Pets Abandoned in New Orleans
Katrina's Victims Further Traumatized
By Lisa Marie Heitman, published Sep 14, 2005
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As victims are relocated to safer shelters, their heartbreaking stories are working their way into the media. One young boy recounts how a police officer took his dog from his arms and informed him pets could not be saved. A 34-year-old nurse, upon meeting with a long-awaited rescue boat, says she was forced to choose between bringing her husband's life-saving medicines and her dogs.
Psychiatrists from the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM) are sharply criticizing federal authorities, stating victims are being further traumatized. Founded in 1985, PCRM encourages higher standards for ethics and effectiveness in research" The evacuation process is already slow and difficult. It is only more painful when evacuees are forced to leave their animals behind, condemning them to a slow death by dehydration," said PCRM ethnologist Jonathan Balcombe, Ph.D.
Pet owners following pet emergency guidelines posted on the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) web site are especially devastated. According to FEMA, pets should always be taken with the family and included in any disaster planning. "If after a disaster you have to leave town, take your pets with you," the site states. "Pets are unlikely to survive on their own."
Although pet owners have a responsibility to evacuate their animals, the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) warns:"Once the disaster is imminent, if the only way out is by official rescue transport, emergency officials may not allow you to take your pets when they bring you out."
HSUS, the nation's largest animal protection organization, offers the following proactive advice for pet owners:
* If you evacuate, do not leave your pets behind. Pets cannot survive alone, and you may not be able to find them when you return to your home.
Pets Abandoned in New Orleans
Houston, TX, -- Stockpiles of clothing, food, toothpaste, shoes, diapers and hundreds of other items are sorted in the Reliant Center for distribution to families arriving from New Orleans on the FEMA organized bus caravan.
Credit: Photo by Ed Edahl/FEMA
Copyright: Photo by Ed Edahl/FEMA
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Did You Know?
HSUS is America's largest animal protection organization.
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Posted on 01/23/2007 at 1:01:00 AM