CRITTER Control Story by Meg Dedolph Photos by David Natt The image of the neighborhood dogcatcher c hasing Kovcr clown an alley with a net is slowly becoming ob solete. Today’s doge ateliers prefer to lie c ailed animal con trol officers and spend as much time investigating castes of animal abuse and neglect as they do rounding up strays At the untmal shelters, adoption and education are tho two main goals The animals at the Lane County Animal Regulation Authority, the taxpayer-funded facility that serves the entire county, are usually strays that were pic ked up by an animal control officer or brought to tho shelter by a citizen. Less often, the animals are clogs that have bitten someone and are In quarantine or are Involved in court cases liven though wild animals arc! not usually handled by the county shelter, some of the stranger guests brought in have been ruitliils, ferruts. chinchillas, roosters and Vietnamese |>ol-t>elllcd pigs "If we think It's been a pet, we'll take it." said animal regulation supervisor Kandy Covey Covey said the main role- of the Lane County shelter is to enforce laws concerning animals, including llcx-ns ing laws, complaints about stray clogs and charges of iinimul .lhtiM* ‘A lot of people say, “Gosh, this Is harder than adopting a child,'* but It Isn't ' Mert Davis. director ot Oreenhill Humane Society Most colls begin with u complaint of »om« Mirl for example, a stray dog - which is recorded on a cart! and assigned to one of the two or three officers on duty Covey said that in u case like that, they en courage the caller to catch the dog them selves Ixicnuse the dog Is often gone when the officer arrives If thi! animal Is still loose when tho officer arrives. the dog is either caught nr chased home, and the officer is sues the dog's owner a citation "It's a violation if the dog is off its own property." Covey said, adding that owners can also (mi cited (or failure to license their dog properly Covey said that although most dogs come when called, there are some "repeat offenders who don't like riding in the trui k Hut we know who those are " Cats are not handled by animal control officers ex i opt in cases of abuse or negler 1 A typical day for an officer may include follow up (alls on neglect cases, responding to calls concerning Injured dogs or oats and patrolling for strays "It's like a police officer," Covey said "If they're not lixiking for murderers or investigating robfjorios, they're setting speed traps." inr snriuT iiirmiy '*»•» uuiu u|* m ~w usually only five to 10 arc lioing hold, and out of the :t0 dog runs available. Covey said only lhree-i|uartors arc typically full. The estimated initial cost of taking a vehicle out to pick up a stray dog and impounding it is S120, said Covey, who also added that an SB boarding fin- is as sessed for each day the dog stays in the shelter. Out of the shelter-held animals that arc picked up in the city of Eugene. 75 percent of them arc returned. "Generally, people in the city make a conscientious choice to have a dog." Covey said, explaining the high return rate. "In the county." Covoy said, "you run into people who have dogs because it's the thing to do. When they lone the dog. they don't like to look for It." The animals that are not reclaimed by their owners are put up for adoption, depending on their health, age, history and "adoptability." Usually, animals without an identification aro held for 72 hours before being put to sleep, but they may be held longer, depending on how "adoptable” the shelter believes the animal is. “Some people think wo're brood-prejudiced." Covey said, "but we're not. If we have a Rottweilor who's friendly and healthy, we'll put him up for adoption. We don't put all the Rottweilors and Dobermans to sleep." The adoption fees at the Lane County shelter are $35.25 for a male dog, $45 25 for a femalo dog, SIB for a male cat and $26 for a femalo cat. The prices include spay/noutor fees, shots foes, a collar and identification Chary! RtcNay, at Eugana, hold• a puppy (mbova) aha adoptad attar going through an axtanaiva tcnaning procats. Bill Waugh taads ona ol tha dogs at tha Lana County Animal Ragulation Authority's kannal (balow). lag for cats, and a leash, collar and one-year license for dogN Covey said that certain times of the year result in more work for the shelter, r iling Fourth of )• 'y and ihe accompanying fireworks as Ix-ing especially frightening to dogs. "Dogs gel scared," Covey said. "They need to come inside and be with their family where they know they’re safe " Covey also said the shulter recommends people keep their animals inside on Halloween bocause "people run uround in weird costumes and dogs get scared or defen sive. Also, chocolate is toxic to animals, so we tell peo ple not to let their dogs have any candy.” An increase in activity also occurs betwoen seasons, Covey said. "There's an Increase in dog bites and dogs at large during the summer," he said. "And in the win ter. there's not so many animals running around." - "We see more large animal complaints in the winter — for example, horses left out." Covey said. “That's a lack of information on the complainant's part, because most stock animals are left outside." The Creenhill Humane Society differs from the Lane County sholter in that it is a privately funded business and receives no funds from taxpayers, said Creenhill di rector Mert Davis. “ Furthermore, CreenhlH's main goal is adoption and not enforcement, unlike the Lane County shelter. "We adopt out three to four times as many animals as Lane County." Davis said. The animals at Creenhill usually come from people who don't want them or can't tump them. "Dogs and cats make up 99.9 percent of what hap pens." Davis said “We're not sot up to handlo exotics or livestock." Of the animals who are adoptable, then; is a 75 per cent adoption rate. * The overall adoption rate of all the animals that puss through the shelter, including (host; that cannot bo put up for adoption for reasons of health or ago, is 31 per cent, which Davis said is an increase from 5 percent in 1987 Davis said the increased rate is because of the promo tions and public appearances that Oreenhill does with in the community, citing the "pet nights" at the Univer sity. People who want to adopt an animal from Groenhill must present a photo identification and proof of ad dress. If the person is a renter, a copy of the lease stat ing that pets are permissible must also be presented. "Frequently," Duvis said, "we have University stu dents who come in to adopt, they givo us o phony ad dress. wo chock it. and wo find out that it's Carson Hall, which doesn't work." Potential pet owners urc also asked a series of ques tions, including where the animal will sleep. If the per son knows a veterinarian, and if there are any small c hildren in the home "A lot of people say. 'Cosh, this is harder than adopt ing a child,' but it Isn't," Davis said. Spaying or neutering the animal is also a requirement for any animal adopted from a shelter, according to city and county code "We wunt to put thn animal into a home where trie animal will be happy as a pot." Davis said. Davis said the spay/neuter laws have made a differ ent* in the nuinixir of animals that pass through the shelter He said in the 1970s, Groenhill alone handled more than 30.000 dogs a year, but now between Green hill and the Lane County shelter, only 12.000 dogs are handled each year. Like the Lane County shelter, the Fourth of July is also a busy time for Greenhill "Wo had the biggest excitement this year when we found out that the fifth of July was on a Sunday, and we're closed on Sunday. We didn’t have to take calls from people whose pets ran off on the Fourth.” Davis said. "If people would just put a collar and tag on every * pet and have their dogs licensod," Davis said, "that would make our job easier. "Poople say that they don't want to put a collar on their cat because they're afraid the cat will go and hang itself on a tree." he said, "but It's more likely the cat will be put to sleep in a shelter if It doesn’t have a col lar." Adoption fees at Greenhill are $57 for a male dog. $67 for a female dog, $36 for a male cat and $40 for a fe male cat. In the case of dogs, the price includes the costs of spaying or neutering, a collar and leash, vaccination, worm and flea treatments and food samples. For cats, the price includes the costs of a cat carrier, a spay or neuter foe, a tag and collar, and for an additional $10 refundable deposit, a video callod "Your New Cat." which the owners are encouraged to watch.