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May 2007 Archives

May 11, 2007

Church not purring about cat feeding

The emails are rolling in on this one.

BY DENISE FLAIM
denise.flaim@newsday.com

May 10, 2007

What would Jesus do?

That's the question being asked by Doreen Vollo, who for two years has fed a colony of feral cats in the woods behind Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Catholic Church in Centereach.

Earlier this month, she said, church officials told her she was trespassing and could not longer feed the cats. When she arrived the following morning, she said, a police car was idling in the church parking lot.

"These are God's creations, they are homeless, and I'm taking care of them," said Vollo, 51, an interior decorator who is Catholic but not a member of the parish. "I'm trying to do a good thing here. It's so sad."

The pastor, the Rev. Msgr. Joseph K. Curley, referred all questions to Sean Dolan, director of communications for the Diocese of Rockville Centre.

"We're not opposed to what she's doing, but it shouldn't be done on parish grounds," Dolan said, noting that the parish was concerned about liability issues, such as a cat scratching a child. "It has nothing to do with the parish not liking animals. It's not her call as to whether she can have or care for these animals on parish property."

Dolan suggested that the cats be adopted or relocated.

Vollo said the cats are feral and want little to do with humans they don't know, much less children. And she has found homes for those she was able to tame. One of them, Priscilla, lives with her. Another, Goldie, has taken up residence at Fair-Way Auto Sales, a car dealership whose lot borders the church and gave her permission to leave food out.

Vollo started feeding the colony three years ago, when the business owner next to Fair-Way asked her to help him tend to the 25 or so cats. She slowly took over their care, but when the man sold his business two years ago, the new owner was not receptive to her feline ministry. So she began feeding the cats every morning at the back of the church property.

Vollo says she has spent thousands of dollars trapping, spaying and neutering the cats. Today, the colony has dwindled to eight, though Vollo says three more need to be fixed, and a new litter of kittens has taken up residence in the bucket seats of a junked car on the Fair-Way lot.

Vollo recently purchased a statue of St. Francis, the great patron saint of animals whose philosophy is one she wishes the nearby parish would emulate.

"Sometimes I say I'm walking away from this, but how can I?" she asked. "They depend on me."

Copyright 2007 Newsday Inc.

Tennessee Pete has been found!

Pete, a rescued English setter who went on the lam on Long Island, was caught in a humane trap Wednesday morning.

He will be returning to Tennessee with his rescue-group searchers.

May 8, 2007

The Vivi Crusade

From search coordinator Bonnie Folz:

<<Vivi Update – May 8, 2007

Just about 15 months after Vivi was carelessly lost while in the care of Delta Airlines, unfortunately,  there is no new news to report on the search for Vivi.  We have had no calls of confirmed sightings of Vivi in months now.  We pray that someone has her and if they do, that they would be kind enough to let someone know, even if anonymously, in the form of a current photo.  We just want to know that Vivi is okay.
 
There are still many fliers up in the various neighborhoods and the Vivi Team does go out now and again to replenish them.
So many good things have come about because of what happened to Vivi.  Good people throughout the country are helping to save other animals' lives.  Whether it be through petitions, networking, donations, forwarding information, prayers, requests for help with lost, injured or suffering animals as well as trying to help a special little girl, Madison, by reaching out to the Extreme Home Makeover crew to rebuild a home, thus giving her the care, therapy and treatments needed at home to assist her family and help Madison thrive and continue to improve.  http://www.gopetition.com/online/12112.html
   
For all of these GOOD things being done, we say, “Thank you Vivi” and thanks to all of you who are out there making a difference.
A group of Vivi volunteers, and others offering to help, have come together to pursue the airline safety issues that are needed to be put in place, and/or enforce those requirements that are already in place, for transporting pets via the airlines.  We are calling this the “Vivi Crusade.”
There is much needed information to be gathered, in order to present any changes that need to be made, whether it is amending a bill or creating a new one.
We are putting a web site together so that people can stay up to date on what the Vivi Crusade group is doing and what is needed.  We are in immediate need of a web host for this web site and are hoping that someone may know of a service that would donate the web-hosting or provide a discount to do so as we are in need of funding to get this new initiative going.  Anyone interested in donating the web-hosting, please contact me at Pawsativebf@aol.com or by cell 917-626-1374.
I contacted Barbara Listenik who, through the unfortunate incident with Delta losing her dog Boris back in 1996, was the driving force behind the Safe Air Travel for Animals Act, also known as the Boris Bill.  Barbara and a few other folks that helped get the Boris Bill passed have offered to join the Vivi Crusade.  With Barbara’s guidance, who has “been there-done that,” and that of Sue Weiss of the Long Island Coalition of Dog Fanciers, the Vivi Crusade is moving in the right direction. 
We’ve come to find that through the “Boris Bill”, training information MUST be given to all airline employees in the safe handling of all pets in their care.  We do not know if this is being done.  If anyone can provide us with training material that is being used to train airline employees and handlers, please forward the information to me.
We have put together a “Vivi Crusade Questionnaire” which asks for information of incidents that travelers have had transporting their pets via the airlines, even if the incident was not reported. 
It has also come to our attention, that many more incidents of pets being lost somewhere within the airlines/airports, are NOT being reported as the pet may have been found in another airport or another part of the airport, hours later.  These poor lost pets somehow get re-routed onto other flights, or are never listed as being on ANY flight to begin with.  There is no logged info about these pets making it a nightmare for them to be tracked when lost.  Only after hours of worry for the owners and some scrambling of airline employees, is the animal found and reunited with the owner with NO explanation what so ever from the airlines on what happened to the animal.  It seems that since the animal has been found, no report is written up and it does not get recorded as a lost pet, which is exactly what it was for that period of time.  With no reporting of the temporarily lost animal, it does not get reported to the Consumer Protection Division of the Department of Transportation, which the airlines are required to do, under the Safe Travel for Animals Act.  These complaints are then published in its Air Travel Consumer Report http://airconsumer.ost.dot.gov/reports/  The complaints list the ‘Description of the Incident’, the ‘Description of Cause of the Incident’ and the ‘Description of Any Corrective Action’ taken by the airlines.  With these lost and found incidents not being reported, the airline is not held responsible to have any corrective actions put into place.  So this can happen to another animal at any time.
We know for a fact that incidents, such as these, go unreported by the airlines if they are not formally reported by the animal’s owner.  Take the story of Faith, the two legged dog, that was lost for almost 10 hours while in American Airlines care this past February, this incident was never listed with the Department of Transportation.  This is only one of the many we have heard of, with this type of “lost” incident happening, but unless there is some type of reporting/record of the incident, we don not have a leg to stand on and cannot get the changes made.  This is why the gathering of information with the Vivi Crusade Questionnaire is so very important.
Another finding we've come across with these lost animals, as you can see from the Air Consumer Reports, is that the airlines claim the crates being used to transport the animal seem to be the cause of the animals getting lost.  Whether it is a faulty crate door mechanism or the crate not being put together securely.  I do believe that this may be the case in some incidences but know that there was nothing wrong with the spring lock door on Vivi's crate when it was handed over to Delta, however, when Vivi's crate was returned days later, the spring mechanism on the door was clearly broken.  To me, this faulty crate excuse seems to be an easy out.  Having a crate manufacturer that can design a crate better suited to contain an animal, may prove to be very helpful in safely transporting them.
The "Vivi Crusade Questionnaire" will be distributed as soon as we have the web site up and running.  If anyone would like a copy of the "Vivi Crusade Questionnaire" sooner or knows of someone that would like a copy, please contact me at Pawsativebf@aol.com   
We appreciate all of your help compiling this information to make these changes.
Keeping the faith and making a difference.
Bonnie Folz>>

May 3, 2007

Barbaro Lives

If you haven't already, you might want to check out the beautifully written ESPN piece on "The Church of Barbaro." Vivi, in many respects, was the canine version of this inspirational thoroughbred.

May 2, 2007

Lost Yorkie in Queens

Honi Reisman sends this via email, along with the ever-true comment: "No one knows Queens better than Team Vivi."

<< lost yorkie queens

2 years old
Male, Neutered – 6 lbs.
Lost last Saturday 4/28
No collar, etc.
Name: Maxie
Lost at Main St and 68th Ave near Kew Gardens Hills

Contact:  Peggy Bautista 347 276 1534>>