ANDERSON — At Wednesday night’s public meeting about restructuring the Anderson Animal Shelter (now Anderson Animal Care and Control), Mayor Kris Ockomon clearly stated that he did not want to make the facility private.
However, in previous statements, he referred to restructuring the facility much like shelters in Hamilton County and Henry County.
The Humane Society of Hamilton County, based in Noblesville, is a private facility that contracts with most of Hamilton County. It has a low-cost spay and neuter clinic attached to it.
Rebecca Stevens, executive director of the Humane Society of Hamilton County, explained that the shelter was privately funded and privately run, with oversight by a board of directors.
“We’re required to take in all stray animals, regardless of capacity from those entities that we contract with,” she said.
Those include Fishers, Westfield, Carmel, Noblesville and Hamilton County. Four small communities — Cicero, Sheridan, Atlanta and Arcadia — do not participate in the program because they cannot afford it, Stevens said.
Because the facility is in contract with these communities, about 43 percent of the shelter’s budget is expected to come from taxpayer dollars for 2008, she said. The rest is raised through fundraisers and adoption fees.
The Humane Society keeps track of where every animal is found or surrendered from, and a charge is added to each community based on the location.
For 2008, the cost per animal is $137.72, Stevens said.
“What that number represents is the cost for us to take in and process each animal and hold them for seven days,” she said.
Processing includes providing care, vaccinations, testing, microchipping and labor.
Like the Humane Society of Hamilton County, the Anderson Animal Shelter has a contract to take in animals from Alexandria, Elwood, Ingalls, Pendleton and the county, said Dick Wiley, chairman of the Board of Public Safety.
Each community is required to pay a fee in the contract. The exact amount was not available Wednesday night.
The Humane Society of Hamilton County does not euthanize animals after a determined period of time, and it does not euthanize animals to make room for more.
“As long as they are healthy and adoptable, we will not euthanize them,” Stevens said.
While Ockomon has since said he does not want to privatize Anderson’s animal facility, he said he would consider a proposal.
Low Cost Spay Neuter Clinic Inc. operates the low-cost facility in Hamilton County. Tammy Sollenberger, executive director of the facility, was at the meeting Wednesday night. She said she might consider opening a low-cost clinic in Madison County.
Local News
10:12 p.m.: How shelter might go private
- Local News
-
-
Anderson man dies at Monroe Reservoir; 3 others arrested
Memorial Day weekend took a tragic turn Saturday evening as an Anderson man visiting Monroe Reservoir died. Three other Anderson men were arrested later that day following the death of Matthew Hosier, 29.
-
Getting Together: Silence not golden for this library program
Certain rules govern almost all libraries: be quiet, don’t mar the pages and absolutely no food or drinks on the premises. But a small group of patrons wait until after hours, lock themselves in the back room of the Alexandria-Monroe Public Library, eat popcorn, drink soda and loudly scoff as they watch bad movies.
-
Veteran receiving Bronze Star 68 years late
An Army veteran will be awarded a Bronze Star on Memorial Day — 68 years after he was originally supposed to receive it.
-
Memorial Day activities set
For Memorial Day weekend, here’s a list of activities to participate in.
-
Arrest Log: May 28
Arrests made by Madison County law enforcement on Saturday, based on Madison County Jail records. Charges are recommended by arresting officers, but are not final until the Madison County prosecutor reviews the case and files official charges.
- Conservation officers arrest Anderson boater on alcohol charge
-
What's Where: May 28
Local activities are scheduled Monday.
-
Handicapped murder convict alleges prison discrimination
Since October 2006, Donald Lock has been confined to a wheel chair because of a degenerative bone disease. He has spent time at correctional facilities throughout the state, but it wasn’t until he was transferred to Pendleton earlier this year that he said he felt his disability was ignored.
-
Arrest log: May 27
The following arrest log appears in the Sunday edition of The Herald Bulletin.
-
Parents at Little League say coach took money
Parents of the North Anderson Little League filed a complaint with police against a former coach who they say stole fundraiser money.
- More Local News Headlines
-


