Animal Welfare Professionals

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  • 1.  Pet Food Pantry

    Posted 16 days ago

    Good Morning, 

    We have recently decided to restructure our pet food pantry program and I am searching for some advice. 

    We currently offer our pet food pantry one day a week for 4 hours. We want to help the community and animals, without enabling.

    Would anyone be able to advise about their programs? What parameters are set? How do you walk the line between "hand-ups and hand-outs", What software is used for appointments and applications if applicable? And any other information is much appreciated! Thank you!


    #AccesstoCare
    #FundraisingandDevelopment
    #MarketingandSocialMedia
    #PetSupportServices*

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    molly applegate
    Volunteer Assistant
    ARL-Iowa
    IA
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  • 2.  RE: Pet Food Pantry

    Posted 16 days ago

    We just started our pantry in January of this year.  We had only planned to offer it quarterly but demand has been so high that we are offering it monthly.  Ours is a drive-by one day a month program.  Both of the founders of the organization work FT jobs so we do this after our regular jobs.  It is a first-come, first-serve situation. We have each family fill out a form every time they come.  We enter this in formation into a Google Spreadsheet and then post our stats on our website after the fact.  We have served over 1100 animals so far.  That's a huge number for a county that has only 23,000 people with 7,000 people in the largest town.  :-)  We ask that people stay in their cars - that moves it faster.  Sometimes people will jump out and offer to load the car but that slows things down so we discourage them from doing that.  We generally get the distribution done in one hour.  People always come early even though we ask them not to.  It's staffed 100% by volunteers as we don't have any staff for our charity yet.  We get a volunteer photographer each time to take photos and post those also on the website.  Granters like to see the photos and the stats.  We list our criteria on the site too.  Right now it is by honor system because we don't really have the capacity to do anything more.    I'm including our website link.  Go to the tabs for PROGRAM STATISTICS to see that info and the tab that says PET FOOD PANTRY for the instructions, criteria and photos.

    Spayed and Aid

    Spayed and Aid remove preview
    Spayed and Aid
    Many people are forced to give up their pets due to economic pressures. Our mission is to keep pets with their families by providing free pet food and free spay and neuter services to those experiencing financial hardship. By keeping pets with their families, we hope to reduce the number of animals in the animal shelter.
    View this on Spayed and Aid >



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    Karen Kirsch
    Founder
    Spayed and Aid
    KY
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  • 3.  RE: Pet Food Pantry

    Posted 15 days ago

    This may sound silly but when you started your program, did you get help from dog food distribution centers to collect enough to fill your shelves and how do you maintain enough food to help all those that are in need?  Thanks 



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    Laura Coan
    Volunteer
    Novastar Rescue
    AR
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  • 4.  RE: Pet Food Pantry

    Posted 15 days ago

    We attempted to get food from the local dog food manufacturer when we started but because we were not a shelter they were unable to help us.  Instead we held a Community Food Drive.  We asked local businesses to serve as collection points and asked people to donate dog/cat food at any of the locations.  We held it February -- for four weeks.  BTW 4 weeks was too long to manage with just volunteers.  We had 12 locations and collect 1100 pounds of food which was enough to get us started.  We continue to ask individual businesses to hold drives throughout the year.  We have also asked local grocers to donate busted bags of food - that has worked well.  We have finally now gotten some donations from the local pet food manufacturer but it took several months.  If people donate money toward the pantry we will also use that money to buy food since there is very little overhead for us with the pantry since we hold it at a storage unit and have no paid staff.



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    Karen Kirsch
    Founder
    Spayed and Aid
    KY
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  • 5.  RE: Pet Food Pantry

    Posted 15 days ago

    Hi Molly, 

    That is a great question and one I am struggling with as well with our pet food bank. We are a farm and exotic animal sanctuary/rescue in a rural area of Florida. We have 174 animals in our care. We too are all volunteer and have jobs outside the sanctuary. We started our pet food bank a year ago after our local people food bank, who also handled pet food, closed. Our food bank isn't as large. We have 58 registered participants and 3 nonprofits that we give food to. Between the families and nonprofits we serve 710 animals (236 are with the nonprofits). We offer not only cat and dog food but also rabbit, chicken, horse, goat and other small animal feeds.  We currently host a once a month pickup and it generally takes an hour to an hour and a half.  Our service is drive through. We ask people to stay in their cars and to be here at a specific time. Many do show up early.  Recipients must register ahead of time with a list of their animals. We tell them that we can help with food for up to three pets per household. Of course if we have extra food/supplies we do give out a little extra if they have more pets. We send out a text/email to them a couple days before  pickup to remind them. We ask that they respond if they are coming because we set up the food for each person the night before.  We usually have one or two no shows a month. I have had several people who come every month, tell me that they have taken in more pets. The idea of our food bank, as I am sure is yours, is to help them keep their current pets by helping them make ends meet. Unfortunately several people have told me that they have adopted additional pets and ask if we can help with food for them as well. I get it we all want to help when we can, but it is frustrating. 



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    Lisa Burn
    Co-founder/VP
    Farmhouse Animal & Nature Sanctuary
    Myakka City, FL
    https://farmhousesanctuary.org
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  • 6.  RE: Pet Food Pantry

    Posted 15 days ago

    The phrase "without enabling" stopped me in my tracks. From my point of view, enabling is the exact point of a pet food pantry - we're enabling people to keep their pets. 

    We house about 150 animals, about 2/3 cats, and are located in a rural NYS country that has a 25% child poverty rate. We offer pet food bags and cans, and cat litter when we get it, at our entrance air lock. During any hour we are open, people come in to the reception desk, which is right there but out of view of the pantry area. They tell us they need food and a staff member goes out to the area with them and helps them sort through and find the kind of food they are looking for - 1 bag per species per week. (They sometimes need to wait because we're backed up - they just wait, like everybody else in the lobby at the time.) We used to take names and phone numbers and we no longer do that: we just write down the number of bags and cat/dog for each visitor. (Thank you for the idea to also track the number of pets who are helped - that's a great stat.)

    Do we occasional discover that someone has grabbed a haul of food? Yes. Does that happen often? No. Do we get into conversations with folks about their circumstances and offer what slim advice we can about spay/neuter programs? Yes.  Do we sometimes help the person get the ACO  involved because they are struggling with the number of  dropped off animals at their place or because their own failing health is a homeless-pet crisis in the making? Yes. Do we provide a compassionate face to people who need it? Yes. Is it time consuming for us? Not really.

    Here's where we get our pantry food: Lots of people bring us food because their pet got finicky or aged out of a type, or more often because their pet passed and they bring food, beds, crates, bowls, etc. to us. When the pantry runs low we send out a FB request to help stock it. Food floods in and then the only problem is storage. We do get the 'in the know' person on FB declaring they know for a fact that a person is abusing the system because they see them buying tobacco products or beer. I help train the front desk volunteers, and I tell them we do not require folks to conquer their addictions before we help them feed their pets. 

    Every shelter's circumstance is unique (except for the under-funded and under-staffed part). We're located in a high poverty, rural region , and this open-door honor system works well for us. As always, I"m thankful to Maddie's and all of you for these conversations. 



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    Eudora Watson
    Animal Enrichment and Volunteer Coordinator
    Potsdam Humane Society Shelter
    New York
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  • 7.  RE: Pet Food Pantry

    Posted 15 days ago

    Hi Molly,

    Times are tough, pet food has nearly doubled in price in the last 18months and people are desperate. It sounds like you have a few clients taking advantage, but I wouldn't allow them to dictate policy. 

    We portion our food and market our pantry as a supplemental service. That gives us the freedom to adjust portion sizes when available supplies fluctuate. When you're giving out 4lb ziplock bags of dog food per person (not per pet) you will see a shift from those using the service for convenience to those using it out of necessity. 



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    Quinn Douglas-Hiley
    Community Resources Manager
    San Diego Humane Society
    CA
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  • 8.  RE: Pet Food Pantry

    Posted 14 days ago

    We run a pet food bank and get most of our donations from the public. Whenever our shelves are bare we post it and ask for donations and tend to get a great response. We also have a few local businesses, like hardware store and farm stores that donate X number of bags a month. We also get a lot of open bags from people whose pets passed away or will no longer eat the food. We have a paper log book where we write everyone down. Their initial time they have to list all of their pets and if they are spayed or neutered. If not, we can spay/neuter the cats for free but unfortunately don't have a program like that for the dogs. The contract says that they can pick up food monthly during our pet food night (Wed 3-6) and if they get anymore pets we will cut them off the program. Every time they come in we write it down and then give them enough to last about a month. We had to do this as we had people coming in weekly for bags and bags of food for only 1 pet. 



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    Cheryl Koenig
    Volunteer Executive Director
    Sullivan County Humane Society
    NH
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  • 9.  RE: Pet Food Pantry

    Posted 14 days ago

    We restructured our pet food pantry and here's what worked: operating twice a week for three hours each session to manage demand. We require proof of financial need and limit aid to a few months before reapplying. We use PantrySoft for appointments and tracking. Partnering with local vets for low-cost wellness checks also encourages responsible pet ownership. Hope this helps! Good luck!



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    Avery Jones
    Engineer
    CraftyCreator
    CA
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