The Animal Foundation, founded in 1978, is one of the highest-volume single-site animal shelters in America. Our mission is to save all healthy and treatable animals in the Las Vegas Valley. Last year we saved over 20,000 lost, homeless, and often mistreated animals.
Invite a shelter pet over for the holidays! The Animal Foundation is looking for foster families who are not traveling and are willing to pick up a dog or cat now through the end of the year. Fostering an animal is an easy, short-term way to help make a difference. It simply means temporarily opening your home to pets in need and giving them love and care while they wait to be adopted.
Your gift to Animal Place transforms into food for pigs, bedding for chickens, and medical care for animals in need. With you by our side, you become an essential part of an animal's journey toward a brighter future. Join us in improving the life of a pig, cow, chicken, goat, or sheep - donate now and be the change they need!
We are dedicated to rescuing and providing sanctuary to farmed animals while advocating for their rights. These sentient beings deserve compassion and protection. Together, we can make a positive impact on their lives. Will you join us?
Help Clementine and her turkey friends thrive at Animal Place! Your support provides food, shelter, and veterinary care, ensuring they live their lives in peace and safety. Every donation makes a difference in the lives of these remarkable and deserving animals. Join us in making their sanctuary a true haven of love and compassion.
We advocate for farmed animals because they are some of our planet's most abused and exploited individuals. These sentient beings experience grave suffering within our food system. We strive to create a more humane and just world for them by raising awareness and promoting change.
Have you ever wondered how you can have the greatest impact helping animals? So have we. Trillions of animals experience extensive but avoidable suffering on farms and in the wild, which motivates our team to contribute to a world where all animals can flourish regardless of their species. Explore our website to learn how you can maximize your efforts to help animals.
Movement Grants is our grant program aimed at building and strengthening the global animal advocacy movement. We are interested in funding groups working on various approaches to animal advocacy, especially those that are underfunded, target large numbers of animals, and are in regions with a relatively small animal advocacy movement.
We go undercover to document and expose the cruel treatment of animals in factory farms and slaughterhouses. To this day, we have inspected over 800 factory farms and slaughterhouses in 13 countries. We raise awareness and inform millions of people who watch our videos so they can see for themselves what the meat, egg, dairy, and fishing industries do to animals. We campaign to convince companies to update their policies that affect animals and our team of attorneys advocate for increased protections and animal rights.
Both cats and dogs can now be adopted at our Taft Hill Shelter, 2200 N. Taft Hill Road, Fort Collins, CO. No adoptable animals are at our Mulberry Campus. Please do not attempt to surrender animals at our Mulberry Campus. If you have questions about adoption or surrender, call (970) 484-8516 or email ad...@savinganimalstoday.org.
Now larger animal food facilities have been required to comply with the preventive controls requirements since September 18, 2017, and facilities that are small businesses were required to implement the CGMPs by that date.
This rule requires animal food facilities to have a food safety plan in place that includes an analysis of hazards to determine which ones need control and risk-based preventive controls to minimize or prevent those hazards.
For example, a farm that raises beef cattle may own and operate a feed mill. The feed mill is considered part of the farm and is not subject to the Preventive Controls for Animal Food rule if the feed mill is managed by the farm or the same company as the farm, is in the same general physical location, and produces animal food that is fed only to the animals on that farm or another farm under the same management.
In another example, a poultry processor may own a feed mill but contract the raising of the poultry to a third-party farmer. The poultry processor and its feed mill are under different management than the farm raising the poultry. The feed mill owned by the poultry processor does not qualify as a farm and is subject to the Preventive Controls for Animal Food rule because it manufactures food for animals that are on a farm that is not under the same management as the feed mill.
We serve the citizens of the State and consumers of California agricultural products to assure the safety, availability and affordability of agricultural products by promoting California agriculture, protecting public and animal health while enhancing stewardship of the environment.
Concerns about an animal, as well as animal-related noise complaints, can be filed online through Huntsville Connect. Residents who suspect or see owner neglect and abuse are encouraged to call 256-883-3782 and report the issue immediately. If the situation is an emergency, please call 911.
When you adopt from RAR, you save the life of a pet who may have arrived at the Refuge because their time was up at a municipal shelter. We receive pets from all types of situations due to no fault of their own. Adopting from an animal rescue also helps stop the cycle of puppy mills.
Our mission is to promote animal welfare and responsible pet ownership, find homes for unwanted pets, provide humane care for all animals in our care, educate the community about the problems of unwanted, neglected, and abused animals and help people keep their animals through spay and neuter, vet care and other help as needed. To do this, we work with the community, area shelters and local rescue groups by developing a network of supporters and volunteers to create a better world for homeless animals.
The health of Missouri's livestock is enviable among states. Our stringent animal health regulations and rigorous disease testing help keep Missouri free from costly and threatening livestock diseases. The Animal Health Division, under the direction of the state veterinarian, is responsible for controlling, eradicating and testing for livestock disease in Missouri. This is accomplished through testing, vaccinations and regulatory programs involving cattle, swine, horses, poultry, exotic animals, sheep, goats and small animals as provided under the Diseased Animal Law.
Please Note: Each individual Certificate of Veterinary Inspection must have an individual permit number for each submitted certificate. You cannot use the same permit number on several Certificates of Veterinary Inspection even if all the animals are being transported together.
The Animal Care Facility Program is staffed by fourteen field staff and two field veterinarians located throughout the state that balance their schedule with routine inspections, investigation of complaints, inquiries into unlicensed facilities and educating licensees and the public on animal husbandry expectations under the animal care program.
The Animal Health Division responds to reports of dead livestock that have not been properly disposed of. Division staff do not dispose of the animals, but do attempt to locate those responsible and see that they properly dispose of the carcasses in a timely manner as required by the Disposal of Dead Animal Law, Chapter 269, RSMo.
There are five (5) acceptable methods for disposal of dead animals. However each has specific requirements and not all are feasible or practical in all cases. The most practical method, in most cases, is on-site burial, which also has certain requirements. Rendering service pickup is only available to livestock markets and large producers. Burning is not acceptable in all cases. Placement in a ditch or waterway is not acceptable.
To report dead livestock not properly disposed of or for further information contact the Division of Animal Health at (573) 751-3377 or e-mail animal...@mda.mo.gov. Please be prepared to give as much of the following information as possible.
Movements of marine animals are a fundamental element of ocean ecosystem dynamics. Telemetry, the use of electronic tag technology to study animal movement, is a critical tool for the biological monitoring of marine life. The multi-agency U.S. Animal Telemetry Network (ATN) has been established to provide unity, stability, and continuity to the national infrastructure that facilitates the collection, management, and availability of this marine animal telemetry data. To accomplish its mission, the ATN is implemented on these three foundational pillars:
Gathering information on the behavior and movement of marine animals is an essential part of the responsibilities of our national agencies charged with protecting endangered and threatened marine species, sustaining fisheries, as well as informing ecosystem-based management. These data and information, collected remotely via acoustic, archival, and satellite telemetry techniques, assists specifically with implementing the Endangered Species Act, the Marine Mammal Protection Act and the Fur Seal Act, the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act, and performing National Environmental Policy Act analyses. Furthermore, telemetry data can be integrated with other IOOS data streams to inform oceanographic, weather, and climate-related data products.
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