Big day for Pawmetto Lifeline

First, a disclaimer: Pawmetto Lifeline, previously known as Project Pet, is a client of ADCO. We did their new Web site, which launched today. I wrote some of the copy for it. That’s why I was at the groundbreaking today.

Now, to my report…

Project Pet has been around since 1999. It started with the activism of some well-connected local folks such as Deloris Mungo, Samuel Tenenbaum and a host of others. With the groundbreaking today for the organization’s new home on Bower Parkway (near Harbison), it’s about to take a giant leap into realizing the dream of the founders and others who have worked to advance the cause over the past decade. Here’s an excerpt from the Web site:

In 2008, more than 23,000 companion animals entered the municipal animal shelters in Richland and Lexington counties. More than 19,000 of these animals were euthanized.

What we are all about is reducing that number to zero. That’s the dream, and we’re going to make it a reality. Actually, perhaps “dream” is too insubstantial a word. We are approaching our goal systematically and pragmatically. We have developed, and are well on the way to implementing, a solid plan employing specific, identified solutions – solutions that have been proven to work. Wishful thinking is not our way.

How will we know we’ve succeeded? When no healthy, treatable, adoptable pet is euthanized in Lexington or Richland counties. A giant leap in that direction was the ground-breaking Aug. 12 on our new facility on Bower Parkway – the Meyer-Finlay Pet Adoption Center of Lexington and Richland Counties.

Of course, we’ve already accomplished a great deal. Since 1999, Project Pet – now Pawmetto Lifeline – has been the conscience of compassion for the Midlands community and a vital area resource for humane care for our abandoned and homeless animals. Our legacy is one of devotion to responsible and compassionate care for the homeless animals of our community, and of fostering the animal-human bond. The core purpose of Pawmetto Lifeline is to promote and practice the principle that every life is precious.

Since our founding, we have rescued over 6,000 animals that would have been put to death otherwise.

When our new home is ready, we’ll be able to do so much more.

We will be able to rescue an additional 2,200 cats and dogs annually from shelters – up from our current rate of 800 annually – which means 3,000 animals that otherwise would not have a chance will live full and healthy lives. More than that, we will be working to break the cycle that has in the past led to hopelessness for so many helpless creatures: With the addition of full-time vets and a medical clinic housed in our new building, we will be able to spay and neuter more than 30,000 animals annually.

In our new building, one staff veterinarian will be able to spay or neuter 7,560 animals each year. But we aren’t going to have just one vet – eventually, we will house four. That adds up to a potential 30,240 procedures per year!

An important thing to note: This operation is a public-private deal. Richland and Lexington counties have formed a partnership with Pawmetto Lifeline to address the over-population issue of companion pets in the two counties. The counties are depending on the organization to provide:

  • an aggressive spay and neuter program that includes a mobile component that will focus on rural areas.
  • a no-cost spay/neuter voucher program
  • adoptions for a minimum of 2,400 dogs and cats from the two counties’ animal shelters.
  • an education program that focuses on proper care for companion pets, including not only such basics as food, water, and shelter, but proper annual medical care.
  • animal behavior training.
That’s why there were several officials from the two counties at the ceremony. From Richland County Council there were Jim Manning, Norman Jackson and Bill Malinowski. From Lexington County Council, Debbie Summers, Smokey Davis, Johnny Jeffcoat and John Carrigg.
Also sitting front and center was Austin Meyer, who with his wife gave the biggest chunk of money to build the new center — $1.5 million. Which is why the center is named for them and their family. Austin, a member of the prominent local Finlay family, is quite a story on his own. He’s the creator of the wildly successful X Plane flight simulator — which I hear recently ran the Microsoft version right out of the sky. And he lives here. Bet you didn’t know that.
Anyway, it was a big day in the lives of thousands of critters in the Midlands — and folks who care about them. It was hot, but there was quite a celebratory atmosphere now that this big day has arrived. The center is to be up and running in Fall 2011.

13 thoughts on “Big day for Pawmetto Lifeline

  1. scout

    That is so awesome! I love that. And so does Sadie…my 10 year old sweet neurotic rescued kitty.

  2. Maude Lebowski

    Thanks for posting this Brad. I supported Project Pet and will continue to support Pawmetto Lifeline.

  3. Doug Ross

    Have a pound dog and just got a pound cat this week (shoot me now).

    We expect to replace each kid with a dog as they leave the nest.

  4. Doug Ross

    Oh, and my little photo is not the pound dog. That’s the other one. He just WISHES he grew up in a pound and developed the street cred.

  5. Herbie

    I caught my krazy kitteh last August. He was living in the garden behind ArtBar. I fed him for a month and then got him into a carrier I borrowed from a friend. SLAM! He whined all the way home but took to my food and litter box imediately. He is a year old now and got his snip-snip a day after I caught him. He is still a rascal but now a house cat. I’ll never get a pet in the future unless it’s a rescue
    or from the shelter.

  6. Herbie

    And Brad, I did catch the kitteh before 2 AM. But I still think I should be able to enjoy ArtBar after 2 AM. Once and a while.

  7. martin

    Brad, wasn’t there something about you, a cartoon and racehorses that created an uproar on the old blog?

    I don’t think you seemed much like an animal lover then.

  8. Brad

    Well, I’m no Ellie Mae Clampett (on a number of levels), but I like critters just fine, as you can see here and here.

    As for “animal lover” — well, that depends on what you mean. If it means someone who believes in treating animals in a humane manner, count me in. If it involves going totally ballistic when the unfortunate death of an animal is used as a PERFECTLY LEGITIMATE metaphor in a cartoon making a valid political point — and I believe that’s what you’re referring to — then count me out.

    But please, let’s not go there again. I was happy to defend my good buddy Robert from ANOTHER hypersensitive group of critics recently, but no sense revisiting ancient history.

  9. Ralph Hightower

    @Brad,

    Thank you for bringing forth that link to the Austin Meyer interview.

    I’ve read a few articles about Meyer’s X-Plane simulator and I think that it is awesome that an independent company like Austin’s is in Columbia! Though, I’m not a pilot, I am interested in his X-Plane Simulator; particularly when I heard about the Space Shuttle config.

    I also know from the web that Austin is a fan of America’s only sports car, the Chevrolet Corvette! When I win Powerball, I will buy a Corvette!

    I’m a dog lover. I had a beagle as a kid and have owned beagles since 1977 and have been a foster home for two beagles.

  10. martin

    Sorry, after I posted yesterday, I thought I remembered you once ran a picture your family dog . The horse cartoon was the first thing that popped into my mind – it was such a big deal.

    I agree, let sleeping dogs sleep.

    I thought what this guy did was great. We need someone like that in every county in the state.

Comments are closed.