City Manager Daniel Valenzuela provided an update on the Animal Services Task Force and is hoping to finalize the task force and schedule the first meeting within the next week
Friday, January 17, 2025
Which City of San Angelo Animal Group?
Friday, January 10, 2025
Interim Neighborhood & Family Services Leadership
Tuesday, January 07, 2025
Animal Crisis Taskforce Update
Mayor Brenda Gunter asked for a rapid formation of the Animal Services Taskforce and production of recommendations on 12-3-24. She set a 45 day turnaround expectation.
City Manager Daniel Valenzuela offered an update in today's public comment. He is close to naming the nine people to serve on the taskforce and listed a number of goals for the group.
- reduce the free roaming dog population
- reduce citizen dog bites
- increase spay/neuter rates
- manage shelter capacity
- encourage responsible pet ownership
- create and enforce policies and ordinances
- foster collaboration with animal rescue groups
That list sounds like the daily job of Animal Services. What happened over the last seven years that caused these problems to grow exponentially and put many citizens at risk?
Shelter Chief Morgan Chegwidden began her role in June 2017 and may soon rise to Director of Neighborhood and Family Services, given Bob Salas' announced retirement.
It would be an odd note in the middle of the taskforce if one accountable person got to avoid examination by virtue of promotion.
Update 1-17-25: Concho Valley Homepage ran a story on the "new Animal Services Advisory Committee" which met yesterday. The piece seemed to confuse the ASAC with Daniel's new Animal Taskforce. CVH interviewed Animal Shelter Director Morgan Chegwidden who has traditionally not involved the ASAC in anything strategic, keeping in the "meet Texas state law" box. A citizen could easily be confused as to which group is doing what after watching the news story. A major clue for anyone watching the actual meeting was that members had to pull monthly shelter numbers from the consent agenda to discuss them. Another clue is Morgan never mentioned Daniel's taskforce, who is on it, the taskforce's aim and how it differs from the ASAC. Chegwidden also failed to give an update on shelter facility renovations, a project Council approved financing almost two years ago.
Friday, December 06, 2024
The Partner/No Partner BFAS Dance
Shelter Chief Morgan Chegwidden's big project was defending the city's "Let them roam unaltered" policy regarding loose dogs, now at third world levels in most neighborhoods. She did so at the 12-3-24 City Council meeting. A question arose about the relationship between the shelter and Best Friends Animal Society. Morgan said the city did not have a signed partner agreement.
She did not share any of the following collaborations (current since 11-1-24):
- Bite investigation course - COSA staff to attend BFAS course
- Sharing COSA Animal Control cases for last FY -- BFAS to heat map
- BFAS virtual rounds training with the shelter medicine team -- Animal Shelter and CV PAWS
It sounds like a partnership, smells like partnership, and reads like a partnership. This is not the first time Morgan has been less than forthcoming in this area.
Council deserves openness and honesty. It isn't getting it and has not for quite some time. That's not a great foundation for going forward.
Thursday, December 05, 2024
Shelter Took 22 Dog Surrenders in FY23-24
Concho Valley PAWS recent public relations blitz over possible changes to San Angelo Animal Shelter dog intake said the following:
Dog intake diversion does not mean dog intake is "closed" but instead allows support alternatives that prevent shelter overcrowding and euthanasia for space.
Now not closed is it? Twenty seven owners surrendered their pet to the Shelter for fiscal year 2023-24, 22 of those were dog surrenders. One person returned their dog during the same period.
Consider the history of cuts implemented by the Shelter in conjunction with PAWS:
Wednesday, December 04, 2024
Data Driven Animal Services Drove Dogs into San Angelo Streets
City Council finally faced San Angelo's third world loose dog problem after an Animal Control Officer was brutally attacked by several large dogs. The City Council member with the longest tenure, having served multiple terms over several decades, asked "why do we even have Animal Services?"
For a brief moment it looked like Council might wash their hands of the whole mess by contracting it out. Beleaguered Council members receive frequent calls and emails from constituents regarding animal related issues, including other major dog attacks that have not been reported in the news.
Animal Services chose to serve dogs in the shelter and those that come into contact with Animal Control Officers over the general public and did so with Council's blessing. Shelter Chief Morgan Chegwidden's slide shows that history. She mentioned a few intake numbers but she did not show:
Council decided to form a task force and delegated this task to City Manager Daniel Valenzuela. Staff recommended shelter leadership and PAWS work on the issue with "additional stakeholders designated as needed." Mayor Gunter expressed her desire for a game plan within 45 days.
City Council is clearly divided on this issue. Some stated their desire to do the minimum and focus on Animal Control. Others said we can serve citizens and pets simultaneously, while enforcing city ordinances, ramping up spay-neuter and getting dangerous dogs off the street.
It was odd seeing PAWS Director Jenie Wilson compliment Council during her public comment, especially after stirring up the public for days that Council might cut "lifesaving programming."
Wilson should have been next to Morgan during her presentation, answering questions about PAWS role. She wasn't so Morgan could just say "I cannot speak for PAWS" in response.
It remains to be seen who Valenzuela appoints to San Angelo's Loose Dog Roundup Task Force other than Morgan and Jenie. It took years to create third world levels of loose dogs and will take years to undo. Can the pair who got us there get us out of the current mess?
Update 12-13-24: Critter Shack Rescue's Sharon Halfmann wrote on Facebook:
The failure of the City of San Angelo to enforce the spay/neuter/vaccination ordinance is one of the problems at the heart of the animal overpopulation issue. Very few citations are given and the backlog of tickets is months if not years long.
The failed “no-kill” movement here and other places in Texas and throughout the US has resulted in record numbers of strays on the streets, where they are often run over, die of starvation, dehydration or illness, become pregnant or impregnate other dogs, or become dangerous packs.
Local rescues are overwhelmed, adoptions numbers are down, resources are limited and the shelter is often completely closed to intake.
If the City can admit that recent policies have failed and that real, wide-reaching change needs to take place, that spay/neuter ordinances need to be strictly enforced and education and low-cost alternatives for pet owners is absolutely necessary, perhaps we can move forward to address these issues as a community - City, pet owners, rescues, concerned citizens.
We so desperately need to move forward to better the lives of area animals, and that can only happen if entities and citizens work together cooperatively for that common goal, in a realistic manner that brings about real, positive changes.
Update 1-7-25: Mayor Brenda Gunter asked for a rapid formation of the Animal Services Taskforce and production of recommendations on 12-3-24. She set a 45 day turnaround expectation.
City Manager Daniel Valenzuela offered an update in today's public comment. He is close to naming the nine people to serve on the taskforce and listed a number of goals for the group.
- reduce the free roaming dog population
- reduce citizen dog bites
- increase spay/neuter rates
- manage shelter capacity
- encourage responsible pet ownership
- create and enforce policies and ordinances
- foster collaboration with animal rescue groups
That list sounds like the daily job of Animal Services. What happened over the last six years that caused these problems to grow exponentially and put many citizens at risk?
Shelter Chief Morgan Chegwidden began her role in July 2018 and may soon rise to Director of Neighborhood and Family Services, given Bob Salas' announced retirement.
It would be an odd note in the middle of the taskforce if one accountable person got to avoid examination by virtue of promotion.
Friday, November 29, 2024
Shelter: Six Years of Decreased Intake
San Angelo City Council will discuss dog intake policies in its upcoming meeting. The City of San Angelo Animal Shelter contracts with Concho Valley PAWS for adoption and veterinary services. Together these organizations have choked off shelter intake in a series of changes over the last six years. Council's background packet has historical statistics on shelter intake. Missing is the just completed fiscal year.
In FY24 the Shelter took in 2,259 pets, a decrease of 642 or 22% fewer than the year before. PAWS began assisting the Shelter via a contractor relationship in FY18 (when the shelter took in 5,914 pets). During PAWS tenure City Animal Shelter intake decreased 62% or by 3,655 pets. That's a drop of 300 pets per month.
Anyone dealing with the Animal Shelter or Concho Valley PAWS hears how "data driven" they are, but rarely see much, if any data, especially on spay/neuter.
Contrast PAWS characterization of the meeting in an e-mail to supporters:
City Council to Consider Eliminating
Critical Life Saving Programs for Animals
With city management's recommendation:
...referring the intake policies to the originating committee, including Animal Services staff and Concho Valley PAWS leadership.
San Angelo Live, often a shelter/PAWS mouthpiece, wrote about referring to the originating committee but failed to include that Concho Valley PAWS is a key part of that committee. They later ran a piece specifically on PAWS concerns.
Live somehow missed Animal Shelter service cuts to the tax-paying public (while their budget grew tremendously). Pets Alive and Best Friends Animal Society drove new shelter initiatives which shifted responsibility to "the community."
"Community sheltering" started years after the city instituted mandatory spay/neuter ordinance for pets. A chronic lack of enforcement meant litters of puppies and kittens contributed to shelter overcrowding. The City Shelter added to the overpopulation by returning thousands of unaltered pets to owners.
Neither moving to assisted living nor death are valid reasons for the shelter to accept a pet. The number of loose dogs in our community grew significantly under "managed intake." In January Shelter Chief Morgan Chegwidden called it a crisis as "pet owners are dumping their animals at the Animal Shelter or letting them loose."
The recent dog attack on an Animal Control Officer arose from a home that had ten dogs, many unaltered. The owner had citations for both failure to spay/neuter and not having a permit for having at least seven dogs. Social media reports indicate the owner tried to surrender some dogs to the shelter to remedy their situation but was refused. The city has no documents relative to this report. The horrific nature of the attack on a professional may have been the impetus for this agenda item. If a trained officer could be taken down what chance would a regular citizen have?
Dog intake diversion does not mean dog intake is "closed" but instead allows support alternatives that prevent shelter overcrowding and euthanasia for space.
Amelia’s “mom” passed away several years ago after a long battle with cancer. It appears her “dad” attempted daily care for Amelia while struggling with his own health but was ultimately hospitalized and permanently moved to assisted living. No one was coming for Amelia.