Once a month, VCA West Los Angeles Animal Hospital’s Imaging Center transforms into HoPe Veterinary Center, a free clinic for homeless pets. HoPe has been offering monthly clinics since July and this past Sunday 45 animals were treated, including many first-timers. Notes Venice Patch, though some clients came from Downtown and other parts of LA, many of the pet owners came from Venice and Santa Monica, where the center was advertising services
There Is HoPe: Free Veterinary Care For Homeless Pets
$5K and Veggie Burgers = OctoMom's PETA Paycheck
She said no to a porn film, but yes to an unusual self-lampooning trade with PETA. Today OctoMom Nadya Suleman will unveil a sign in her front yard advocating spaying and neutering household pets in exchange for some cash and food from the animal rights group, according to KTLA.
Octomom to Advocate Spaying & Neutering on Her Front Lawn
Facing foreclosure on her La Habra home, Nadya Suleman, aka Octomom, has agreed to accept an offer from People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) wherein she takes cash to apply to her mortgage in exchange for posting a sign on her lawn. News of her acceptance was made public via Suleman's attorney, according to LA Now. The sign will include a message cautioning all not to let their dogs and cats become "Octomoms" and to have them spayed or neutered. Suleman found herself in the position of losing the home she purchased last year for her and her 14 children when she fell behind on payments on the $450,000 home loan still carried by the previous owner.
PETA to OctoMom: Be An Animal Advocate, We'll Save Your Ass
Dogs and cats give birth in litters, and last year, so did Nadya Suleman, hence her moniker OctoMom. That common bond is what seems to have prompted People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) to have offered to rescue Suleman from foreclosure on her La Habra home, MyFoxLA is reporting.
Vote of No Confidence Sought for Animal Services Boss
Richard Alarcon and others on the Los Angeles City Council are fed up with Ed Boks, the General Manager of the Animal Services Department. This month's drop of coupons for city mandated spaying and neutering apparently was the last straw. "[The city] faces a continuing crisis in the management of the Department of Animal Services," began Alarcon in a motion he introduced today. "These problems range across a gamut of issues: facilities, management and operations, and priority setting and follow up. These problems have caused a severe problem for the City in implementing its laws, policies and procedures."
Councilman Seeks Sacking of Animal Services Head
Spaying and neutering vouchers for low-income residents are back and it didn't come without controversy. The vouchers were cut a few weeks ago because of citywide budget cuts. Animal Services General Manager Ed Boks had a choice where to cut his budget, unfortunately for him, he chose one of the most hot-button issues. Councilman Dennis Zine, who slammed Animal Services' Ed Boks about blogging last week, has asked for him to step down or be fired. "I think it's time for Mr. Boks to find another place to work," Zine said. "It's been a continuing saga of him and his mismanagement." To that, Boks responds: "I stand ready and willing to meet with Dennis Zine any time, any place to help move the department forward. This has been an open invitation for well over a year."
Councilman Questions the Snipping of Spay/Neuter Subsidies
Budget cuts recently led to the Los Angeles Animal Services Department announcing they would no longer be able to offer low-cost spay/neuter services, despite the fact that just a year ago the City made spaying and neutering mandatory--a law that went into effect last October.
One More Day to be Neuter Free
It's already law that your pooch must be snipped, but starting tomorrow it is enforceable. If you didn't know about this, that's because "though Animal Services is charged with enforcing the mandatory spay-and-neuter law, it does not intend to do so," according to City Controller Laura Chick's scathing audit released in the summer. The purpose of the law is help control pet population growth. In theory, the less the little buggers are born and in turn not adopted, the less Animal Service shelters will have to practice euthanasia in overcrowded shelters. Fines start in the triple digits.

