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When you find an injured stray dog in your neighborhood, who do you call? In many communities across America, the answer might surprise you: there's often no one officially responsible for helping. This creates dangerous gaps that leave both animals and people at risk.
Host Penny Ellison talks with Brian Hackett, Director of Government and Community Relations at Associated Humane Societies of New Jersey, about the uneven patchwork of animal control across the country. This continues our series exploring potential legislation that can move the needle for animals. This week's focus: making local animal control services mandatory in every community.
In this episode, we explore:
Brian shares insights from years of working within the system, explaining how even states with legal mandates often fall short in implementation, and why sustainable animal control requires treating it as an essential government service like police or fire departments.
Key Takeaway: Animal control isn't just about animal welfare—it's about public safety, community health, and creating systems that work for everyone. Every community deserves reliable, well-funded animal control services.
Resources mentioned:
Don't miss future episodes in this series as we continue exploring achievable legislation that can create real change for animals in your community.
Subscribe for more on animal law, advocacy, and taking compassionate action in your community.
_______________________________________________________________________________________________
Because compassion is great, but compassionate action is infinitely better
By Penny Ellison, Animal Advocacy Academy5
1111 ratings
When you find an injured stray dog in your neighborhood, who do you call? In many communities across America, the answer might surprise you: there's often no one officially responsible for helping. This creates dangerous gaps that leave both animals and people at risk.
Host Penny Ellison talks with Brian Hackett, Director of Government and Community Relations at Associated Humane Societies of New Jersey, about the uneven patchwork of animal control across the country. This continues our series exploring potential legislation that can move the needle for animals. This week's focus: making local animal control services mandatory in every community.
In this episode, we explore:
Brian shares insights from years of working within the system, explaining how even states with legal mandates often fall short in implementation, and why sustainable animal control requires treating it as an essential government service like police or fire departments.
Key Takeaway: Animal control isn't just about animal welfare—it's about public safety, community health, and creating systems that work for everyone. Every community deserves reliable, well-funded animal control services.
Resources mentioned:
Don't miss future episodes in this series as we continue exploring achievable legislation that can create real change for animals in your community.
Subscribe for more on animal law, advocacy, and taking compassionate action in your community.
_______________________________________________________________________________________________
Because compassion is great, but compassionate action is infinitely better

61 Listeners

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