Volunteer Animal Transport to Foster or Forever Homes

Alice Villalobos, DVM - Veterinary Practice News, November 20, 2007

"Fifteen Legs:When all that stands between death and freedom is a ride..." by Bonnie Silva, provides information about animal welfare and pet placement.

Most of us don’t have a clue about the amazing volunteer cyber-networking that goes into transports of doomed animals toward hope.

Silva’s book contains excellent research and writing that illuminates a vital but mostly underground conduit of animal welfare and pet placement. Volunteers who work in cyberspace to coordinate routes and drivers who transport homeless animals are unsung heroes. This book salutes the volunteer drivers, including truck drivers and pilots, who transport furry passengers in their sedans, vans, SUVs, trucks and planes. When the mileage of all the legs is combined, an animal may be transported hundreds or thousands of miles. The purpose for the hundreds of e-mails that connect one shuttle after another is to give doomed, unwanted, homeless animals a second chance to survive and live in foster homes or to get to their adoptive forever homes.

Silva originally wanted to create a documentary film on volunteer animal transport, but she was declined funding. One filmmaker said, “It’s just not of sufficient social significance.” Writing the book was her second choice. But since she was committed to the project, she could embellish the book with her thoughts on topics such as, if animals have feelings, pet overpopulation, puppy mills, animal hoarders, no-kill shelters, pet relinquishment issues, and so on.

Silva gives credit to technology, the Internet and generous-minded people for weaving the intricate legs together that compose animal transport. There is a tremendous amount of work and fact-checking that goes into each successful animal transport. The online animal transport community’s coordinators spend a lot of volunteer time building an amazingly intricate cyber railroad. Each transport has various legs (one to three hours of driving) that have specific destinations and timetables for meet, greet, pickup and drop off of their live cargo. Some transports have to be cancelled because of bad weather, road conditions and last minute cancellations. Drivers know which transport coordinators are apt to have all their legs double checked and monitored by cell phone follow ups.

Silva’s interest in the back story of volunteer animal transport lead her to find that, in reality, the plight of homeless animals most often results in routine and methodical death. She did not want to conceal or gloss over the disturbing and pitiful truth of the stray unwanted animal situation in our country.

The stay on death row for millions of innocent homeless animals can be very short (sometimes as little as 72 hours). Large dogs in the southern state’s shelters are generally doomed. Thanks to volunteer transports, some animals get the chance to survive if pulled from the shelter and taken to foster homes in other states.

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