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Chartered in 1953, Simcoe and District Humane Society volunteers have helped animals in and around Norfolk County. SDHS is a non-profit, charitable organization relying on fundraising activities and donations from members of community. Volunteers look after every aspect of the Society including daily operations and working hands on with the animals from intake to adoption. Foster homes are a great asset to the Society as the organization prepares to raise funds for a much needed building.
As advocates for animal welfare, Helping Hands Humane Society, Inc. provides sanctuary for animals in need of compassionate care and protection. We accept responsibility for:Fostering the adoption of healthy animals into responsible homes and reuniting lost animals with their ownersReducing overpopulation by promoting sterilization of animalsProviding an accessible facility with effective leadership and well-trained staffServing the community through education and addressing animal welfare issuesMaintaining a fiscally responsible organization by adhering to the highest standards of integrity
We operate an companion animal adoption and humane education center. More than 90% of our funding comes from kind-hearted donations and our own revenue-generating activities. Through the generosity of our community we are able to house, feed and care for over 1,000 unwanted and homeless animals each year. Every gift helps us to continue to provide life saving care and deliver important community education and outreach programs.
The Baldwin Humane Society, formerly BARC, is a no-kill adoption agency. Established in 1979, we were the first animal advocacy group in Baldwin County. Our goal is to eliminate the number of abused and abandoned pets through spay/neuter, education, rescue and adoption. As a 501(c)3 not-for-profit, we rely entirely upon donations and do not receive any government funding. We rescue, rehabilitate, and find homes for hundreds of abused, abandoned and neglected pets annually.
The Florence Area Humane Society was founded in 1974 as a 501 (c) (3) tax-exempt non-profit charitable organization that rescues and shelters abandoned, abused, and neglected animals in the Florence community. The mission of FAHS is to rehabilitate them, provide appropriate medical care, and place them in forever, loving homes, ensuring happiness for both pet and owner. We promote adoptions as well as seek animal rescues to find suitable placement for the almost 2000 animals we take in annually.
The LCHS is committed to the humane treatment of all animals and actively performs cruelty investigations in St. Catharines, Lincoln, Grimsby, Thorold and Niagara-on-the-Lake. Taking in over 4,500 animals each year and adopting cats to forever homes for only $25, the LCHS needs your financial support to continue our important work. Your gift will truly help the animals in our care. On behalf of our Board, staff and volunteers - thank you for your kind contribution to the animals.
The Pickens County Humane Society is a nonprofit organization filed under a 501 (c)(3), chartered for the prevention of animal cruelty. The shelter opened in 1972 to provide a refuge for stray and unwanted pets and to eliminate animal suffering and overpopulation through public education. Shelter Mission: Our mission is to eliminate animal suffering and overpopulation through education. Shelter Services: To provide a refuge for stray and unwanted pets. All pets will be spayed or neutered and have Rabies vaccinations. To provide suitable homes for these animals. To provide educational materials for the public. Pet Food Bank
To find good homes for animals in our custody; rescue sick, injured, and abandoned animals when possible; seek to return lost animals to their owners; Investigate reports of mistreated animals and confiscate through legal means those animals it cannot help otherwise; encourage local and state law enforcement agencies to prosecute those who commit crimes against animals; teach the principles of kindness and humane care to all animals; vigorously promote animal birth control through every means possible; provide euthanasia when necessary
Humane Society of Shenandoah County is an all-volunteer, 501(c)(3) organization that works tirelessly to assure the compassionate treatment, welfare, and safety of animals in Shenandoah County. HSSC does not have a physical location, all animals are fostered in our homes. We focus primarily on aiding the most vulnerable animals in the community through grassroots programs. Our programs are designed to prevent animals from entering the animal shelter. All funding for our programs relies on generous contributions from donors like you, as well as grants, bequests and fundraising events.
It is our mission to preserve the lives and enhance the well-being of animals. At the Greenville Humane Society, we love and care for each pet as if they were our own. We work hard every day to provide homeless pets with more than just the basics of food and shelter—our pets receive daily enrichment, loving attention, and medical care. Beyond adoption, we offer a wide variety of preventative services like vaccinations and spay/neuter to make proper pet care affordable for our community so that all pets can be pets for life.
Our organization is committed to keeping pets safe, happy and healthy while they wait to be placed in a forever home. Since 1983 the McCook Humane Society has provided a temporary home for puppies and kittens, as well as adult dogs, cats and any temporarily homeless pet. We are dedicated to finding permanent, loving homes for abused, neglected, and abandoned animals in Southwest Nebraska and Northwest Kansas, while also continuing in our mission of education in Responsible Pet Ownership. We are classified as a No Kill Shelter and strive to be as low kill as possible and give them every opportunity to find forever homes.
The Wyandot County Humane Society was founded in 1985 because the local dog pound was selling animals to research and the remaining animals were being killed by unacceptable methods. The shelter continues to accept all animals 24 hours a day in order to prevent the suffering of being stray or worse and has expanded services to reach into three nearby counties to prevent animals from suffering a terrible death. No animal of ANY TYPE is ever turned away. Our scope of operation has truly become at least state wide, and in some instances we are covering several Midwest states at this point