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Heather Ridenour, right, and Kiley Jimenez look to see what dogs are still in the kennels at the Anderson Animal Shelter Wednesday. Ridenour and her husband Joe have been volunteers at the shelter helping rescue animals. She found the situation at the shelter Wednesday to be heart breaking.
Richard Sitler / The Herald Bulletin


Heather Ridenour talks to a Rottweiler at the Anderson Animal Shelter Wednesday Ridenour and her husband Joe have been volunteers at the shelter helping rescue animals. She found the situation at the shelter Wednesday to be heart breaking.
Richard Sitler / The Herald Bulletin

Published March 27, 2008 08:49 pm - ANDERSON — City officials announced Thursday their plans to restructure the Anderson Animal Shelter.


8:48 p.m.: City moves to restructure shelter


By Jessica Kerman

ANDERSON — City officials announced Thursday their plans to restructure the Anderson Animal Shelter.

The announcement came after Larry Russell, then senior humane officer, performed an unscheduled euthanization on 28 dogs on Wednesday morning, and several concerns were voiced to the mayor’s office.

Mayor Kris Ockomon said the city would try to structure the shelter similar to the way the Hamilton County animal shelter is modeled, where they are subsidized but still privately run.

“We’re trying to figure out what’s best for (the shelter),” Ockomon said. “We’ll try to do this as quickly and as efficiently as possible.”

However, Ockomon said he wanted to make sure it was done in a way that would work long-term.

The city will hold a public meeting on April 9 to get input on the matter.

Susan Frye, of the Halfway House for Pit Bulls, said she believed privatization is a good avenue for the city.

“I think that is a wonderful, wonderful idea, but that takes time,” she said.

However, she was worried about how the shelter will be run until the process is complete.

“Animals are not widgets,” she said. “They can’t just be placed on a shelf. In the meantime, those animals are there, and they need something.”

The city also announced Thursday that Russell and Deputy Humane Officer Brad Cox were no longer running the shelter, located at 613 Dewey St., and local veterinarians would run it temporarily.

“If we could snap our fingers and the animal shelter could be privatized, that’d be great,” Frye said.

As a taxpayer, Frye said she did not want to see money roll into the shelter if it continues to be run the same way.

“I want to make sure that people who are qualified are there to do that job,” she said. “I have that fiscal worry, and I have a community safety worry.”

Ockomon said the city is obligated to continue animal control, so officers in that capacity will continue to do their job.



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