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Why Transparency?
By Rich Avanzino
Richard Avanzino built the
first No Kill city as Executive
Director of the San Francisco
SPCA. In 1999, he became
the first President of Maddie’s
Fund, a family foundation
funded by PeopleSoft founder
Dave Duffield, and his wife,
Cheryl, to help create a No
Kill nation.
With transparency as one of the most
important ways
to bring forth public awareness about the
reality that
homeless pets face, Maddie’s Fund requires
all shelters
within a city to work together and report
detailed
statistics of their data, including the
number of animals
taken in, the number adopted out, and the
number
killed. This requirement has prevented many
communities
from getting grants, because many
traditional shelters
have historically not wanted to disclose
their data. Here,
Avanzino elaborates on the importance of
transparency
to the No Kill model.
Transparency is one of the cornerstones of
the
Maddie’s Fund philosophy.
Although transparency in the non-profit
world
generally refers to financial information, I
am
referring to shelter data, or specifically
tracking and
publicly reporting the outcome of every live
dog or cat
who crosses the shelter threshold.
To achieve transparency, shelters should
start by
collecting and publishing shelter animal
intakes and
outcomes, using nationally recognized
definitions
that categorize animals as “healthy”,
“treatable” and
“unhealthy & untreatable”. Publishing this
data means
promoting it on websites and in newsletters
so the
whole world can see what’s happening.
Many shelters say they don’t want to publish
their
statistics because the organization will
look bad. If
an agency fears looking bad, something is
going on.
Regardless the reason, if large numbers of
dogs and
cats are dying, the public should know. We
owe it to
the animals to tell the community what’s
taking place
in the shelter system. Not only does the
public have
the right to know, but once the information
is exposed,
there is greater opportunity for solutions
to be found
to reduce the killing. If the community
doesn’t know
what’s happening, it can’t help.
In my opinion, real transparency means no
fudging
allowed. If an organization saved all of its
healthy
animals except for 25 friendly, healthy pit
bulls that
were killed because of a local mandate,
those animals
have to be accounted for and
listed as healthy deaths. They
can be asterisked (e.g., “the
Humane Society saved all of
its healthy shelter dogs and
cats except for 25 pit bulls who
were killed because of a local
ordinance prohibiting pit bull
placement”). But the organization
has to be transparent and
account for those deaths.
Another situation that tends
to go unreported is owner/
guardian requested euthanasia.
It’s not uncommon for shelters
to euthanize animals
at a guardian’s request then
exclude them from overall
shelter intakes and deaths.
In other words, the animals
simply don’t show up in public
records.
Rather than fearing or fighting
transparency, animal welfare
organizations should embrace
it. When an organization is
forthcoming and demonstrates
it has nothing to hide,
its vulnerability to exposés and
allegations is substantially
reduced. If there is a problem,
the best way to address
it is to talk about it. Cover-ups
cause people to lose faith and
question an organization’s
honesty. Refusals to disclose
information only make people
assume the worst.
Transparency is a big plus
even if an organization is less
than perfect, because it allows
the community to monitor
improvement. When the public
can see that an agency is saving
an increasing number of
dog and cat lives, it enhances
the organization’s reputation,
which builds community
trust, which increases financial
support, which saves even
more lives — and the positive
momentum keeps building for
the animals.
For more information, visit
www.maddiesfund.org.
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