Strays could suffer city budget woes
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Bryce Alderton
Stray cats and dogs may end up the unfortunate victims of the city’s
budget woes.
For two years, members of Save Our Strays have been pressing the city
to open and operate a humane animal shelter in Huntington Beach that
would care for stray animals.
While the Humane Society on Newland Street caters to Huntington Beach
residents, the strays the private organization takes in are solely from
Westminster and Costa Mesa.
Members of Save Our Strays hope that, like the Humane Society, the new
shelter would not euthanize a healthy animal.
Karen Chepeka of Save Our Strays said she also would like to see such
a place, where the city has more control of the animals taken in, gain
volunteer support.
“You have more control if [the shelter] is in your own community, and
we don’t feel we have much of a say right now with the county’s shelter,”
Chepeka said.
Chepeka would also like to see a decreased euthanasia rate. The county
euthanasia rates for dogs and cats from Huntington Beach are 17% and 74%,
respectively.
But what the people want and what they can get are two different
things. Especially at times when money is tight.
Just last month, the City Council approved a long-debated budget that
went through tough cuts before $8 million in programs were chopped off.
Within that budget constraint, the city pays $427,000 to Orange County
for services such as animal control, shelter costs, inspections of
businesses and vaccinations.
But establishing a new humane animal shelter in the city would cost
$2.5 million annually, according to a study completed in February by the
consulting firm Meyer & Allen Assn.
That’s $2 million the city doesn’t have right now.
And Pete Grant, a senior administrator for the city, doesn’t know
where the extra money would come from because the city’s general fund
simply doesn’t have any excess revenue to spend.
City staff members don’t believe the deficit could be made up with fee
increases or grants.
Still, there is some hope for the Save Our Stray people. A city
committee formed in March is continuing to look into the possibility of
building a shelter.
The committee consists of Mayor Pam Julien Houchen and Councilwomen
Debbie Cook and Connie Boardman.
“We will pursue [a shelter] if it makes sense fiscally, but we have to
be fiscally responsible,” Julien Houchen said.
The committee is waiting to see a long-term contract proposal by the
county, which is entertaining ideas of relocating its current shelter
from Orange to Tustin, which would be further away from Huntington Beach.
The City Council has not taken any action nor has any action pending
regarding a long-term contract with the county.
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