News of animal-care center closure prompts donations
Alex Coolman
The manager of the county’s only center for injured and orphaned
wildlife said Friday that a groundswell of community support may allow it
to continue to treat animals.
The Wetlands and Wildlife Care Center of Orange County, a Huntington
Beach organization, announced Wednesday that it would stop accepting new
animals because of severe funding shortages.
The center is virtually the only place where Newport-Mesa animal-care
agencies can send rescued wildlife. Without its services, the agencies
had planned to euthanize creatures plucked from situations such as fuel
spills.
But Gary Gorman, the center’s facilities manager, said media coverage
of the financial troubles had generated a significant amount of community
concern -- and a lot of money.
Gorman said a variety of anonymous sources donated about $20,000 to
the center, and many others pledged to make additional donations.
Contractors have volunteered to assist the center with some of the
expensive improvements -- such as paving a parking lot and improving
handicapped access -- that must be made to comply with city regulations.
The injection of cash means that the center could resume accepting
animals as early as this weekend, Gorman said.
But in the long run, he said he still worries about the center’s
financial picture and its ability to generate a regular stream of
revenue.
“What we have is an emotional, immediate outpouring of support,”
Gorman said. “We’re also looking at the long term, to be able to fund
this thing annually and keep it going.
“The hope is that somebody out there [will make] a sizablecontribution
or the pledge of an annual contribution.”
Funding from the cities that use the center’s services does not seem
like it will be such a source. Jamye Rogers, an animal control officer
with the Newport Beach Police Department, said the city pays the center
for each animal it sends there. But Newport Beach is alone in this
respect; no other city pays for the use of the center.
“That will continue,” Rogers said of Newport’s funding program. “Any
animal that we bring in, we pay to have it rehabbed.”
Rogers said she also may try to feature the center on the “Pick a Pet”
television show -- produced by the city’s animal shelter -- to bring
attention to its plight.
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