Focus Animal welfare Revenue $267,000 in 2013 Province British Columbia Area served British Columbia | Key people Carol Hine Employees 6 part-time in 2013 Founded 2004 Type of business non-profit charity | |
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Senior animals in need today society saints cbc national news clip
Senior Animals in Need Today (SAINTS) is a farm sanctuary for senior and special needs animals in Mission, British Columbia, Canada.
Contents
- Senior animals in need today society saints cbc national news clip
- Senior animals in need today society
- History
- The sanctuary
- Cats with feline leukemia
- Notable rescues
- References
Senior animals in need today society
History
Carol Hine, a nurse, began the sanctuary in 2004 to provide a more compassionate setting for senior animals who would otherwise spend their last days in animal shelters or pounds. After a short time in a smaller location, the sanctuary moved to a 3-acre (1.2 hectare) farm in Mission, British Columbia.
The sanctuary
The farm location contains a home, barn, several outbuildings, a pond and several fields. A foster program also houses some animals in homes of volunteers.
There are typically over 100 animals in care, of a variety of species. The organization's website stated in October 2014 that the animals in care included 38 dogs (including 7 in permanent foster care), 39 cats, 13 rabbits, 3 sheep, 3 horses, 1 chicken, 1 rooster, 4 ducks, 2 potbellied pigs, a farm pig, 2 Jersey cows, 1 Holstein cow, 3 goats and a llama. Animals are available for adoption. By 2014, the sanctuary had been home to more than 600 animals since its opening.
The sanctuary welcomes visitors on weekends, and has an annual open house.
Cats with feline leukemia
In the fall of 2007, SAINTS modified an outbuilding to house cats with the feline leukemia virus. The first occupants, dubbed the "americats", were 12 cats from a large seizure from a former cat sanctuary in Pahrump, Nevada. The cats arrived in November 2007. In 2010, only one of the original cats remained.
Another group of cats with the feline leukemia virus was taken in from a September 2008 seizure of cats from a former cat rescue organization in Delta, British Columbia. In August 2014, the last cat from that group died.
The organization lists cats with the feline leukemia virus for adoption on its website, stating that the cats may live for three years after the diagnosis.