Blog

  • Can Ottawa Write the Future of Animal Welfare?

    “There is no power greater for change than a community discovering what it cares about.” ― Margaret Wheatley

    Earlier this month, I found myself in a room with hundreds of other animal welfarists, talking about the future for animals in our country. This was the Humane Canada annual conference, and as a movement, we have many reasons to be proud!

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  • When Love Hurts: One of the Biggest Reasons Ottawa is Surrendering Pets

    Surrendering a pet is a tough and personal decision. We’ve shared before some of the reasons that would bring a pet to the OHS and how we’ll do whatever we can to keep a pet with a family who loves and cares for them.

    There is a unique story behind every animal who comes to the OHS, but we have noticed a common thread over the past year. One of the most frequent reasons owners need to surrender their pet is that they simply have too many.

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  • Rabbits — The New Cats

    They roam your house, use a litter box, are best kept indoors, should be spayed/neutered, and their homeless population has been exploding.

    Sound familiar? Well, I’m not talking about cats, but rabbits.

    Around September 2021, we declared our rabbit population a burgeoning crisis. Rabbits were coming to us in entire litters, easily cruising into the double digits. It was a bunny-palooza.

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  • Can Ottawa End Its Cycle of Homeless Cats?

    It’s that time of year when we start to see a rising number of kittens and momma cats who need our help. During the winter months, we were taking in somewhere between 150 and 200 cats each month. During the spring and summer months, this increases by more than 100 cats monthly.

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  • Will You Be There for the Animals?

    In all the years I’ve worked for the Ottawa Humane Society, I haven’t seen an end to the different ways an animal might need our help.

    A cat with a gunshot wound in his leg. A dog who had crawled into a car engine to escape the cold. A Guinea pig with ovarian cysts. Floods of homeless bunnies needing shelter, care and love. A momma cat who needed a C-section to save her life and the lives of her kittens.

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  • The Life-Saving Difference

    Many hands make life-saving work at the Ottawa Humane Society possible. One of these essential groups is our amazing team of volunteers — close to 800 strong.

    This past week, we celebrated National Volunteer Week, and we took the chance to showcase a few of the people who are a part of this selfless team. 

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  • Helping at Both Ends of the Leash: The Future of the Humane Movement

    I had the honour last week of meeting with shelters, advocates and people who care about animals from all over North America and even around the globe at the Humane Society of the United States’ Animal Expo.

    We talked about the challenges we are facing as leaders in the humane movement. Ways that we can better serve our communities. And, of course, how we can do more for animals in need.

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  • Heartbreaking and Inexcusable: An Orca’s Legacy

    You may have heard the news earlier this month that Kiska, the world’s loneliest orca, died after 40 years in captivity.

    The solace I take in Kiska’s death is that she is no longer suffering and the knowledge that no orca will ever endure a similar fate in Canada — Bill S-203 made sure of that even if it excluded Kiska and other animals already locked away behind Marineland’s walls.

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  • Our Next Step in Keeping Families Together

    Almost daily, we receive calls from struggling pet owners to ask if the OHS can provide veterinary care for their pet — often for a condition that earlier intervention might have prevented. Outside of our Mobile Spay/Neuter Service (MSNS) and microchip clinics, the answer has been no, but that’s changing.

    This week, we piloted our first-ever Wellness Clinic and provided wellness exams, core vaccinations, microchips, and a few other basic veterinary services to nine cats and dogs whose families are not able to afford veterinary care. We talk to owners about how to keep their pets healthy and signs of illness to watch for.

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  • A New Epidemic

    Recently, the City of Ottawa declared intimate partner violence an epidemic. Domestic abuse and violence not only harm the people in a household, but also harm pets. The link between domestic violence against people and domestic violence against animals is well-documented and clearly established.

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