this makes me sad.
Updated: 01:03 PM EDT
Evacuees Distraught Over Lost Pets
By MIKE STOBBE, AP
ATLANTA (Sept. 5) - As Valerie Bennett was evacuated from a New Orleans hospital, rescuers told her there was no room in the boat for her dogs. She pleaded. "I offered him my wedding ring and my mom's wedding ring," the 34-year-old nurse recalled Saturday. They wouldn't budge. She and her husband could bring only one item, and they already had a plastic tub containing the medicines her husband, a liver transplant recipient, needed to survive.
AFP/Getty ImagesA dog is tied to the railing of a highway ramp in New Orleans six days after hurricane Katrina hit the city.
Such emotional scenes were repeated perhaps thousands of times along the Gulf Coast last week as pet owners were forced to abandon their animals in the midst of evacuation.
In one example reported last week by The Associated Press, a police officer took a dog from one little boy waiting to get on a bus in New Orleans. "Snowball! Snowball!" the boy cried until he vomited. The policeman told a reporter he didn't know what would happen to the dog.
At the hospital, a doctor euthanized some animals at the request of their owners, who feared they would be abandoned and starve to death. He set up a small gas chamber out of a plastic-wrapped dog kennel.
"The bigger dogs were fighting it. Fighting the gas. It took them longer. When I saw that, I said 'I can't do it,'" said Bennett's husband, Lorne.
Valerie Bennett left her dogs with the anesthesiologist, who promised to care for about 30 staff members' pets on the roof of the hospital, Lindy Boggs Medical Center.
"He said he'd stay there as long as he possibly could," Valerie Bennett recalled, speaking from her husband's bedside at Atlanta's Emory University Hospital.
On Saturday afternoon, she said she saw a posting on a Web site called petfinder.com that said the anesthesiologist was still caring for the animals.
Louisiana State Treasurer John Kennedy, who was helping with relief efforts Saturday, said some evacuees refused to leave without their pets.
"One woman told me 'I've lost my house, my job, my car and I am not turning my dog loose to starve,'" Kennedy said.
Kennedy said he persuaded refugees to get on the bus by telling them he would have the animals taken to an exhibition center.
The Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals picked up two cats and 15 dogs, including one Kennedy found tied up beneath the overpass next to an unopened can of dog food with a sign that read "Please take care of my dog, his name is Chucky."
The fate of pets is a huge but underappreciated cause of anguish for storm survivors, said Richard Garfield, professor of international clinical nursing at New York's Columbia University.
"People in shelters are worried about 'Did Fluffy get out?'" he said. "It's very distressing for people, wondering if their pets are isolated or starving."
The Bennetts had four animals, including two beloved dogs.
They moved to Slidell, La., in July when Valerie took a job at an organ transplant institute connected to Lindy Boggs. Lorne, a former paramedic, is disabled since undergoing a liver transplant in 2001.
On Saturday, as Hurricane Katrina approached, both went to the hospital to help and took all four animals with them.
They fed their guinea pig and left it in its cage in a patient room. They couldn't refill its empty water bottle because the hospital's plumbing failed Sunday, they said. They poured food on the floor for the cat, but again no water.
"I just hope that they forgive me," Valerie Bennett cried.
9/5/2005 11:40:41
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
really sad.


11 Comments:
tearjerking
That's horrible! Rebellion! Fight! Fight! Save your pets! Kill the police! Fight for you pet!
that is horrible!! if i had been there i think that i would have REFUSED to go ANYWHERE without my pet, i don't care what they would have promised. i wouldn't have left. either we both lived, or we both died. besides the dog has more of a right to live than me.
*the innocent can never last*
Rochwen Eldariel
yeah, i would have just said 'no. make me. i aint goin nowhere without fluffy.' or whatever. yeah... ok.
i think i will have to write that out in a will or something and sign it. because in a situation like that the rescue people are likely to claim that you are "not in your right mind" do to be trauma or whatever and then they just stick needle in you and you'd be out, and then when you woke up you would be in a hospital or whatever and your pet would be gone... that would be terrible. i think i need to write out a will... very soon.
*the innocent can never last*
rochwen eldariel
think about this. YOU HAVE NO FOOD OR WATER. You've lost everything you ever owned except your family and pet. You're up to your calf in water. You get offered a chance to get out, to get water, food, medicine, whatever else you need. Basically it's a life or death decision. but you can't take your pet.
what would you do? Really and for truly?
I just feel sick thinking anout this. It gives me that...ugh...sinking feeling, and you're like, oh, that's so awfull I can barely stand to think about it....
no. you are only half right carrittop. there is one point you missed. True, you are out of food. but if i were there, i dont need any meds and there has to be food SOMEWHERE and i have plenty of water, seeing as it is up to my knees. I would probably start walking in the direction of the 'safety' zone WITH my pet and whatever was edible, i'd eat. you can eat grass. you can eat bugs. (some one i know went on a survival trip in the desert;all she ate for 2 months was the occasional sheep or deer and the usual insects or mouse)
so i wouldnt be that bad off. well, i would be. but one can go for a very long time with out food and there is quite a lot of water to drink and i would rather walk with my pet than abandon my dog. do you know how bad i feel leaving coc and cop for an hour? can you imagine leaving them for life? i could never do it. my 'guardians' would drag me but i would never go on my own. ever.
to answer your question carrittop, i don't really know whether i would leave in that situation or not, it is the sort of thing you can speculate about but you can never really say for sure. i would have to actually be there to know what i would do. but if you had lost everything and all you had left was your pet... could you really leave them behind?
i think that part of the problem is that our nation's populatin has gotten too soft. we are used to having everything at our fingertips, never being hungry or thirsty, always being able to drive somewhere... but couldn't you just put your all into it and walk somewhere?? swim somewhere?? i think with determination you can do ANYTHING. and often determination grows out of desperation.
yes...
yeah. sitting in my warm, DRY, safe home right now I say what tal does...i'd have to be tazered before I left rox! I just couldn't imagine it....omg, it would be so horrible, knowing you're leaving your pet there, probably to die...
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