Best Friends Animal Society, founded in its present form in 1991, is an American nonprofit 501(c)(3) animal welfare organization. Best Friends works nationwide in outreach programs with shelters, rescue groups and members to promote pet adoption, no-kill animal rescue, and spay-and-neuter practices.
History
The group originated in Arizona in 1971, developing from The Foundation Faith of the Millennium, a religious group formerly known as the Process Church of the Final Judgment.
The Foundation church relocated animals from its Arizona ranch to property in Kanab, Utah, in 1984. In 1991, the church was renamed Best Friends Animal Sanctuary, which became a tax-exempt, nonprofit charity, and in 2003 renamed Best Friends Animal Society.
The sanctuary
After the Foundation church moved to the current sanctuary grounds in 1984, the founders eventually began informally calling it "Best Friends" until 1991 when it officially began operating as Best Friends Animal Sanctuary, a no-kill shelter located in Southwestern Utah in Angel Canyon (formerly Kanab Canyon) near Kanab.
The sanctuary is on 3,700 acres (15Â km2) with an additional 33,000 acres (130Â km2) leased from the United States Bureau of Land Management near Zion National Park, the Grand Canyon's North Rim, Bryce Canyon National Park, and Lake Powell. The sanctuary is home to around 1,500 homeless animals.
National Geographic Channel's DogTown series was filmed at the sanctuary, where animals are housed.
Los Angeles shelter
In August 2011, the city of Los Angeles contracted Best Friends to operate and manage its Northeast Valley Shelter, which the city could no longer afford to run. Under the contract, Best Friends was to provide adoptions for shelter animals and spay and neuter services for the community.
Magazine
The group publishes Best Friends, a bimonthly magazine about animals, animal welfare, news events, and activities at the sanctuary. The magazine, which is distributed free to members, has 200,000 subscribers. Originating as Foundation magazine in 1975, the first edition of Best Friends magazine was published in 1993, two years after the religious group became an animal sanctuary.
Work after Hurricane Katrina (2005-2010)
Best Friends' official role in post-Hurricane Katrina operations was that of a primary animal rescue organization. Best Friendsâ teams entered the hurricane disaster area on September 2, 2005, and stayed eight months in and around New Orleans. Best Friends did not have a significant presence doing animal disaster rescue or recovery work until Katrina.
After Katrina, Best Friends helped Pets Alive, an animal shelter in New York state, and rescued about 800 cats from an institutional hoarding situation in Nevada, and assisted local animal rescue groups following the Peruvian earthquakes of 2007. Best Friends also took in some of former NFL quarterback Michael Vick's fighting dogs. In December 2008, Georgia, one of the former Vick dogs, appeared on The Ellen DeGeneres Show with Best Friends dog trainer John Garcia. The two also appeared on CNN's "Larry King Live".
The Champions Documentary
In 2007, Best Friends petitioned the state of Virginia in an attempt to save the dogs seized from the Bad Newz Kennels dog fighting investigation. The dogs, once owned by NFL Quarterback Michael Vick, were expected to be euthanized for fear of aggressive behavior. Best Friends took in 22 of the most traumatized dogs and rehabilitated and re-homed many of them.
The ensuing story of rehabilitation was profiled in an episode of the National Geographic Channel program DogTown. Dogtownâs producer, Darcy Dennett, later approached Best Friends about a feature-length documentary on the same story. Released in October 2015, ââThe Championsââ covers the stories of five of the dogs in detail, and the impact the dogs have had not just on the people who adopted them, but also on the way society looks at dogs rescued from fighting cases, and the pit bull breed especially. The film received the 2015 Zelda Penzel "Giving Voice to the Voiceless" award at the 2015 Hamptons International Film Festival.
The film features the work of both Best Friends Animal Society and BAD RAP, an Oakland-based animal welfare rescue group.
FilmRise acquired the rights to the film in November 2015. The Champions was released theatrically through a series of community screenings and became available for digital download on March 1, 2016.
Community cat programs
In August 2008, Best Friends and PetSmart Charities funded a program called "Feral Freedom" for free-roaming community cats in Jacksonville, Florida. The program was conceived by Rick Ducharme of First Coast No More Homeless Pets.
Similar programs were funded with a grant from PetSmart Charities and implemented by Best Friends in Albuquerque, New Mexico; DeKalb County, Georgia; San Antonio, Texas; Baltimore, Maryland; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and other communities. In St. George, Utah, the city partnered with Best Friends on a trap-neuter-return program in January 2013.
See also
- Animal welfare
- The Process Church of The Final Judgment
Further reading
- Scott, Cathy; Myers, Clay (2008). Pawprints of Katrina: Pets Saved and Lessons Learned. Howell Book House. ISBNÂ 978-0-470-22851-7.Â
- Glen, Samantha (2001). Best Friends: The True Story of the World's Most Beloved Animal Sanctuary. Kensington. ISBNÂ 978-1-57566-735-5.Â
- Dogtown: A Sanctuary for Rescued Dogs. Sellers Publishing. 2008. p. 80. ISBN 978-1-4162-0526-5.Â
- Wyllie, Timothy (2009). Love Sex Fear Death: The Inside Story of the Process Church of the Final Judgement. Feral House. ISBNÂ 978-1-932595-37-6.Â
References
External links
- Best Friends Animal Society site
- CBS's "Assignment America" coverage of animals from war-torn Lebanon