Animal Protection Grant Highlights
Since inception, the Animal Protection Program has created and supported projects of animal rescue, research, rehabilitation and advocacy. Our grants have assisted a wide variety of programs including companion animal issues, carnivore protection, sanctuary and refuge, and endangered species throughout North America and overseas.
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Asociacion Internacional para la Proteccion de los Animales (AIPA) 2000
The creation of AIPA brought, for the first time ever, high volume, high quality, mobile spay neuter services to Mexico. Concentrating on Monterrey, Nuevo Leon, AIPA’s mission focuses on sterilization (mobile and stationary clinics), veterinary training in several universities throughout Mexico and in the field, and humane euthanasia. Effectively ending animal electrocution in the state of Nuevo Leon. AIPA’s services temporarily expanded to Juarez, Chihuahua and Patzcuaro, Michoacan. Today, AIPA continues its work throughout Nuevo Leon and is almost entirely self-sufficient.
For more information, please see, www.companionstonone.com |
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Earth Island Institute (1992-present)
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Panthera (2009)
Multi-year support for the Teton Cougar Project in the southern Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, a unique decade-long study which focuses on studying cougar behavior in areas largely populated by humans as well as cougar behavior and interaction with other large predators, including wolves, grizzly bears and black bears. www.panthera.org/programs/cougars/teton-cougar-project |
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Homeless Animal Relief Project (2000-present)
HARP is a compassionate non-profit with the mission to end animal suffering due to overpopulation and homelessness by providing realistic solutions (free birth control surgeries) to cats and dogs of the chronically poor and to feral (unsocialized domestic) cats www.homelessanimalsreliefproject.org |
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Southern Methodist University (2000-present)
Multi-year support for a unique campus feral cat program including the first regional Campus Cats Conference which encouraged colleges to support Trap, Neuter and Return and student education as the only humane and effective solution for the management of feral cat populations on campuses. |