Giving Tuesday pays off big time for Dartmouth animal shelter - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Giving Tuesday pays off big time for Dartmouth animal shelter

Bide Awhile made nearly six times its fundraising goal, thanks to large and small contributions and an anonymous donor who pledged to match donations up to $5,000.

Bide Awhile made nearly 6 times its original donation goal

An orange tabby cat wears a red neck tie with polkadots.
Mr. Ginger required more than $5,000 in care. The stray cat was taken in by Bide Awhile and his story was shared to the shelter's Facebook page to highlight the rising costs it's facing. (Bide Awhile/Facebook)

Giving Tuesday paid off in a big way for a Dartmouth, N.S., animal shelter.

In the past, the day dedicated to donating to charitiesusually brought in around $5,000 for Bide Awhile. But this year, thanks to campaigning, donations large and small and a donor that was willing to match contributions up to $5,000, the shelter ended up withmore than$29,000.

"I think there was a lot of high-fives and ... we were very shocked,"executive directorLiesjeSomers-Blondetold CBC's Mainstreet Halifax on Thursday. "It means the community is listening and they're noticing and they're seeing the good and the things that we're doing to give back to the community."

Somers-Blonde said the money came at a time when the shelter needed it.

"If you consider the cost of groceries have gone up, the cost of housing has gone up, the vet bills have gone up and so too have our bills," Somers-Blond said.

"So our numbers are high, much higher thansomebody who just owns one or two pets. We're talking 500 [animals] this year for vaccines,dewormers and surgeries, and so those numbers for us are astronomical."

Two people standing in front of a window.
Sam Cole, left, Bide Awhile's marketing co-ordinator, and Liesje Somers-Blonde, Bide Awhile's executive director, are shown at the Mainstreet studio in Halifax. (Carolyn Ray/CBC)

Sam Cole, Bide Awhile's marketing co-ordinator, told Mainstreetthat highlighting costs the shelter faced on social media helped spread awareness of the costs they were facing. For example, Mr. Ginger, a stray cat positive for feline immunodeficiency virus that was brought to the shelter in the spring, required more than $5,000 in care.

"He was adopted for the summer to a lady who was 101. She entered a nursing home. So he came back to us a couple of weeks ago. They had a great summer together, full of love," Cole said.

"He needed a full dental, so he needed all of his teeth removed. So that was that, alongside his just care costs of food and any regular vaccinations."

More animals being surrendered

Somers-Blonde said 500 animals is about double than what there had been in the past. She said they're seeing moreanimals surrenderedlately.

"Alot of people are having to surrender animals that they themselves have not been able to financially afford the vet costs. So they're coming in not spayed, not neutered, not vaccinated, not dewormed. And so those are in turn passed on to us. We're happy to do it, and then to adopt them out for a significantly lower fee," Somers-Blonde said.

Cole said more than $8,000 of the $29,000 came through a number of smaller donations.

Donations big and small helped

"I get that a lot of people right now are financially conscious of what they're spending on right now, but as an organization that receivesno government funding we're solely community funded we wanted to see everyone give what they could," Cole said, adding the average donor gave $25.

"Even five dollars made a difference."

Cole said there are more fundraising events in the works for next year, including cat yoga and pilates. On Dec. 10, Bide Awhile will host a holiday open house and its first tree lighting.

With files from Carolyn Ray and CBC's Mainstreet Halifax