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Mew MAPS 4 animal shelter to be named after late advocate Louisa McCune
Mew MAPS 4 animal shelter to be named after late advocate Louisa McCune

Yahoo

time28-02-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Mew MAPS 4 animal shelter to be named after late advocate Louisa McCune

Oklahoma City leaders dedicated the upcoming MAPS 4 Animal Shelter to the late animal welfare advocate Louisa McCune during a groundbreaking ceremony early Thursday. The $42 million facility, funded through the voter-approved MAPS 4 sales tax initiative, will be called the Oklahoma City Louisa McCune Animal Welfare Center, named after the former magazine editor and philanthropy executive well known for her animal rights activism. Earlier this week, Oklahoma City Council members unanimously approved the official name for the center, which is expected to finish construction in 2026. The 70,000-square-foot facility will be built on a site behind the current animal shelter at 2811 SE 29, and include four entrances, one for each service: adoption, stray and surrender intake, training and clinic. Oklahoma City Mayor David Holt, noting that his own dog, Logan, was once a rescue animal, reminded audience members that McCune's advocacy was largely responsible for ensuring the shelter would receive MAPS 4 funding in the first place. Around the time presentations were being prepared for projects that could be included in the 2019 MAPS 4 programming, Holt was uncertain if enough support had been amassed behind the funding and building of a new animal shelter. He told McCune that a new welfare headquarters might have to wait another day. 'Louisa didn't accept that answer, and she went to work,' Holt remembered. 'She began advocating with the council. She created a coalition of support, and really within a week, this thing had done a 180, and now there was more than enough support on the council to proceed with inclusion of the animal shelter in the conversation.' Related: Louisa McCune loved her way through life ― a great example for all McCune died after a hard-fought battle with cancer last August. Along with her executive director role at the philanthropic Kirkpatrick Foundation, she'd served as a board member for the Patrons of OKC Animal Welfare and the MAPS 4 neighborhood subcommittee, where she helped oversee the development of the upcoming shelter. Saddened by her passing, several community leaders suggested naming the upcoming MAPS 4 facility in her honor, to which councilmembers enthusiastically agreed. 'It speaks not just to her influence on this specific project, but to the work she had done for many years around animal welfare locally and nationally,' Holt said. 'That was a great idea.' Members of McCune's family and representatives of the Kirkpatrick Foundation were present at the groundbreaking Thursday. Among them was current foundation Executive Director Kelley Barnes, who reminisced on the further impact of McCune's PAWS in MAPS 4 campaign. She argued that human health metrics are directly connected with how society treats animals. The well-being of animals, Barnes said, was McCune's passion, also reflected in the pillars of the Kirkpatrick Foundation's mission. 'She said, 'Where animals fare well, people fare well,'' Barnes said. 'Fundamentally, we believe that animal well-being is a critical variable in community health. An animal shelter is an essential piece of the social and municipal fabric of place, much like a fire department. A well-designed and well-funded animal shelter is part of the portfolio of benefits found in a vibrant city life.' Related: New MAPS 4 animal shelter plans have finalized. When will construction begin? The current animal shelter on SE 29 was built in 1996, when attitudes toward animal welfare were much different. The shelter's live-release rate was drastically low, thanks to drastic overcrowding, limited public awareness of adoption needs and the use of euthanasia for space at the building. But following efforts from McCune, former Animal Welfare Division Superintendent Jon Gary, and partner humane organizations over the years, sentiments have changed and animal adoptions have increased in Oklahoma City. And many believe it's time for a much-needed upgrade, including Councilman Todd Stone, who represents Ward 4 where the animal welfare headquarters is located. 'The hope is that this new facility will really change the way our community approaches animal welfare,' Stone said. 'It's designed to improve the care for the animals, but also improve conditions for our staff and our volunteers.' The new center will more than double the number of dog kennels to nearly 550, and cat condos will increase to over 300. Site plans also include outdoor play yards covered with artificial turf designed for exercise and socialization, a large training room, an improved pasture, and meeting spaces for events and educational sessions. It will be constructed in two phases, with the first phase encompassing the main shelter, and the second phase rebuilding the 2,800-square-foot barn and adding more parking space. That phase would then end with demolition of the current shelter. 'What this will do is allow us to make sure that we don't have a lot of disruption for the animals, and we'll be able to transition the animals over before we start tearing the old building down,' Stone said. Related: Animal euthanasia has increased at pet shelters nationwide. How does OKC's shelter fare? Gary, who also attended the groundbreaking Thursday, retired in December from his 25-year career with OKC Animal Welfare to continue advocacy in San Antonio. The city has since selected a new division superintendent, Ronnie Schlabs, whose 17 years of experience include working for animal shelters in Iowa, Kansas and Nebraska. But until Schlabs assumes the role in late March, OKC Development Services Director Brock Rowe is filling in. Rowe spent most of his speech Thursday thanking the animal shelter's staff, volunteers, and partners, all of whom he said do very intense and mentally taxing work in caring for the animals. He believes a new state-of-the-art facility could transform the experience for both the animals and the onsite staff. 'Sometimes, Animal Welfare's overlooked, and in this situation it's not,' Rowe said. 'It's something that is inspiring, and it's awesome that our citizens care that much about animal welfare. It's the ability now to change and transform lives of pets and make sure that pets have welfare that they need in taking care of them better.' This article originally appeared on Oklahoman: Groundbreaking for MAPS 4 OKC animal shelter honors Louisa McCune

OKC's Louisa McCune Animal Welfare Center breaks ground
OKC's Louisa McCune Animal Welfare Center breaks ground

Yahoo

time28-02-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

OKC's Louisa McCune Animal Welfare Center breaks ground

OKLAHOMA CITY (KFOR) – The name of OKC's new animal shelter is the Oklahoma City Louisa McCune Animal Welfare Center. It broke ground on Thursday. 'This original building was built back in 1996 and it's time for an upgrade,' said Councilman Todd Stone, City of Oklahoma City. LOCAL NEWS: Loving and adoptable pets available this February McCune spent years advocating for humane living conditions for animals in Oklahoma and around the world. She significantly contributed to the new shelter project before passing away last year. 'I know Louisa is here with us in spirit, and she would absolutely be thrilled,' said Kelly Barnes of the Kirkpatrick Foundation. 'She said, where animals fare well, people fare well.' The $42 million project is funded through MAPS 4. 'It's designed to improve the care for the animals, but also improve conditions for our staff and our volunteers,' said Stone. The center will be constructed in two phases. One, building the main shelter and two, rebuilding the 2,800 square foot barn, providing parking and removing the current structure. The new facility will more than double the number of dog kennels to nearly 550 and increase the number of cat condos to more than 300. LOCAL NEWS: OKC Zoo welcomes Eastern collared lizards 'It's not just about being prettier and having newer, nicer things,' said Mayor David Holt. 'Sometimes capacity limitations drive decisions about euthanasia that might have not occurred otherwise.' The new building is scheduled to open in 2026. 'There's a lot that's going to happen at this place, and that's certainly a fulfillment of Louisa's expansive vision for it,' said Holt. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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