HomeMy WebLinkAboutPaula Sardinas 12.15.21A Attachment 3QUICKREFERENCE
About Pets for Life
A core program of the Humane Society of the United States (the HSUS), Pets for Life (PFL) is driven by social justice
and guided by the philosophy that a deep connection with pets transcends socio-economic, racial and
geographic boundaries, and no one should be denied the opportunity to experience the benefits, joy and comfort that
come from the human-animal bond.
Systemic inequity and institutional barriers create immense challenges for millions of people every day
in accessing pet resources and information. Since 2011, PFL has been a thought leader in bringing attention to and advocating
for people who are routinely overlooked and, in many instances, looked down upon.
PFL takes a comprehensive, long-term approach to addressing the inequity in and lack of access to pet resources
people experience in underserved communities through door-to-door community outreach and pet owner support
services. Providing free veterinary care, supplies, services and information to pet owners, the program builds trust and
positive relationships within the communities that are served as opposed to staying on the periphery.
STRATEGY SHORT-TERM INTERMEDIATE LONG-TERM IMPACT
OUTCOMES
POLICY AND
ENFORCEMENT
REFORM
DIRECT
CARE
TRAINING AND
MENTORSHIP
Through door-to-door
outreach and consistent
follow-up, provide
resources, such as
veterinary wellness care,
spay/neuter and pet supplies,
at no cost to the pet owner
Create professional tools
for and deliver in-depth,
personalized guidance
to organizations
incorporating PFL
programming in their
communities
Advocate for change in
institutions that create and
enforce unjust policies
disproportionately
impacting pet owners
based on socio-economic
status, race or geography
• Remove barriers to
services in underserved
communities
• Provide consistent
access to resources
• Create trust through
relationship building
• Word-of-mouth spreads
• PFL becomes a known
and reliable resource
• Familiarity with PFL
becomes common
through focused
engagement
• Stabilization of resource
access is transformative
• Organizations receive
in-person training
• Access to tools and
best practices for
self-learning
• Build relationships
with partners
• Law enforcement
and policymakers
receive in-person
training, as well as PFL
tools and best practices
• Increasingly advanced
instruction and guidance
• Heightened understanding
of systemic poverty and
institutional discrimination
• Refine program operations
• Understanding systemic
inequity and the
criminalization of poverty
• Non-punitive, support-based
measures become more
common, valued and seen as
economical and effective
Through the
combined impact
of these various
strategies:
• PFL inspires
widespread
empathy and
establishes
systemic solutions
that create lasting
resource equity
in all areas of
pet ownership
regardless of race,
socio-economic
status or geography
• Animal welfare
will become a
more fair
and inclusive
movement
• Integration of
community-based
programming into
organizational mission
• Long-term program
sustainability is achieved
• Policies and legislation
support racial and
economic equity and
provide justice for all
• Proven resource-based
efforts are widely favored
over punitive approaches
PFL Theory of Change
A dedicated PFL mentorship team
delivers in-depth guidance and support to
local organizations around the country
and to the veterinary community,
ensuring they have the necessary tools
and knowledge to take ownership over
their own community outreach program.
PFL emphasizes understanding the
impact of systemic poverty on pet
ownership, effective outreach strategies
and long-term program sustainability.
TRAINING AND
MENTORSHIP
The PFL team provides free pet services
and information to pet owners in the
most underserved communities of Los
Angeles and Philadelphia on a daily
basis. These established core markets
are also where PFL refines best
practices and serve as training grounds
for local organizations to learn how
to implement PFL in their own
communities - dramatically
increasing collective impact.
DIRECT
CARE
Acting as a catalyst for systemic
solutions, PFL advances the national
conversation among animal control, law
enforcement and policymakers on
shifting from punitive approaches to
more inclusive, support-based
community engagement models.
Driven by social justice, PFL addresses
institutional barriers that perpetuate
the inequity that far too many
people experience.
POLICY AND
ENFORCEMENT REFORM
To address the systemic challenges people and pets living in poverty face, PFL focuses on three distinct but intersecting areas:
Visit PFLequity.org to download the complete PFL Outreach
Toolkit, and watch for the updated version coming Summer 2019.
Addressing Structural Inequity
Systemic poverty and structural inequity create obstacles to affordable veterinary and pet wellness
services similar to the challenges and barriers people experience in accessing healthy food, education,
jobs, health care and housing. At its core, PFL challenges the institutions that create and perpetuate
divisiveness, unjust policies and an overt imbalance in resource accessibility. The program cultivates
equal opportunities for all pet owners - regardless of race, ethnicity, income level or geography.
Offering services is an important part of the solution and certainly an immediate need, but bringing
about transformational change requires tackling the larger systems that keep inequity in the present.
PFL embraces the human in humane, extends compassion and respect to all audiences of pet owners
and works to gain greater recognition within the animal welfare movement of how these systems of
oppression impact pet ownership for millions of people in underserved communities on a daily basis.
Getting Proximate & Strategic
While the direct care work of PFL is extremely important and will always be central to the program,
just as important is sharing all that has been learned from the community, what people living in
poverty have to teach the animal welfare and veterinary fields. One of the biggest lessons is that
there is a difference between just offering services and creating equity in access. Attorney, author
and founder of the Equal Justice Initiative, Bryan Stevenson, said it very effectively – “The opposite
of poverty is not wealth, the opposite of poverty is justice.”
A philosophical shift must happen. Service providers and policymakers have to get up close and
personal. Big problems cannot be tackled from a distance. While it may feel uncomfortable and takes
time and real investment, being proximate to the people being served is essential to developing an
approach that truly mirrors the voice of the community. The opposite is true as well – distance can
allow for one-sided policymaking and programming and can result in a lack of empathy.
Rethinking Community Engagement
National conversations on how community engagement and partnering are more effective and
economical approaches than punishment in addressing systemic and deep-rooted issues of inequity
have direct application to animal welfare. There are many ways companion animal work can be more
fair and inclusive and where focusing on pet owner support programming yields results beneficial to
people, animals and the entire community.
The animal welfare movement has been discussing and treating the issue of animal cruelty and
neglect the same way for decades, and it is time to reconsider the accuracy of this perspective. While
institutional and large-scale cruelty situations do exist, what has traditionally been labeled animal cruelty
in individual situations is almost always an issue of access to services or need for financial assistance. The
distinction is important in order to move the field away from criminalizing pet owners who are faced
with socio-economic and geographic challenges to a place where compassion and support are offered.
Changing the Narrative
The narratives created by animal welfare experts can set the tone for what others believe and do.
For instance, posting a story on social media about a skinny dog can galvanize a donor base. But how
does the story change when that thin dog is coming into the shelter only because his owner was being
evicted, the dog got loose and she had not been able to get him dewormer? We must ask questions and
learn in order to tell accurate and nuanced stories, or at a minimum not make assumptions that vilify a
person. It is all too easy for our messaging to fall into the trap of creating extremely narrow definitions
of who is capable of compassion or what compassion must look like.
Exercising cultural humility - the practice of looking inward and examining implicit bias - is an essential
ingredient to valuing other viewpoints and creating an honest narrative. A fundamental part of
being equitable is for all types of service agencies to listen to community members, learn from their
knowledge, provide opportunities for sharing and then integrate this feedback into the way we
conduct our work and the stories we tell.